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Aussie Green tumbles from lead in golf senior major

Aussie Green tumbles from lead in golf senior major

Yahoo18-05-2025

Australia's Richard Green will need to pull off something special to triumph at the year's first senior major championship after tumbling from the lead he'd held after the first two days.
One shot in front going into Saturday at the Regions Tradition in Alabama, Green battled to a three-over 73.
The Victorian lefthander was unable to find any joy with the putter as he hit 15 of 18 greens in regulation and paid the price for a double bogey and two bogeys as he fell to a share of 10th place, five shots behind American leader Jerry Kelly (65).
RIchard Green had the 18- and 36-hole lead the first two days @RegionsTrad.After a double bogey on No. 10, for the first time since Round 1 he sits outside of the lead, two shots back. pic.twitter.com/XiskeqAsKo
— PGA TOUR Champions (@ChampionsTour) May 17, 2025
Despite battling back issues earlier in the week, Kelly turned in his first unblemished card of the tournament in forging a one-shot lead at 15 under ahead of South Korea's Y.E. Yang.
Yang's countryman Charlie Wi (67) was a stroke back in a tie for third with New Zealand's Steven Alker (71).
Michael Wright was best of the other Australians, surging with a 66 to share 13th at nine under, with Greg Chalmers (70) a shot further back, while Rob Pampling (68) and Mark Hensby (68) were at five under, David Bransdon (72), Stuart Appleby (69) and Steve Allan (73) were four under and John Senden (75) 10 over.
After finishing with a flourish with three birdies over his final three holes at Greystone Golf & Country Club, the 58-year-old Kelly is in the pole position for his 14th Champions Tour victory.
"I'm happy that I found something that was working really well with the swing and the putter in the end," Kelly said. "It's just more of the same tomorrow, just got to keep the pedal down with these guys."
- with AAP

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Key takeaways from F1's 2026 schedule: Streamlined start, a ratings test and a punishing close
Key takeaways from F1's 2026 schedule: Streamlined start, a ratings test and a punishing close

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Key takeaways from F1's 2026 schedule: Streamlined start, a ratings test and a punishing close

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How To Watch The U.S. Open, And What To Expect At Golf's Third Major
How To Watch The U.S. Open, And What To Expect At Golf's Third Major

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

How To Watch The U.S. Open, And What To Expect At Golf's Third Major

Amid intrigue about the carnage that Oakmont Country Club's near-impenetrable rough and notoriously fearsome greens might dish out to the game's top players at the U.S. Open, Scottie Scheffler enters the golf season's third major championship as a heavy favorite after wins in three of his past four starts, including a four-shot win at last month's PGA Championship. The world's No. 1-ranked golfer, Scheffler heads a field of 156 players teeing it up this week just outside Pittsburgh at the nation's first golf course to be recognized as a National Historic Landmark. Oakmont originally opened in 1903, designed by Henry Fownes on farmland he acquired adjacent to the Allegheny River Valley, and is one of the game's most challenging and uncompromising layouts. Pennsylvania-based golf architect Gil Hanse, who completed a restoration of the course in October 2023, describes Oakmont as 'unapologetically difficult.' 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While this year's prize money hasn't been set, it will likely rival or surpass the $21.5 million awarded at last year's U.S. Open in Pinehurst, where DeChambeau took home $4.3 million.

2 Little-Known Factors That Influence Your Short-Game Shots
2 Little-Known Factors That Influence Your Short-Game Shots

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

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2 Little-Known Factors That Influence Your Short-Game Shots

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