Stephanie Kyriacou already made an ace at the Women's British. Then she assisted on another
Mimi Rhodes of England made a hole-in-one on the par-3 fifth hole when her tee shot glanced off the golf ball belonging to Kyriacou and caromed right into the cup in the final round.
Her shot would have rolled by if not for Kyriacou's golf ball being there. Kyriacou had hit first and nearly made her second ace until the ball rolled just left of the hole, inches away.
Kyriacou made a hole-in-one on the par-3 eighth in the second round on Friday.
___
AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
US Open prize money pool increases to a record $90 million for 2025
The US Open will see a massive increase in prize money for its winners this year. On Wednesday, the tournament announced a significant upgrade in prize money, with the New York City showcase being the first competition to reach $90 million in player compensation. Following the $70 million prize money set in 2024, which established a record, the tournament is seeing a 21% increase in the purse this year. The staggering amount of money to compete for is only a 15% fraction of the tournament's $559.7 million revenue, according to the US Open site. The singles winners for the men's and women's tournaments will take the largest winning payout in tennis, each pocketing $5 million, which is a 39% bump from the $3.6 million prize in 2024. Prize money did not just grow for the title winners but also for other participants: The upgraded purse will compensate runners-up ($2.5 million, up 39%), semi-finalists ($1.26 million, up 26%), quarter-finalists ($660,000, up 25%) and Round of 16 competitors ($400,000, up 23%). This materialized after years of a strategic focus on redistribution to provide significant payouts to all participants. Aside from increasing the prize money, the US Open also looked to lower the out-of-pocket expenses for players. Competitors will be given a $1,000 travel stipend and two rooms in the player hotel or $600 per day if they opt to stay elsewhere. Players can also avail free racquet stringing of up to five racquets per pound. These accommodations total $5 million toward player support. The US Open's prize money significantly dwarfs the other majors, with Wimbledon paying $72.7 million, the French Open paying $65.4 million and the Australian Open paying $62.9 million across all players. Before the increase, a handful of players raised concerns about their share of tournament revenues. Tennis' top players hired WTA chief executive Larry Scott to speak to the Grand Slam event organizers on their behalf. The players were fighting to receive a bigger portion of the tournament revenues. While team sports in the US give players close to 50% of the profit, tennis players generally receive between 15% and 20% of Grand Slam revenue, according to The New York Times. Additionally, the Professional Tennis Players Association, led by Novak Djokovic, has filed an antitrust lawsuit, naming the four Grand Slams as 'co-conspirators' to a 'cartel' encompassing the men's and women's tours, the International Tennis Federation, and the International Tennis Integrity Agency. The PTPA shared that it is having 'productive discussions' with the four majors, which resulted in their removal from the updated complaint filed in June. Since then, the ATP and WTA have filed to dismiss the lawsuit. The US Open will be played at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Queens, New York, from August 24 to September 7.
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Real Madrid starlet called up for senior training for 2nd day in a row
A highly-regarded up-and-coming member of the youth ranks at La Liga giants Real Madrid was on Wednesday afforded a fresh chance to showcase his talents at senior level. The player in question? Thiago Pitarch. The name of youngster Pitarch all of a sudden emerged as a prominent one in the media chatter surrounding Real Madrid on Tuesday. This came after word was forthcoming that the midfielder, fresh off celebrating his 18th birthday, had been called up to train alongside Xabi Alonso's senior Blancos squad. And as alluded to above, Pitarch evidently did enough to impress Real's first-team coaching staff. As much comes amid confirmation that the Spaniard, who spent last season plying his trade with Los Merengues' U19s, was this morning called up to senior duties at Valdebebas once more. Amid something of a shortage of options in his midfield ranks at present, Xabi Alonso appears to have identified Pitarch as a player who could potentially contribute this coming season. Conor Laird – GSFN
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Stokes joins Superchargers as mentor
England Test captain Ben Stokes has joined Northern Superchargers in The Hundred as a mentor. Stokes, who played five games for Superchargers across the 2021 and 2024 tournaments, will join the men's team for the duration of this year's competition. In was announced in February that the all-rounder would miss the 100-ball competition this summer to manage his fitness before the Ashes in Australia this winter. Having sustained a shoulder injury that ruled him out of the fifth Test between England and India, Stokes would not have been fit to play in any case. However, the 34-year-old will still hope to make an impact by providing his expertise as he joins head coach Andrew Flintoff's backroom staff at the Superchargers.