logo
Zary: PGA Tour Americas skips Saskatchewan stopover this summer

Zary: PGA Tour Americas skips Saskatchewan stopover this summer

Ottawa Citizen18 hours ago

There's a big absence among the Saskatchewan golf scorecards this summer.
Article content
Once again, there won't be a PGA professional event being played in the province. The Elk Ridge Saskatchewan Open — after what was an abbreviated run — is not included in the PGA Tour Americas circuit for 2025.
Article content
Canadian A.J. Ewart — who is playing in this week's RBC Canadian Open in Caledon, Ont., being held at TPC Toronto/Osprey Valley — won the PGA Tour Americas event last year at Elk Ridge.
Article content
Article content
American John Pak — who is also competing at the 2025 RBC Canadian Open this week — won the Saskatchewan event back in 2023.
Article content
Article content
Prior to that, the Elk Ridge Open had been cancelled due to heavy rainfall in 2022 after a trial-run event was held during the COVID pandemic in 2021.
Article content
The Elk Ridge event had marked the return of professional men's tour golf to the province after a three-year absence between 2017-2020. Previously, the Dakota Dunes Golf Links — located south of Saskatoon on the Whitecap Dakota First Nation — staged Saskatchewan's pro tournament for seven years straight, from 2010-2016, as part of what was then under the respective Canadian Tour, PGA Tour Canada and Mackenzie Tour-PGA Tour Canada banners.
Article content
The name changed from Saskatchewan Open (2008-2009) to Dakota Dunes Casino Open (2010-2012) to Dakota Dunes Open (2013) to SIGA Dakota Dunes Open (2014-2016).
Article content
Article content

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

French Open: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka faces No. 2 Coco Gauff in the women's final
French Open: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka faces No. 2 Coco Gauff in the women's final

Winnipeg Free Press

time40 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

French Open: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka faces No. 2 Coco Gauff in the women's final

PARIS (AP) — No.1 Aryna Sabalenka faces No. 2 Coco Gauff in the French Open final on Saturday with both women aiming to win the title for the first time. Gauff lost the 2022 French Open final at age 18 but the American beat Sabalenka in the 2023 U.S. Open final, Gauff's only major so far. The 27-year-old Sabalenka, who is from Belarus, has won three majors but is appearing in her first French Open final. It is the first No. 1 vs. No. 2 final in Paris since 2013, when Serena Williams defeated Maria Sharapova, and just the second in the last 30 years. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. Sabalenka and Gauff have split their 10 previous matchups evenly, but Sabalenka won their most recent encounter, also on a clay court at the Madrid Open a month ago. ___ AP tennis:

Davis Alexander era off to a good start for Alouettes
Davis Alexander era off to a good start for Alouettes

Montreal Gazette

time2 hours ago

  • Montreal Gazette

Davis Alexander era off to a good start for Alouettes

By Now that Davis Alexander has reached a certain status level as the Alouettes' starting quarterback, he might want to eschew having to play exhibition games next season. Alexander in general, and the Als' offence in particular, struggled mightily in the first half against Ottawa on May 24 in the teams' first exhibition game. Montreal failed to score a touchdown over the opening 30 minutes and even had trouble generating first downs that afternoon. Based on two weeks' of training camp workouts to that point, there was a modicum of reason to wonder — especially since Alexander and the starters didn't play the following week on the road against the Redblacks. Wonder no more. While one game does not a season make, the early reviews on Alexander are positive. Despite starting only four games last season — all wins — the 26-year-old fourth-year veteran showed the moment wasn't too big for him on Friday night. Alexander and his teammates delivered a beat-down on the Toronto Argonauts, handling the visitors with ease during this complete 28-10 victory at Molson Stadium in their regular-season opener before 21,480 Molson Stadium spectators. The Argos might be the defending Grey Cup champions, but on this night they looked like chumps. 'His mental toughness,' said receiver Tyson Philpot, who scored Montreal's first offensive touchdown on a 26-yard pass from Alexander late in the first quarter. 'He raises the level of competition. He demands excellence from all of us. As a receiving corps we know we have to show up for him. 'I think that's the start of the D.A. era right now.' Simply based on statistics, there was nothing spectacular about Alexander. He completed 19 of 26 passes for 205 yards along with the touchdown to Philpot, who suffered a freak season-ending foot injury last August against Hamilton. Alexander also was intercepted once in the third quarter, while underthrowing Philpot on a long attempt that was as good as a punt. In the process, Alexander showed a quarterback need not throw for 300 yards to be effective. He was accurate with his passes and was able to find receivers while moving the pocket. Austin Mack was Montreal's leading receiver, catching five passes for 51 yards. Philpot had four receptions for 48 yards. Alexander utilized seven different receivers. 'I'm not going to say the pre-season doesn't mean anything to me,' Alexander said. 'You know I go out there and compete every single time. Maybe it was knocking a littler bit of rust off? Or just a different type of competitive juice. We've got playmakers everywhere. We had guys making crucial second-down conversions, and our run game was spectacular. 'I refer to it as cowboy football,' he added. 'If things break down it's on me as a quarterback to make something happen.' This might have been the Alouettes' most-balanced offensive attack since Jason Maas became head coach in 2023. Canadian tailback Sean Thomas-Erlington gained 86 yards on 17 carries. Alexander had four carries for 50 yards, while American rookie Travis Theis chipped in with three carries for 22 yards. The Als had 163 yards rushing. Montreal generated 22 first downs along with 354 yards' net offence while running 55 plays and controlling the ball for 34 minutes. 'He (Alexander) showed me a little bit of everything,' Maas said. 'He did some really good things throwing the ball down the field, did a lot of great things with his legs. Some toughness and leading us on offence. I thought he did a tremendous job of making really good decisions and didn't put the ball in harm's way. 'We still have to look at the film and get better; I know that.' The teams were meeting for the first time since last November's East Division final, when the Alouettes committed six turnovers and lost 30-28 at home, denying themselves the opportunity of defending their CFL title. If Montreal was seeking revenge on Friday night, it succeeded. 'I'd be lying if I didn't say that a big part of that came from that sour taste we had in our mouth from that game,' said linebacker Tyrice Beverette, last season's division finalist as outstanding defensive player. 'We know we left something on the field. We know we were the better team that (day), but didn't come out to play. We wanted to show the world tonight who was the better team.' Toronto quarterback Nick Arbuckle might have been the Grey Cup's most valuable player last season, but Montreal's' defence made his life miserable. While Arbuckle passed for 273 yards and a touchdown, he also was intercepted twice — a trademark that has dogged him throughout his inconsistent career. Arbuckle also fumbled just before halftime when under duress from defensive-tackle Shawn Oakman. Rush-end Isaac Adeyemi-Berglund recovered the ball, returning it 17 yards for a touchdown. Short-yardage quarterback Caleb Evans scored the Alouettes' other touchdown on a one-yard run in the third quarter after James Letcher Jr. returned the opening second-half kickoff 67 yards. Jose Maltos added two field goals and a single. Montreal's next three games are on the road beginning next Friday at Ottawa.

Rory McIlroy frees up his weekend at the RBC Canadian Open, where another homegrown champion is in play
Rory McIlroy frees up his weekend at the RBC Canadian Open, where another homegrown champion is in play

Toronto Star

time5 hours ago

  • Toronto Star

Rory McIlroy frees up his weekend at the RBC Canadian Open, where another homegrown champion is in play

Maybe it was karmic justice being doled out for snubbing Jack Nicklaus last week. Perhaps it's a case of a green-jacket hangover that won't go away. Whatever the cause, Rory McIlroy's results at the RBC Canadian Open at TPC Toronto couldn't have pleased tournament organizers. Thanks to a dismal second-round 78 on the North course, the two-time tournament champion and world No. 2 found himself unceremoniously summoning his private jet for a flight back to his Florida home Friday night. McIlroy didn't just miss the cut. He missed the 3-under-par benchmark to partake in the weekend by six strokes. He didn't just play poorly. His performance, which included a quadruple-bogey eight on the par-4 fifth hole that featured a lost ball, left him 149th in the 156-man field.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store