
Ryan Fox wins Canadian Open playoff. Joaquin Niemann has 4th LIV Golf victory of the season
CALEDON, Ontario (AP) — Ryan Fox of New Zealand won for the second time in five weeks on the PGA Tour with another memorable shot in a playoff, this time a 3-wood to 7 feet on the fourth extra hole Sunday to beat Sam Burns in the RBC Canadian Open.
Fox won the Myrtle Beach Classic last month by chipping in for birdie to win a three-man playoff. This one on the TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley took a little longer.
Advertisement
What turned out to be the winning shot might be more memorable. Fox smoked a 3-wood that landed softly just left of the pin and settled 7 feet away. Burns pulled his 3-wood some 55 feet left of the front right pin. He ran his eagle putt 8 feet by and missed that one.
Fox missed his eagle try before tapping in for birdie.
Fox holed a birdie putt from just inside 18 feet on the par-5 18th in regulation for a 4-under 66 that allowed him to join Sam Burns at 18-under 262. Burns had finished some two hours earlier with a birdie on the final hole for a 62.
They played the 18th four more times — the PGA Tour moved the pin position from far left to front right after two extra holes — and there was nothing compelling about the extra holes.
Advertisement
Fox delivered the goods on the final hole and now has two wins in just over a month. The victory moved the 38-year-old Fox from No. 75 to No. 32 in the world, getting him into the U.S. Open next week for being among the top 60 in the world ranking.
LIV Golf League
GAINESVILLE, Va. (AP) — Joaquin Niemann of Chile won LIV Golf Virginia for his fourth victory in the Saudi-funded tour's first eight events of the season, closing with an 8-under 63 to beat Graeme McDowell (66) and Anirban Lahiri (68) by a stroke.
Niemann broke out of a logjam at the top with birdies on Nos. 14-17 and parred the par-4 18th to finish at 15-under 198 at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club. The 26-year-old Niemann also won this year in Australia, Singapore and Mexico. He has six career LIV victories after winning twice on the PGA Tour.
Advertisement
Bryson DeChambeau, preparing for his U.S. Open title defense at Oakmont, had a 65 to tie for fourth with Phil Mickelson (65) and Bubba Watson (67) at 13 under.
LPGA Tour
GALLOWAY, N.J. (AP) — Jennifer Kupcho closed with an 8-foot birdie putt in light rain to hold off Ilhee Lee in the ShopRite LPGA Classic, ending a drought of nearly three years without winning.
Kupcho, whose four LPGA Tour titles include a major at the Chevron Championship, birdied three of the last five holes for a 5-under 66. She took the lead with a 20-foot birdie putt from just off the green on the 14th, and avoided a playoff with the putt on 18.
Advertisement
Lee was the 36-hole leader going into the final round on a rain-soaked Bay Course at Seaview Hotel, so drenched that the par-3 17th was moved up to play only 76 yards. She had two early bogeys and shot 39 on the front to fall back.
But the South Korean finished strong, with five birdies on the back, including the last two holes, for a 68. It wasn't enough to catch Kupcho, who finished at 15-under 198 in one of only two LPGA events contested over 54 holes.
European Tour
AMSTERDAM (AP) — Connor Syme of Scotland captured his first European tour title when he held steady for a 1-under 70 for a two-shot victory over Joakim Lagergren on Sweden in the KLM Open.
Advertisement
Syme went into the final round with a two-shot lead and Lagergren never got any closer at The International course. The Swede was still in range with four holes to play, but Lagergren came up woefully short on the par-5 15th and took two to reach the green, making bogey.
Lagergren also missed an 8-foot par putt on the par-3 17th to fall four shots behind. He closed with an eagle for a 70.
Syme finished on 11-under 273 to win in his 182nd start on the European tour.
PGA Tour Champions
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — European Ryder Cup captains and teammates Darren Clarke and Thomas Bjorn won the American Family Insurance Championship, shooting a 7-under 64 in better-ball play for a four-stroke victory over four teams.
Advertisement
The tournament hosted by Steve Stricker — who tied for second with brother-in-law Mario Tiziani — switched to the team format this year, giving the PGA Tour Champions its only team event.
Clarke and Bjorn finished at 32-under 181 at TPC Wisconsin. They opened with a better-ball 59 and shot a 58 on Saturday in a scramble round.
The 56-year-old Clarke, from Northern Ireland, won for the fifth time on the 59-and-over tour. The 54-year-old Bjorn, from Denmark, won his first Champions title.
Striker and Tiziani closed with a 65 to match the teams of Alex Cejka-Soren Kjeldsen (59), Doug Barron-Dicky Pride (69) and Steve Flesch-Paul Goydos (64) at 28 under.
Advertisement
Korn Ferry Tour
GREER, S.C. (AP) — Austin Smotherman birdied three of his last four holes and closed with a 4-under 67 for a three-shot victory in the BMW Charity Pro-Am on the Korn Ferry Tour.
Smotherman won for the second time on the Korn Ferry Tour, his other title coming in 2021 during a season that first sent him to the PGA Tour. This win moves him to No. 4 on the Korn Ferry points list. He finished at 25-under 260.
Sebastian Cappelen (66), Pierceson Coody (67) and Carl Yuan (71) tied for second.
Yuan had a one-shot lead to start the final round and opened with four birdies in seven holes. But he made two double bogeys in a three-hole stretch around the turn and never caught up.
Advertisement
Other tours
Samantha Wagner closed with 7-under 65 for a two-shot victory over Sophia Schubert in the FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship on the Epson Tour. ... Taiga Semikawa birdied two of his last three holes for a 5-under 66, and then birdied the first playoff hole against Mikumu Horikawa to win the BMW Japan Golf Tour Championship Mori Building Cup. It was his first Japan Golf Tour win in two years. ... Felix Mory of France closed with a 2-under 69 and made birdie on the first playoff hole against Santiago Tarrio to win the Swiss Challenge on the Challenge Tour. ... Sara Kouskova of the Czech Republic had a bogey and double bogey late in the final round and then held on with three pars for a 1-under 71 and a one-shot victory in Tenerife Women's Open on the Ladies European Tour. ... Samuel Simpson won his first Sunshine Tour title when he rallied from a six-shot deficit with a 3-under 69 to win the Mopani Zambia Open over Herman Loubser, who shot 76. ... Aihi Takano pulled away with an 8-under 64 for a four-shot victory over Min-Young Lee in the Yonex Ladies on the Japan LPGA. ... Gayoung Lee won a three-way playoff in the Celltrion Queens Masters on the Korea LPGA, making birdie on each of the extra holes to defeat Shihyun Kim and Jinseon Han.
___
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


New York Times
32 minutes ago
- New York Times
Yankees had a chance to bury Red Sox's season but failed: 3 takeaways
NEW YORK — There's not much that Jazz Chisholm Jr. wouldn't say with a microphone in his face, but what Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Hunter Dobbins said was one of those moments that the New York Yankees' third baseman would have stayed quiet. Dobbins told Red Sox writer Gabrielle Starr that if the Yankees were the last team to give him a contract, he'd retire. It was an audacious comment for a rookie to make before making his debut in the Yankees-Red Sox rivalry on the road at Yankee Stadium, in what is always a hostile environment when the two clubs play. Advertisement 'I don't think I would ever say that,' Chisholm said before Sunday's game. 'I feel like that closes doors, but I like it, though. I like the competitiveness. It adds a lot of spiciness. You enjoy it. You're more locked in as a fan because you know what's going on. It's fun.' For a moment, it looked like Dobbins' outing on Sunday Night Baseball would go off the rails. Ben Rice led off the game with a single, and Aaron Judge followed by blasting a 436-foot opposite-field two-run home run. Judge said the only player he could remember saying something similarly to Dobbins' comment was Ken Griffey Jr., who repeatedly stated throughout his career that he would never play for the Yankees. Judge said Dobbins' remark was in his head when he stepped in the batter's box in the first inning. 'I was a little surprised,' Judge said. The Judge sentenced this ball to exile. #AllRise — New York Yankees (@Yankees) June 8, 2025 But to Dobbins' credit, he settled in after Judge's blast. Dobbins held the Yankees to just four hits and three runs across five innings. Boston manager Alex Cora took Dobbins out after just 64 pitches because he did not want the rookie facing the top of the Yankees' order for a third time. Chisholm posted 'free smoke' on his Instagram account before Sunday's game, referencing the free motivation the Yankees would have from Dobbins' comments, but the only smoke in the Bronx came from Boston's bats. They hit five home runs and won 11-7, taking two of three games from the Yankees this weekend. This was the first time Boston won back-to-back games since May 24. The Yankees could have buried the Red Sox's season this weekend. Boston entered this series sputtering and dealt with constant cries from the fan base to call up No. 1 prospect Roman Anthony to provide a spark, but it leaves New York with a bit of momentum after falling behind in the division by 10.5 games after Friday night's loss. It's still a long shot for the Red Sox to win the AL East, but being down 8.5 games rather than potentially 12.5 games is quite the difference. Advertisement 'They beat us here this weekend,' Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. 'It's part of it. We'll regroup into the off day. We're off to Kansas City and, obviously, back to Boston to get ourselves right back on track.' Here are two more takeaways from this series: The Yankees miss Luke Weaver. Losing their most important reliever for several weeks because of a pulled hamstring is shining a light on some of the cracks the bullpen currently has. We mentioned Ian Hamilton not being the same in Saturday's story, but add Jonathan Loáisiga to that group, too. It's a small sample but Loáisiga has allowed four home runs in 10 innings pitched this season. It's already the second-most home runs he's allowed in a single season in any year of his career. His biggest issue is that he doesn't have the same level of command as he had in 2023, and he's not getting the same elite movement on his signature pitch. The hope is that Loáisiga will regain form with more innings coming off of elbow surgery, but it should give the front office some concern because it's not a given that a pitcher will return to form in his first season back from a major injury. Story's turn!!! — Red Sox (@RedSox) June 9, 2025 'Stuff-wise, he's where he needs to be,' Boone said. It's a small sample, but his sinker still grades out as elite, according to Stuff+, which measures the physical characteristics of a pitch. But, his sinker currently has the lowest Stuff+ of his career. For now, Loáisiga needs lower-leverage outings while he sorts through his issues. The Yankees have the 15th-best bullpen ERA. A key factor for their inflated ERA? They are walking too many hitters. Their bullpen's walk percentage is the eighth-worst in MLB, and no current playoff team has a worse walk percentage than the Yankees. They need at least one new bullpen arm at the trade deadline. Advertisement Don't look now, but DJ LeMahieu has a 103 wRC+ entering the Kansas City series. I did not see him being much of a positive contributor, considering his concerning downward trajectory over the past few seasons. Now it is a small sample (69 plate appearances), but the Yankees will take any positive contribution from him that they can get. He's now 9 for his last 21, including a double and a home run over his last six games. What's interesting about LeMahieu's start to his 2025 season is he entered Sunday's game with the highest average exit velocity, barrel percentage and average launch angle of his career. Those are three major positives and would be interesting developments if they can stick over a larger sample. It's too early to make any sweeping conclusions on LeMahieu as a player, but it's worth keeping an eye on because if they can get simply league-average production out of him, it would be an unexpected contribution and could impact their trade deadline decisions. (Photo of Jazz Chisholm Jr. reacting after striking out in the eighth inning on Sunday: John Jones / Imagn Images)


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Jeevan Badwal scores 1st MLS goal, Whitecaps beat short-handed Sounders 3-0
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Jeevan Badwal scored his first career goal in the 40th minute, Daniel Ríos added his first goal of the season and the Vancouver Whitecaps beat the Seattle Sounders 2-0 on Sunday night to extend their unbeaten streak to 10 games. Nouhou Tolo — known simply as 'Nouhou' — and Jon Bell were shown a red cards in the 51st minute and 55th minutes and Seattle (7-6-5) played two-men down the rest of the way.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Club World Cup team guide – Chelsea: Expensively assembled fringe contenders or a serious threat?
FIFA Club World Cup champions in 2022, Chelsea are relishing the chance to make history by winning the first edition of Gianni Infantino's expanded tournament in the United States. Group D opponents Los Angeles FC, Flamengo and Esperanto de Tunis will inspire little fear in Enzo Maresca's expensively assembled squad, but even if they match expectations and advance as winners, the degree of difficulty will rise sharply in the knockout stage for a club emerging from two seasons outside the UEFA Champions League. Chelsea are determined to show the best version of themselves in the Club World Cup, and not just because of the lucrative financial rewards on offer. This tournament also presents a golden opportunity to reclaim their seat at elite club football's top table after a bumpy few years. Follow the Club World Cup on The Athletic this summer… A stirring end to the season has Chelsea feeling very good about themselves as they head to the United States. Maresca's young team ground out the results they needed to secure a fourth-place finish on the final day of the Premier League campaign, then justified their status as overwhelming favourites to win the UEFA Conference League with a comprehensive dismantling of Real Betis in the final in Wroclaw. Advertisement Chelsea's group stage opposition at the Club World Cup may remind them of the level of team they faced in the Conference League en route to beating Betis. It will certainly be closer to that than to the weekly examinations that Maresca's side encounter in the Premier League, which may allow them to ease their way into their best rhythm. It would be foolish to discount Chelsea as threats to win the competition — this is a club who have won every major domestic and European honour and their golden age lasted for much of the first quarter of this century. But with different owners, a relatively inexperienced coach and the youngest squad in the competition, they are best classified as fringe contenders. Chelsea qualified for this summer's Club World Cup by lifting the Champions League in May 2021. That triumph in Porto feels like a lifetime ago, given just how much has happened at Stamford Bridge since: sanctions, a club sale and an almost total overhaul on and off the pitch. Club captain Reece James is the only surviving member of that team in Maresca's squad. In the first three years of its ownership, the consortium led by Clearlake Capital and Todd Boehly has moved fast and broken things. Virtually every trace of the Roman Abramovich era has gone and the revolution has been painful, with Chelsea plummeting to 12th in the Premier League in 2022-23 and finishing sixth in 2023-24 while spending aggressively on transfers. A fourth-placed finish this season, coupled with a first trophy for Clearlake and Boehly to celebrate, creates the impression that the new Chelsea that will grace the Club World Cup stage is ready to compete again, even if it looks nothing like the old one. Chelsea play a Pep Guardiola-influenced style: a possession-focused, positional game. The nominal starting formation is a standard 4-3-3 but one of Maresca's full-backs will usually 'invert', often into the base of midfield and sometimes into one of the attacking half-spaces. In possession, the goal is for Chelsea to arrange themselves with a three-man defence and a three-man attack with a midfield box between them, creating the possibility for overloads around opposing formations. The goalkeeper is also encouraged to act as an '11th outfielder' in possession to facilitate playing out through and around pressure. Maresca's aim is to control games by creating numerical superiority on the ball. Maresca has risen fast to the Chelsea job. A midfielder who enjoyed a decorated but nomadic playing career, he was encouraged to go into coaching by Manuel Pellegrini when the two men were at Malaga in 2011. Seven years later, Pellegrini got Maresca on to a Premier League touchline, hiring the Italian as part of his backroom staff at West Ham United. No wonder, then, that Maresca still calls Pellegrini his 'professional dad'. Guardiola, however, has been every bit as impactful on his coaching journey, both in the season Maresca spent coaching Manchester City's elite development squad to the Premier League 2 title in 2020-21 and in Maresca's experience as Guardiola's assistant in the 2022-23 treble-winning campaign. Advertisement Those stints at City bookended a short, failed spell as coach of Parma and primed Maresca for his next opportunity to strike out on his own. He made the most of it, guiding Leicester City to promotion from the Championship as title winners in 2023-24 and attracting admirers among the Chelsea hierarchy in the process. Maresca was a bold choice to succeed Mauricio Pochettino at Stamford Bridge, and his first season at Chelsea had plenty of challenges — not least the open hostility of supporters less than enamoured with his style of play at times. But he delivered a top-four Premier League finish and a trophy, and comes into the Club World Cup in a strong position. He may have looked out of sorts for much of 2025, but Cole Palmer remains the undisputed star of this Chelsea team. That reality was underlined by his thrilling assists for the two goals that turned the Conference League final on its head: the first a beautiful in-swinging cross with his left foot on to the head of Enzo Fernandez, the second a brilliant turn followed by a pinpoint delivery with his right to meet Nicolas Jackson's run to the near post. 'I was just sick of getting the ball and going backwards and sideways,' Palmer explained after the match. He is the only Chelsea player capable of changing a game simply at his whim. There are a number of candidates given the youth of Chelsea's squad, but the player most supporters will be intrigued to watch in the U.S. is Andrey Santos. The dynamic Brazilian has blossomed on loan at BlueCo sister club Strasbourg and could bring some much-needed physicality and goal threat to Maresca's midfield. Chelsea fans have cultivated a vibrant repertoire of songs about their team, individual players and rival clubs over their long history. One particularly rousing supporter anthem is Carefree, bellowed to the tune of the English hymn Lord of the Dance': Carefree, wherever you may be, We are the famous CFC, And we don't give a f**k, Whoever you may be, Cos we are the famous CFC. Four years ago, when The Athletic asked this precise question of Chelsea fans on X, the answer was emphatic, with Tottenham Hotspur garnering 58.6 per cent of the vote. Spurs serve both as Chelsea's favourite punchline and their preferred punching bag. It's one of football's stranger rivalries that dates back to the 1960s, when Tottenham — with the help of Chelsea youth products Jimmy Greaves and Terry Venables — triumphed in a 1967 FA Cup final meeting and were seen as the more glamorous and successful club. The roles have long since reversed, but the animosity endures. Chelsea were the first club (along with Arsenal) to wear numbered shirts for a league match, against Swansea Town on August 25, 1928. Chelsea have not been the neutral's easiest choice since the 1990s, when they charmed with Gianfranco Zola and a cosmopolitan collective of charismatic veterans. Abramovich's disruptive billions instead made them compelling villains and the vast transfer spending of Clearlake and Boehly has done little to endear them to anyone not affiliated with Stamford Bridge. But if you want a reason to cheer for Chelsea, just watch Palmer. His nonchalant genius is of the Gianfranco Zola lineage, and forms the essence of why football is worth your time. (All kick-offs ET/BST) (Top photos: Eurasia Sport Images, Charlotte Wilson/Getty; design: Kelsea Petersen/The Athletic)