logo
Aussie golf's renowned long bomber Lincoln Tighe could be about to end a decade-long drought at the PNG Open

Aussie golf's renowned long bomber Lincoln Tighe could be about to end a decade-long drought at the PNG Open

News.com.au2 days ago
It's been more than a decade since he last won a world rankings event, but big-hitting Lincoln Tighe wants to validate years of persistence when he tries to fend off a host of challengers on the final day of the Papua New Guinea Open.
The Wollongong-based Tighe, whose last professional win came at the NSW PGA Championship in 2014, has long been renowned as one of the power hitters on the PGA Tour of Australasia circuit – and clearly has found a course which fits his game.
The 35-year-old fought his way to a one-shot lead after the third round in Port Moresby, trying to break one of the longest active winning droughts on tour.
It's not as if Tighe hasn't been competitive in recent years – and he had a successful Pro-Am stint during the off-season – but wins have been hard to find and he won't have a better chance than the first event of the new campaign in PNG.
Tighe (-9) signed for a one-under 71 in his third round on Saturday, opening up a one-shot cushion from a quartet of chasers, including Queensland's Gavin Fairfax and Will Florimo, Victoria's Joel Mitchell and NSW's Corey Lamb, who were all at eight-under.
Tighe's best career performance was when he tied for fifth behind Matt Jones at the 2015 Australian Open, launching bombs off the tee at the famed The Australian course, and speaking about his dad's career as a jeweller in interviews afterwards.
Tighe will be hoping there will be another engraver on standby if he can crack a long-awaited win in the Pacific.
'It feels good,' Tighe said. 'I've been over here a lot of times now and played the course. I feel quite comfortable out there and know where to hit it.
'It would mean a lot (to win). Last year I had new things in my life, my little boy came along and (I want) to support my wife and she supports me. Last year was rough (on the course), but I kept my job, which was OK. A win would be great and it's been a while since my last one.'
Florimo and Lamb played in the final group during the third round, but both couldn't replicate the highs of their opening 36 holes with one-over 73s.
Jordan Doull, Andrew Campbell and Ben Henkel were all two shots shy of Tighe at seven-under on a congested leaderboard.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cory Crawford's epic final round comeback to win PNG Open
Cory Crawford's epic final round comeback to win PNG Open

News.com.au

time18 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Cory Crawford's epic final round comeback to win PNG Open

Cory Crawford launched one of the biggest final day comebacks in the recent history of the PGA Tour of Australasia, running away with the Papua New Guinea Open. The Queenslander started the final day five shots behind solo leader Lincoln Tighe, but breezed to a four-shot win thanks to a sparkling seven-under 65 in Port Moresby. It was his second win on tour in less than a year after claiming the Victorian PGA in late 2024, an event tinged with controversy when Anthony Quayle was penalised seven strokes in his opening round for mistakenly playing preferred lies before charging home on championship day. There was little doubt about Crawford's victory this time, the 32-year-old reeling in the leaders quickly with five birdies on the front nine and watching others falter as he finished at 11-under for the tournament. It was the second time he has won the PNG Open, his other success coming in 2017. 'It feels really good,' Crawford said. 'The first time (I won in PNG) I had no idea what I was doing. This time it was really structured and means a lot more because so much has gone into it. 'To win a golf tournament is so hard, as everyone knows. To win this is really special. My mindset was aggressive. I put a lot of pressure on myself to be able to shoot a good number to try to win this thing. That's all I was thinking for the whole day.' Tighe's wait for a first PGA Tour of Australasia win in more than decade goes on, signing for a disappointing two-over 74 to finish at seven-under for the event. He was in a tie for second at seven-under alongside Zach Ion (67), Jake McLeod (71), Ben Henkel (72) and Will Florimo (73). Crawford only started the tournament with a pair of even-par 72s, but clicked into gear on the weekend for a 68-65 finish to claim the season-opening event. The second stop on tour will be Darwin for the Northern Territory PGA later this month.

Warriors star handed ban after controversial NRL thriller
Warriors star handed ban after controversial NRL thriller

News.com.au

timea day ago

  • News.com.au

Warriors star handed ban after controversial NRL thriller

Dragons coach Shane Flanagan has claimed he no longer knows the rules after a crucial Adam Pompey try which set up the Warriors' round 24 win. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer > But the win has come at a cost for the Warriors, with Jackson Ford dealt a three-match early-plea ban by the judiciary for a crusher tackle on Allan Corey in the 23rd minute. The suspension will be four weeks if unsuccessfully challenged. Ford will miss the rest of the regular season irrespective of if he accepts the three-game ban. The Dragons fought tooth and nail in the Go Media Stadium clash, forcing a fluid forward rotation after losing three players – Jack de Belin, Hamish Stewart and Hame Sele – across two first half incidents. They still led 10-4 at the break, after a Mathew Feagai double, then were forced into a mountain of defence as they hung against the top four Warriors side. A sweeping backline play in the 63rd minute drew Flanagan's ire, as Dragons five-eighth Lyhkan King-Togia appealed for an obstruction penalty after being impeded by Marata Niukore, with Pompey crossing outside his second-row teammate. The footage was heavily scrutinised by the Bunker before being awarded, but that didn't sit well with Flanagan. 'What was an obstruction last week wasn't one this week,' he said. 'I've started playing footy when I was four years old; I don't know the rules anymore, I deadset don't know the rules. 'It's tough. We are a tough club, this is a tough unit, a connected unit, and we'll fight really hard for the next three weeks. 'Last week it was an obstruction, this week it was not. 'The boys asked out on the field numerous times and they just got shooed away. It's frustrating.' Pompey scored a second try 10 minutes later to put the Warriors up 14-10 with seven minutes to play, and while the Dragons had a late chance to score it amounted to nothing. They lost forwards duo Stewart and de Belin in the 14th minute after a sickening head clash, before Sele joined them in the sheds with a category 1 concussion in the 29th minute. Shane Flanagan opted against using his 18th man – winger Tyrell Sloan – until the 67th minute, leaving the remaining forwards with a mountain of work and more minutes than any would have planned for. Damien Cook made a staggering 61 tackles, David Klemmer made 36 and ran for 151 metres, and Jacob Liddle also made 35 tackles among the monstrous efforts across the pack. Fullback Clint Gutherson moved to lock to accommodate Sloan's arrival, while Cook spent time at prop, amid numerous positional tweaks as Flanagan was forced to rotate one forward in the most limited of interchange benches. Pompey crosses the line for the Warriors! ðŸ'° Watch #NRLWarriorsDragons LIVE on ch.502 or stream on Kayo: âœ�ï¸� BLOG ðŸ'¢ MATCH CENTRE â€' Fox League (@FOXNRL) August 15, 2025 DRAGONS CARNAGE Jack de Belin's 250th NRL game didn't quite go the way he planned. He and Stewart attempted a tackle on Warriors prop James Fisher-Harris, who slipped by just a moment too fast for the Dragons duo. Their heads collided, as Stewart copped a cut along the hairline and de Belin crashed backwards to the turf. 'What a disaster for the Dragons given the positive opening they've had to this game,' said Warren Smith on Fox League. The Dragons led 4-0 at the time of the incident, but it got worse for the Dragons in the 29th minute after replacement forward Sele was also knocked out. Sele, who entered the game in place of Stewart, went low to tackle Dallin Watene-Zelezniak but caught the Warriors winger's hip. You can't stop Feagai! ðŸ'Š ðŸ'° Watch #NRLWarriorsDragons LIVE on ch.502 or stream on Kayo: âœ�ï¸� BLOG ðŸ'¢ MATCH CENTRE â€' Fox League (@FOXNRL) August 15, 2025 DOING IT TOUGH The Warriors were far from their best, but the fact they found a way to win was enough to keep coach Andrew Webster happy – just. Two weeks ago they were done by the Dolphins on the siren, whereas this week they snuffed out the Dragons' last-gasp attempt to pinch victory. It's that result that gives Webster some solace. 'We're killing ourselves still, but tonight I think it was whatever it takes, we're not walking away without the points,' Webster said.

Australian cricket captain Pat Cummins champions kids' literacy
Australian cricket captain Pat Cummins champions kids' literacy

News.com.au

time2 days ago

  • News.com.au

Australian cricket captain Pat Cummins champions kids' literacy

No stranger to breaking records, Australian cricket captain Pat Cummins weighed in on the Prime Minister's Spelling Bee this week after the national spelling challenge broke all previous records for student, teacher and school registrations. With over 73,500 students now registered by over 3000 teachers at nearly 1400 schools, Cummins credited his teacher mum with instilling his own lifelong belief in the power of childhood literacy skills. When he and wife Becky welcomed their first child, son Albie in 2021, Cummins became a UNICEF Australia Ambassador because being a father 'changed everything'. 'Now as our family grows (with the birth of daughter Edith in February), so does my sense of responsibility to make sure we are building the right foundations for both of our children,' he said. The legendary fast bowler said challenges like the PM's Spelling Bee 'make learning exciting by turning it into a fun and fast-paced game'. 'The best part is that kids don't even realise how much they're taking in while they play,' he said. 'So, they're getting something good for them, which is spelling and literacy, but in a way they can enjoy.' With Albie nearly four and Edith already six months' old, Cummins said children's early years were 'when their little minds are taking in the world around them and shaping the rest of their lives'. 'It's in these years where education begins, with every bedtime story we read to them, every curious question and every proud recital of the alphabet,' Cummins said. Education was such a strong force in the Cummins family thanks to his mum's vocation, so the cricketer 'grew up understanding how powerful it can be.' Through his adult education came the knowledge that many children were not given that same chances in life. Travels through famously cricket-mad India have evolved from Cummins simply enjoying being a superstar of the game to visiting UNICEF programs for children. 'I've seen the barriers that still stand in the way of learning – such as poverty, or just the fact of being a girl,' he said. 'In Hyderabad, I visited schools where initiatives are underway to help keep girls in education, giving them the skills but also the confidence to set up their futures. Because the reality for these girls in India is that over half will have left school before Year 10. 'I saw these young minds diving into creative problem-solving, STEM, even 3D printing – their imagination alive, and their enthusiasm contagious.' But mastery of such complex subjects, he said, would be impossible without foundation literacy. 'Reading opens the doors to knowledge – letting children understand new ideas, be able to express them and find ways to make sense of a range of topics,' he said. 'It's the basis for a lifetime of learning and without it, can leave other forms of education out of reach.' The Hyderabad experience really brought home to him how important foundation literacy was for all Australian kids. 'Without it, they aren't given the chance to discover their full potential,' Cummins said. 'It's something we can't afford to ignore.' With his Howzat Pat children's book series out now, Cummins said he grew up loving adventures in books just as much as he loved playing backyard cricket with his brothers. 'Working on (Howzat Pat) … I want to encourage Albie and Edi, like my parents encouraged me, to have that same love of sport, curiosity and reading all at once – and I hope the books encourage the same thing for all kids across the country.' With the PM's Spelling Bee 'making the learning part of the everyday fun', Cummins said combining education with play was 'a huge win – no matter what the result is'. 'As a parent myself, I know how powerful this kind of learning can be,' he said. 'You can see their curiosity, they're building their confidence, and it also gives them a real sense of achievement.' UNICEF Australia head of policy and advocacy Katie Maskiell said it went further than reading and writing being the building blocks of education – they're every child's right. 'If a child can learn to read and write, they are allowed curiosity, confidence and a voice,' she said. 'Every minute spent learning brings a child closer to a brighter future, and every child deserves that chance, no matter what.' UNICEF currently works in 190 countries creating access to education in circumstances unimaginable to most children here in the Lucky Country. Elsewhere, millions of kids are living in poverty and war zones, amid floods and earthquakes, or in places where simply being a girl means no classroom access. 'UNICEF knows education is a beacon of hope for these children,' Ms Maskiell said. Run by free classroom literacy resource Kids News, registrations and the school round of the Prime Minister's Spelling Bee close at 5pm AEST on Friday 22 August. Visit ABOUT THE BEE â—� The Prime Minister's Spelling Bee is a free, online competition for students in Years 3-8. â—� Students compete at their school in three levels: Green level for Years 3-4, Orange level for Years 5-6 and Red level for Years 7-8. â—� They get 30 randomly selected words from their competition level and have 25 seconds to type each answer. The students with the most correct words in the fastest time progress to finals. â—� Teachers can register their students until August 22, when the school round ends. â—� State and territory finals will be held September 1-5 and the national finals on September 10-11. â—� The national champion in each age group wins a trip to Canberra to meet the Prime Minister, an iPad, HarperCollins book pack and a $1000 voucher for their school.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store