
K.H. Lee (back) withdraws from Houston Open
The 33-year-old South Korea native carded a 5-over 75 in Thursday's first round at Memorial Park Golf Course.
Lee's eventful opening round included four birdies, five bogeys and two double bogeys.
Lee has two career wins on the PGA Tour, both coming at the AT&T Byron Nelson in 2021 and 2022.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Report: Bryson DeChambeau eyes pre-Ryder Cup PGA Tour event
August 16 - Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley wants his team to play together in a PGA Tour event before the United States hosts Team Europe at Bethpage Black Course in New York beginning Sept. 26. And that includes Bryson DeChambeau, who has yet to clinch an automatic qualifier spot for the team but stands in great position to do so. But there's just one problem with DeChambeau joining the hoped-for Ryder Cup outing at the Procore Championship from Sept. 11-14 in Napa, Calif. As a member of the LIV Golf circuit, DeChambeau is suspended from the PGA Tour. But he told Sports illustrated on Friday that he'd like to take part. "That's up to the Tour and their decision to make," he said after his opening-round 67 at LIV Golf Indianapolis, where he is vying to lock up third place for the LIV season. "It's on them if they don't let us become together as a team and play." A PGA Tour spokesperson confirmed to Sports Illustrated that DeChambeau is not eligible to play. DeChambeau's agent, Brett Falkoff, told the publication that the player has not formally asked to play in a PGA Tour event but that he "plans to participate in every team gathering that he is permitted to attend." DeChambeau, 31, said LIV leadership would allow him to play at the Procore. LIV Golf members who qualify for majors are allowed to play in those PGA Tour-sanctioned events. DeChambeau played in all four in 2025, missing the cut at the U.S. Open and finishing in the Top 10 in the other three: T5 at the Masters, T2 at the PGA and T10 at The Open Championship. --Field Level Media


The Herald Scotland
8 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Robert MacIntyre leads BMW Championship by five shots
That left him five clear of world number one Scottie Scheffler, who carded a 65 to sit one ahead of Sweden's Ludvig Aberg. Bobby Mac woke up feeling dangerous. — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) August 15, 2025 MacIntyre birdied the first after a fine approach to inside five feet, before further gains from 14 feet at the fourth and seven feet at the seventh. He picked up another shot at the 11th after driving the green at the par four, holed from 30 feet at the 14th and completed his scoring by reaching the par-five 16th in two and two-putting for birdie as he chases a third PGA Tour title. 'I've always said when I'm comfortable with a putter in my hands, it's a dangerous thing,' MacIntyre said in quotes reported on the PGA Tour website. 'The priority is getting that putter face as square as I can at impact, which is not rocket science, but it's difficult to do. 'For me, that's the priority now, just to go and do that. Then when you get in a certain range, it's all pace putting and touch, and my touch is normally pretty good. 'I feel like this week I've really done a good job of getting it underneath the hole to be able to be aggressive with an uphill putt.' 📢 2025 #BMWCHAMPS Round 3 Tee Times are here! — BMW Championship (@BMWchamps) August 15, 2025 England's Tommy Fleetwood, who had been second overnight, slipped into a tie for fifth with a second-round 69 in Maryland. Fleetwood's compatriot Harry Hall put himself just inside the projected cut mark for the season-ending Tour Championship as a 67 left him in a share of eighth place. Only the top 30 in the FedEx Cup standings will proceed to East Lake in Atlanta with Hall currently projected to climb 15 places and take the final spot in the field.


Scotsman
10 hours ago
- Scotsman
'It's a dangerous thing' - Flawless Bob MacIntyre extends lead in chase for third PGA Tour title
Scot moves five shots clear at halfway stage of BMW Championship Sign up to our Golf newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Bob MacIntyre surged into a five-shot lead at the halfway stage of the BMW Championship as he added a second-round 64 to his opening 62 at Caves Valley Golf Club. Scotland's MacIntyre produced six birdies in his flawless second round to reach 14 under in the second FedEx Cup play-off event. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad That left him five clear of world number one Scottie Scheffler, who carded a 65 to sit one ahead of Sweden's Ludvig Aberg. MacIntyre birdied the first after a fine approach to inside five feet, before further gains from 14 feet at the fourth and seven feet at the seventh. He picked up another shot at the 11th after driving the green at the par four, holed from 30 feet at the 14th and completed his scoring by reaching the par-five 16th in two and two-putting for birdie as he chases a third PGA Tour title and career-best $3.6million payday. Bob MacIntyre prepares to putt on the third green during the second round of the BMW Championship 2025 at Caves Valley Golf Club. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images 'I've always said when I'm comfortable with a putter in my hands, it's a dangerous thing,' MacIntyre said in quotes reported on the PGA Tour website. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'The priority is getting that putter face as square as I can at impact, which is not rocket science, but it's difficult to do. 'For me, that's the priority now, just to go and do that. Then when you get in a certain range, it's all pace putting and touch, and my touch is normally pretty good. 'I feel like this week I've really done a good job of getting it underneath the hole to be able to be aggressive with an uphill putt.' England's Tommy Fleetwood, who had been second overnight, slipped into a tie for fifth with a second-round 69 in Maryland. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Fleetwood's compatriot Harry Hall put himself just inside the projected cut mark for the season-ending Tour Championship as a 67 left him in a share of eighth place.