Leona Maguire paired with Áine Donegan and Anna Nordqvist at Women's Irish Open
The trio will tee off in their first round on Thursday morning at 9am, starting on the 10th hole at Carton House.
Maguire comes into the tournament after finishing in a tie for 18th place alongside Jennifer Kupcho at the Dow Championship last weekend, having led at the halfway point. The Cavan native also earned a top-20 finish at the Women's PGA Championship in Texas.
Meanwhile, Sara Byrne is in a group with English duo Charley Hull and Georgia Hall for the Irish Women's Open. They will tee off at 2pm from the first hole.
Advertisement
Read the full list of tee times here
Hashtags

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


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
Women's Open: Leona Maguire makes cut but well behind leader Yamashita
Leona Maguire was the only of the three Irish players to make the cut at the Women's Open at Royal Porthcawl but her second round of 73 left her 12 shots off the lead on one over. Maguire failed to ignite with only one birdie on the day, as Lauren Walsh agonisingly missed the cut by one stroke after a 75. Anna Foster was well off the pace at 11 over. Seaside golf can meddle with the most patient of characters. Lottie Woad had played herself firmly into the second-round mix at this Women's Open at five under par, but the 16th at Royal Porthcawl was to bite back at English golf's golden girl. Woad's second shot found trouble – it took Lydia Ko, one of Woad's playing partners, to find the ball – and her third swing barely caused any movement whatsoever. Woad called for a referee, plus a second opinion, in her belief that her ball was now embedded and worthy of free relief. With the claims refused, she had to declare the ball unplayable. This grisly affair eventually culminated in a triple-bogey seven and a round of 70 which for so long had looked like further demonstrating Woad's rapid ascent to the summit of her sport. READ MORE 'There was a lot more good in it than bad,' said Woad. 'I played really well for 17 holes, just that one hole cost me a bit. 'I think it's probably the toughest hole on the course. The tee shot is hard to hit the fairway and then you've got three wood into a very strong wind. Anything that's missing the target is going to be exaggerated. So I pushed it and got a pretty unlucky lie. It wasn't too thick around there apart from where I was. So I couldn't really do much with that.' Woad admitted she was disappointed that officialdom had declared that her ball was not embedded. 'I just had to forget about it as quickly as possible,' she added. Woad missed from four feet for a birdie at the last, meaning she remains nine adrift of the lead. By her own admission, and even owing for the vagaries of links, that may already be too far. The broader problem for Woad and all others is that Miyu Yamashita has taken quite a grip on this tournament. The Japanese player's 65 launched her to 11 under, meaning a three-shot lead over her compatriot Rio Takeda. Yamashita's bogey-free round included a stunning back nine of 32. Close inspection of Yamashita's form indicates her prominence in Wales should be no real surprise. While the terrain might be somewhat different from what the 23-year-old is used to, jousting at the summit of leaderboards appears second nature. She has won 13 times on the Japan Tour and had 43 top-three finishes since April 2021. In this, her rookie year on the LPGA Tour, she has recorded 10 top-20 finishes from 16 starts. Yamashita shares her name with a Japanese wrestler, which must lead to some interesting moments when observers are punching letters into Google. The golfing Yamashita missed the cut in the Women's Open last year. She appears on a mission to make up for that. Lindy Duncan's 70 moved her to four under, where she has Pajaree Anannarukarn and Chiara Tamburlini for company. Madelene Sagström moved into touching distance of the group behind Yamashita, the Swede's 69 meaning a three-under total at the 36-hole point. At two under, Porthcawl member Darcey Harry comfortably survived for the weekend. The world number one, Nelly Korda, like Woad and Harry, is at minus two, while there was a golden moment for Steph Kyriacou, who made a hole in one with her gap wedge at the 8th.


RTÉ News
3 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Leona Maguire makes cut at AIG Women's Open as Japan's Miyu Yamashita breezes clear at windy Porthcawl
Ireland's Leona Maguire carded a steady second round of one-over-par, 73 to safely make it to the weekend at the AIG Women's Open in tough conditions at Royal Porthcawl. Maguire sits at one-over-par, and is 12 shots back of 36-hole leader Miyu Yamashita who took control of the tournament during the morning's play. The Cavan golfer grinded it out on the Welsh links making just one birdie and two bogeys to ensure she would be around for the weekend. There was disappointment however for fellow Irish golfers Lauren Walsh and Anna Foster who failed to make the cut. Walsh missed out by just one shot after an eventful round that featured seven bogeys and four birdies, but her three-over-par total means she will miss out, while Foster shot a second round of 79 to finish at 11-over-par. Japan's Miyu Yamashita will take a three shot lead into the weekend after a flawless round of seven-under-par 65 in the best of the conditions this morning. The 20-year-old made the most of her early tee time and carded seven birdies with no bogeys as she goes in search of her first major win. Fellow Japanese star Rio Takeda, who was in the same group as Yamashita, is solo second on eight-under-par, with a chasing group on minus four.


Irish Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Katie Taylor's father Pete confirms her relationship status after reconciliation
Pete Taylor has confirmed that his daughter Katie is now married. It follows speculation that the boxing superstar had been wed, having been photographed wearing a ring on her left hand in the build-up to her trilogy win over Amanda Serrano last month. "Ever since the fight there with Katie, people are seeing the two of us back together, even some of the s*** you hear about that," Pete told James English on his podcast 'Anything Goes'. "I was reading somewhere that Katie Taylor never got married because of her father, he wouldn't let married, you know, and I'm thinking, 'where are you getting this s*** from?'". Taylor senior also opened up to English about the family rift that saw Katie remove him from her coaching team ahead of the Rio Olympics in 2016 - and after the high of winning gold at London 2012 "I split with Katie's ma two years, maybe a year after the Olympics," Taylor said. "Katie's really into her faith as well and I just remember Katie coming down to the boxing club and she says, 'I just don't want you in the corner, you and ma are not together'. "I'm married now to Karen, and Karen's the same age as Katie and everybody was saying Pete's turned around for Katie's best friend, but they didn't even know each other. Katie Taylor wearing a ring on her left ring finger as she faces off with Amanda Serrano earlier this month (Image: (Photo by)) "In social media and in the papers it was, 'Katie Taylor's best friend'. For me it's an insult, it sounds like 'Katie's been best friends with this girl since her childhood, you've bleedin' groomed her'. But she didn't know her, but that grows legs then. Just rumours and rumours and rumours. "She has such morals, she has such faith and thinks that when you're married you should be together for life. It killed me now, but I had to respect it because she did a documentary after and said, 'when I went training it was like I was fighting with only one hand because my da wasn't there'. She knew what the consequences would be, she lost in the Olympics in 2016 in Rio." Pete explained that it was a tough time and claimed he had been portrayed as a villain by the Irish media. "We weren't really speaking," he said of his relationship with Katie around the Rio Games. "It was tough for both of us but that's life. "Because we were always together it was a big thing in the newspapers, you'd think I was the only person who ever split up a marriage and when Katie got beaten I was painted as the villain. It made me a pure villain in Ireland but that's life, they used to make up stories about me on a bad news day. It was tough at the time." He also described the build-up and contests at London 2012 as a very pressurised time. "She's not lost in 17 major competitions or something, and if we silver medal it would have been a disappointment for everybody in Ireland, and Ireland was going through a bad time," he recalled. "There was the financial crash in Ireland and everybody was depressed and I felt the hopes of Ireland were on the shoulders of the two of us. And there's banners all over Dublin saying Katie Taylor, gold medal London, she'll win a gold medal. Jesus, some pressure it was. "It was not enjoyable. The Olympics was not one bit enjoyable - it was just pressure. You know, even after Katie won the goal, for me, it was just relief." Get the latest sports headlines straight to your inbox by signing up for free email .