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Historic feat puts Adam Scott in mix for drought-breaking title at US Open

Historic feat puts Adam Scott in mix for drought-breaking title at US Open

7NEWS18 hours ago

Adam Scott is firmly in the mix to claim an elusive second major championship after finishing a brilliant US Open third round just one shot off the lead.
Super composed, Scott rebounded from a first-hole bogey with four birdies, including three on the back nine, in a stylish Saturday three-under-par 67 at the fearsome Oakmont Country Club.
Australia's former world No.1 is only the third player in US Open history to start with three rounds of 70 or better at the tournament's most demanding layout.
Curtis Strange achieved the feat in 1994 before Shane Lowry matched the record eight years ago.
Scott's 70-70-67 start leaves the 2013 Masters champion just one stroke behind American leader Sam Burns, who carded a one-under 69.
Fellow American JJ Spaun bogeyed the last hole in a round of 70 to join Scott at three under.
For much of the day, Scott hovered at even par before exploding with three birdies in the last six holes on 13, 14 and 17.
At 44, Scott is bidding to become the second-oldest US Open winner of since Hale Irwin in 1990.
Victory would also place the Australian in the history books for the longest wait by a player between their first and second major championship triumph.
'At this point, it's just all opportunity for me. I feel like there's all upside,' Scott said.
'I'm lucky. I've won a major. I'd love to win the US Open tomorrow. It's going to take a really great round of golf, something like what I did today, I believe, and fortunately the confidence is up so I should take advantage of it.'
And golf's most likeable elder statesman has experience on his side, with Scott the only major winner sitting inside the top 10 entering Sunday's final round (Monday AEST).
Contesting an extraordinary 96th consecutive major, Scott three-putted the opening hole in a deflating start.
But the veteran put the hiccup behind him to collect his first birdie of the day at the par-5 fourth hole.
Then he hit the go button down the stretch to be well-poised to break a five-year winless run since taking out the Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles in 2020.
'I played really solid today,' Scott said.
'Conditions were a lot softer, but there's still plenty of trouble to get in, and I drove it well off the tee. I was in most fairways, I would say.
'And the couple of times I missed, I managed to escape. So it was a good solid US Open round of golf.'
Norwegian Victor Hovland is outright fourth at one under after also shooting 70.
The quartet are the only players in red numbers.
Playing his first major since 2022, Monday qualifier Marc Leishman rocketed up the leaderboard with a birdie-filled round of 68 to be tied for 11th.
But the revitalised Australian looks a little too far back at four over and eight shots adrift of Burns, as is world No.1 Scottie Scheffler who could only manage an even-par third round after a wretched day on the greens.
Jason Day (72) is one shot further back in equal 21st.

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Soaring in Sweden: Olyslagers, Duplantis hit heights
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Soaring in Sweden: Olyslagers, Duplantis hit heights

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Queen of Queen's: Age no barrier for champ mum-of-two
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The 37-year-old mother-of-two claimed the biggest title of her career on Sunday to cap off the first women's tournament held at the historic west London venue in 52 years. It was a family affair for Maria, whose daughters, 11-year-old Charlotte and four-year-old Cecilia, joined her husband and coach Charles-Edouard Maria in the front row to watch her dispatch American Anisimova in one hour and 23 minutes. Maria, who knocked out top-20 players Karolina Muchova, Elena Rybakina and Madison Keys en route, becomes the oldest player ever to win a WTA 500 event and the most venerable in any tour singles event since 2020, when Serena Williams - who also returned to tennis after having children - won in Auckland at 38. "It means a lot to me, because I'm 37 years old and I won this trophy today," said Maria, who confirmed she would like her career to last for at least another two years so she can play doubles as soon as her eldest is eligible. 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It was a family affair for Maria, whose daughters, 11-year-old Charlotte and four-year-old Cecilia, joined her husband and coach Charles-Edouard Maria in the front row to watch her dispatch American Anisimova in one hour and 23 minutes. Maria, who knocked out top-20 players Karolina Muchova, Elena Rybakina and Madison Keys en route, becomes the oldest player ever to win a WTA 500 event and the most venerable in any tour singles event since 2020, when Serena Williams - who also returned to tennis after having children - won in Auckland at 38. "It means a lot to me, because I'm 37 years old and I won this trophy today," said Maria, who confirmed she would like her career to last for at least another two years so she can play doubles as soon as her eldest is eligible. "In the past, people were always saying, 'you're too old', but actually I'm a good example that even at my age, you can still win big trophies. "I'm super proud of myself that I could win this tournament, because I always believed, and my husband too. "That's why we kept going, because there was aways this belief that I could win big tournaments and do great things on the tour, so I'm really, really proud of this." Maria replaces Olga Morozova, who once coached a young Andy Murray after whom the club's centre court is now named, as the most recent female winner at Queen's. Fittingly, she marked the venue's new chapter by scribbling "queen of Queen's" on the TV camera lens. Maria entered this WTA 500 tournament at 86th in the rankings, but the triumph will catapult her to No.43 when they update on Monday -- when Emma Raducanu will also officially take over from Katie Boulter as British No.1. The 2022 German Wimbledon semi-finalist Maria won her first WTA title on grass at Mallorca in 2018, following it with back-to-back clay court trophies at Bogota in 2023. In the week's other WTA grass-court final at Rosmalen in the Netherlands, Belgian third seed Elise Mertens beat Romanian Elena-Gabriela Ruse 6-3 7-6 (7-4) to claim her second title of the year and her 10th in all. "It's been an incredible week," said Mertens, who had to dig deep to save 11 match points and overcome two-time winner Ekaterina Alexandrova in Saturday's semi-final. German qualifier Tatjana Maria has become the first woman to win a title at Queen's Club since 1973 after beating eighth seed Amanda Anisimova 6-3 6-4 on the Andy Murray Arena. The 37-year-old mother-of-two claimed the biggest title of her career on Sunday to cap off the first women's tournament held at the historic west London venue in 52 years. It was a family affair for Maria, whose daughters, 11-year-old Charlotte and four-year-old Cecilia, joined her husband and coach Charles-Edouard Maria in the front row to watch her dispatch American Anisimova in one hour and 23 minutes. Maria, who knocked out top-20 players Karolina Muchova, Elena Rybakina and Madison Keys en route, becomes the oldest player ever to win a WTA 500 event and the most venerable in any tour singles event since 2020, when Serena Williams - who also returned to tennis after having children - won in Auckland at 38. "It means a lot to me, because I'm 37 years old and I won this trophy today," said Maria, who confirmed she would like her career to last for at least another two years so she can play doubles as soon as her eldest is eligible. "In the past, people were always saying, 'you're too old', but actually I'm a good example that even at my age, you can still win big trophies. "I'm super proud of myself that I could win this tournament, because I always believed, and my husband too. "That's why we kept going, because there was aways this belief that I could win big tournaments and do great things on the tour, so I'm really, really proud of this." Maria replaces Olga Morozova, who once coached a young Andy Murray after whom the club's centre court is now named, as the most recent female winner at Queen's. Fittingly, she marked the venue's new chapter by scribbling "queen of Queen's" on the TV camera lens. Maria entered this WTA 500 tournament at 86th in the rankings, but the triumph will catapult her to No.43 when they update on Monday -- when Emma Raducanu will also officially take over from Katie Boulter as British No.1. The 2022 German Wimbledon semi-finalist Maria won her first WTA title on grass at Mallorca in 2018, following it with back-to-back clay court trophies at Bogota in 2023. In the week's other WTA grass-court final at Rosmalen in the Netherlands, Belgian third seed Elise Mertens beat Romanian Elena-Gabriela Ruse 6-3 7-6 (7-4) to claim her second title of the year and her 10th in all. "It's been an incredible week," said Mertens, who had to dig deep to save 11 match points and overcome two-time winner Ekaterina Alexandrova in Saturday's semi-final.

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