
Pádraig Harrington two shots clear of field after 65 at Senior Open
will take a two-shot lead into the final round of the ISPS Handa Senior Open at Sunningdale as he looks to make it back-to-back senior Majors following his win at the US Open at the end of June.
The 53-year-old Dubliner carded six birdies and a bogey in a five-under 65 to move to 13 under, two shots clear of American Justin Leonard, like Harrington a former winner of the Open Championship.
Leonard matched Harrington's 65 to make the final pairing on Sunday, with Denmark's Thomas Bjorn dropping back to third after he carded a three-under 67.
Meanwhile, Lottie Woad will take a two-stroke lead into the final round of the Women's Scottish Open at Dundonald Links as she seeks to clinch her maiden professional win on debut.
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The 21-year-old from Surrey, the recent winner of the Irish Open at Carton House, maintained her cushion at the top of the leaderboard after a third-round five-under 67.
A fourth birdie in her first 10 holes briefly extended the advantage to three, and despite picking up further shots at the 14th and 17th, a bogey at the short 15th – only her second in 54 holes – left her 17 under.
That was two better than Denmark's Nanna Koerstz Madsen and South Korean Sei Young Kim.
World number one Nelly Korda is five shots adrift on 12 under after a bogey-free 70, her highest round of the week.
Ireland's Leona Maguire fell back into a share of 18th position after carding a one-over 73 that leaves her on five under.
Maguire was three over for her round on the 17th tee but made birdies on the last two holes.
'There was a lot of attention kind of leading up so this feels a bit more free now that I've got my [LPGA] card,' said Woad, who turned professional last week having finished just a shot outside the playoff won by Grace Kim at the Evian Championship, the women's fourth Major of the year.
'I don't think you can ever expect to be leading but I knew my game was good and I was playing well the last month or so. I definitely hoped to be contending. I'm where I wanted to be.
'There's always nerves but, overall, I'm feeling good. I am excited for the opportunity and I've got the experience from leading in Ireland and other events that I've been in. I'm just going to try and use that.'
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The 42
37 minutes ago
- The 42
'I was in a really bad way' - Dublin's goalscoring star bows out a five-time All-Ireland winner
THE FOCUS WAS on Hannah Tyrrell yesterday, but another Dublin All-Ireland winner quietly slipped into retirement. Multi-sport star Tyrrell had shared her plans to call time through the build-up, and confirmed her decision to RTÉ's Marty Morrissey on the Croke Park pitch. Nicole Owens also announced her retirement in an interview with Jerome Quinn for Ladies Gaelic football. 'That is me done,' the five-time All-Ireland winner said. 'I made the decision, win or lose, because I knew if we didn't get over the line it would be hard to make it. The big thing for me today was to go out and enjoy it as much as possible.' While she kept quiet on her decision in the press conference room — the on-field interview was published later — Owens reflected on a special day. Advertisement She laid the platform for victory with a sixth-minute goal, as Dublin stormed to a 2-16 to 0-10 win over Meath. The 32-year-old has had a nightmare run of injuries in recent years, perhaps making it all the sweeter. 'I was on the fence about coming back or not this year, and I think I was in a bad way starting,' she told The 42. 'I think it speaks to this team, a few of the girls I would have chatted to, Paul (Casey) and Derek (Murray) would have been on to me. I was in a really bad way at the start of this year, they just kind of put an arm around me and got me back in. 'We spoke about Orlagh Nolan on the pitch, but off the pitch, having someone there on the shit days, to be in the gym doing the same stuff over and over again, that was massive. 'I'm so proud of this team and how that ended, and how we had a performance when it mattered. I'm glad that I managed to score a goal to cap it off!' Elaborating on the injury hell, which included two ACL ruptures and an Achilles setback, Owens continued: 'If you look at the likes of Martha (Byrne) and Leah (Caffrey), who've probably missed about one game in the past 12 years. I'd love to have been that consistent and that solid, but, unfortunately . . . some of us maybe weren't made to play football to this extent! 'It's allowed me to develop a bit of resilience, and, look, I've always been given a lot of trust, the lads backed me when I came back this year, and I was given chances because of what I'd done in previous years, and I think you can't understate the importance of that, the team trusting me and the role that that played. I'm just delighted.' Joint manager Casey, sitting to Owens' left in the bowels of the Hogan Stand, hailed the 2017 All-Star forward, who made her debut in 2012. 'Like Nicole here, there's some girls who are suited to the big stage and that they've never, ever let this county down on the biggest of days. 'Nicole, I thought her work-rate out there was superb. And it really typified what all those older players did. I don't know if we should get into calling out their ages and all that, but they brought all that experience out into play.' Injury was a big factor for Dublin this year. They were often down key players, with Lauren Magee the latest to join the long-term injury list with an ACL tear in May. Orlagh Nolan recently returned from the dreaded knee injury, and turned in a Player of the Match performance yesterday. The Ballinteer St John's forward carried huge amounts of ball, and chipped in with a brilliant point. 'Orlagh has worked so, so hard to come back,' Casey said. 'Like when we were up at Clonshaugh and Craobh Chiaran in the dark and the muck, Orlagh was in the gym and she was working so hard to come back. She always did it with a smile on her face. Orlagh Nolan on the ball against Marion Farrelly. Ben Brady / INPHO Ben Brady / INPHO / INPHO 'We would have loved to have her back playing full games, maybe in the quarter-final, but our medical team were very strict in terms of just easing her back into it. But it fell perfectly for her to have her first start today. I suppose, sadly, it coincided with Caoimhe (O'Connor)'s injury as well. 'But Orlagh, just her composure on the ball out there at crucial times, she was superb. We saw that when she came on in the semi-final against Galway. She's a fantastic footballer, so hopefully she can put all those injury problems behind her.' Related Reads 'She's given everything. This is a cherry on the top' - Dublin's retiring multi-sport star Dublin dominate Meath to win second All-Ireland in three years Nolan had the initials 'LM' and 'COC' written on her blue wristband. 2011 All-Ireland winner Casey hailed several others who have had tricky paths. 'Niamh Donlon we thought we had lost last weekend, she had a bit of a nick in her groin. But to go out and give that performance was superb. 'Being able to bring Hannah Leahy in there. She had suffered three cruciate ligament injuries over the years. Aoife Kane had a really bad injury against Kildare in the group stage of the Leinster championship. 'To be able to bring those players in was fantastic. It's great for them and it's testament to all the hard work that they've done.' *****


Irish Examiner
2 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
'We felt totally in control'- says delighted manager as Tyrone lift second ever All-Ireland intermediate title
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Irish Examiner
3 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Nancy McGillivray takes a road less travelled to Ireland honours
Ireland 27 Scotland 21 Planning for one World Cup should be plenty for anyone's plate. Not Scott Bemand's. If first priority for the Ireland head coach is the upcoming tournament in England then Australia's hosting in 2029 never seems far from his thoughts. It was the global gathering in four years' time that was uppermost in the Englishman's mind when he took over the girls in green, and he has referenced the tournament more than once in recent weeks even as England 2025 gets more real with every passing day. So, while Saturday's five-try, six-point warm-up defeat of Scotland in Cork served an obvious and immediate purpose, it also fed into that longer-term goal with Ivana Kiripati, Nancy McGivillray and Ailish Quinn all making their debuts. The first two are 22, Quinn is still a teenager at 19. For McGivillray, this was the peak point to date on a rugby journey that began as an eight-year old in Hong Kong and playing for the Discovery Bay Pirates. It was only when she was 18 and left for uni in England that XVs became a thing. Her potential led to Exeter Chiefs and a transition contract with England's RFU that concluded at the end of June. That allowed the centre to make the switch to Ireland and make a debut which peaked with a try shortly after half-time. So, why Ireland? 'Well, my dad [Raymond] is Irish so start off there,' said a player once labelled as a 'huge talent' by England legend Emily Scarratt. 'I'm not actually English at all. I just have an English passport. So a big part of it was also family and culture. Ireland debutant Nancy McGillivray scores her side's third try. Pic: Shauna Clinton/Sportsfile. 'I was in and around England, but I kind of had two years to figure out what I want, and I think, for me, that's to put on the green jersey. And a big part was family. My granddad would dream about that all the time, and he's not here today, but that's a big part.' Her granddad is Donald McGivillray, from Balbriggan in Dublin. Ireland's new recruit, whose mum Phatcharin is Thai, spent plenty of summers in Cong as a child. Other disparate strands played their part in this story too. Ireland head coach Scott Bemand was still an assistant with England when McGivillray was coming through that system and the player had gone through the Irish union's IQ pathway system when she first moved to the UK. All those lines were kept open. What impact she, or the other rookies, can make in the here and now remains to be seen. Back row is an area of serious depth, even with injury absentees, while Aoife Dalton excelled in the 13 shirt in the Six Nations and played every single minute. 'They're going to be big hitters for not just this World Cup but the one after,' said Bemand. Every shoulder is welcome against this wheel. Ireland, without Erin King and Dorothy Wall in their pack for the World Cup, and with Aoife Wafer n onlooker here and a doubt for at least some of the tournament, will have been thrilled to come through this first prep match unscathed. Captain Sam Monaghan, Eimear Corri-Fallon and Beibhinn Parsons all made reappearances in Irish shirts after long-term injuries and the manner in which a much-changed and relatively inexperienced Irish team recovered from 14-0 down bodes well. Only four of this starting side had been named to kick off their last game, the round five Six Nations trip to Scotland, and that had been over three months previously. Early rust was no surprise, but they largely bossed the Scots for long periods after it. The hope will be that more impressive auditions are the order of the day when Ireland play their second and last warm-up next week against Canada before the squad is named two days later and a World Cup opener against Japan on August 24th. For McGivillray it will also be an opportunity to catch up with Florence Symonds who was a teammate growing up with the Pirates and is now on the Canadian XVs squad having won a silver medal in sevens at last year's Olympics. 'Someone like her, it's an inspiration just to see one of my best mates go to Olympics and now she's in the World Cup squad as well. We grew up playing rugby together.' And look at them now. Ireland: M Deely; B Parsons, N McGillivray, E Higgins, A-L Costigan; D O'Brien, M Scuffil-McCabe; S McCarthy, C Moloney-MacDonald, S McGrath; E Corri-Fallon, S Monaghan (capt); G Moore, I Kiripati, B Hogan. Replacements: D Nic a Bhaird for Moore (3-14) and for Hogan (60); F Tuite for Monaghan (36); L Djougang for McGrath and N O'Dowd for McCarthy (both 50); E Lane for Scuffil-McCabe and E Breen for O'Brien (both 60); A Quinn for Kiripati and N Jones for Moloney-MacDonald (both 70). Scotland: C Rollie; R Lloyd, E Orr, L Thomson, L Scott; H Ramsay, C Mattinson; A Young, L Skeldon, E Clarke; E Wassell, R Malcolm; R McLachlan, A Stewart, E Gallagher. Replacements: E Martin for Skeldon (32); L Bartlett for Young (HT); L Brebner-Holden for Mattinson (51); M Poolan for Clarke (55); B Blacklock for Ramsey (57); A Ferrie for Wassell and E Donaldson for Malcolm (both 65); C Grant for Brebner-Holden (71). Referee: C Munarini (FIR).