
Ryan Gerard and Rico Hoey share the Barracuda Championship lead
'Hit a great shot and was lucky that it found the hole,' Gerard said. 'It's pretty special. Really nice way to finish. Hopefully, it's a good omen for tomorrow.'
Players receive eight points for a double eagle, five for eagle and two for birdie. A point is deducted for bogey and three for double bogey.
In breezy conditions at Tahoe Mountain Club, Gerard had a 12-point round and Hoey birdied four of the last six in an eight-point day. Both winless on the PGA Tour, they had 34 points, one more than 2021 winner Erik van Rooyen.
'Just keep believing in myself and see what happens,' Hoey said.
Gerard is playing for the sixth straight week — a string that began with the U.S. Open and took him to Scotland last week.
'I love this golf course. I love playing in this area. I like playing golf,' Gerard said. 'So, I got in at 2:30 in the morning on Tuesday.'
The 25-year-old former North Carolina player, fifth in the event two years ago, was ninth and second in consecutive events in Texas in April.
The 29-year-old Hoey was the second-round leader. He was born in the Philippines, grew up in California and played at the University of Southern California.
'Struggled early but kind of caught fire on the back, so it was nice to end that way,' Hoey said. 'I just was praying the putter would get hot because the putter was really cold.'
Van Rooyen, from South Africa, eagled the par-5 third in an eight-point round.
Tom Vaillant of France was two points back at 32 after a nine-point day.
'Just staying steady as much as I can and trying to avoid mistakes,' Vaillant said. 'Keep the ball in the right spot and stay patient.'
Hayden Springer and Vince Whaley had 29 points.
Ben Martin, the first-round leader with 16 points, had his second zero-point round to drop into a tie for 55th.
Played opposite the British Open, the tournament is co-sanctioned by the European tour. The winner gets into the PGA Championship but not the Masters.
___
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
2025 3M Open prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at TPC Twin Cities
Kurt Kitayama emerged victorious from a bunched up leaderboard in an exciting final round at the 2025 3M Open. Kitayama walked away from TPC Twin Cities with a trophy and 500 FedEx Cup Points, but that's not all. He also won a good chunk of cash. Here's the breakdown of how much money each PGA Tour player earned at the 3M Open, where there was a purse of $8.4 million. 3M Open 2025 prize money payouts POS PLAYER SCORE MONEY 1 K. Kitayama -23 $1,512,000 2 S. Stevens -22 $915,600 T3 D. Lipsky -20 $410,025 T3 M. Wallace -20 $410,025 T3 Pi. Coody -20 $410,025 T3 J. Knapp -20 $410,025 T7 W. Mouw -19 $263,900 T7 A. Noren -19 $263,900 T7 T. Kanaya -19 $263,900 T10 N. Goodwin -18 $263,900 T10 C. Gotterup -18 $263,900 T12 T. Montgomery -17 $186,900 T12 W. Clark -17 $186,900 T14 A. Svensson -16 $140,700 T14 C. Kirk -16 $140,700 T14 M. Meissner -16 $140,700 T14 T. Moore -16 $140,700 T14 J. Svensson -16 $140,700 T14 T. Olesen -16 $140,700 T20 C. Bezuidenhout -15 $95,508 T20 G. Woodland -15 $95,508 T20 B. Valdes -15 $95,508 T20 B. Kohles -15 $95,508 T20 E. Grillo -15 $95,508 T25 T. Rosenmueller -14 $69,020 T25 H. Higgs -14 $69,020 T25 A. Bhatia -14 $69,020 T28 K. Roy -13 $50,590 T28 K. Kisner -13 $50,590 T28 T. Kim -13 $50,590 T28 N. Hardy -13 $50,590 T28 C. Champ -13 $50,590 T28 R. Fowler -13 $50,590 T28 V. Perez -13 $50,590 T28 C. Young -13 $50,590 T28 S. Power -13 $50,590 T28 C. Ramey -13 $50,590 T28 N. Lashley -13 $50,590 T39 G. Sigg -12 $34,860 T39 G. Higgo -12 $34,860 T39 A. Eckroat -12 $34,860 T39 M. Homa -12 $34,860 T39 J. Dahmen -12 $34,860 T44 J. Vegas -11 $24,696 T44 Z. Blair -11 $24,696 T44 P. Fishburn -11 $24,696 T44 A. Hadwin -11 $24,696 T44 J. Bramlett -11 $24,696 T44 T. Merritt -11 $24,696 T44 M. Pavon -11 $24,696 T44 A. Smalley -11 $24,696 T44 M. La Sasso (a) -11 $0 T53 M. Hughes -10 $20,118 T53 C. Villegas -10 $20,118 T53 I. Salinda -10 $20,118 T53 A. Scott -10 $20,118 T57 R. Hoey -9 $19,320 T57 V. Whaley -9 $19,320 T57 D. Skinns -9 $19,320 T57 B. Garnett -9 $19,320 T61 M. Hubbard -8 $18,396 T61 T. Cone -8 $18,396 T61 M. Schmid -8 $18,396 T61 B. Silverman -8 $18,396 T61 C. Del Solar -8 $18,396 T61 S. Burns -8 $18,396 T61 L. Clanton -8 $18,396 T68 M. McCarty -7 $17,472 T68 T. Pendrith -7 $17,472 T68 N. Norgaard -7 $17,472 T68 S. Ryder -7 $17,472 T72 A. Rozner -5 $16,968 T72 H. Norlander -5 $16,968 74 S. Fisk -4 $16,968 75 D. Ford -3 $16,548 76 T. Dickson -2 $16,380 This article originally appeared on Golfweek: 3M Open 2025 payouts, prize money for each player in Minnesota


San Francisco Chronicle
36 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Summer McIntosh goes for her second gold on Day 2 at the swimming world championships
SINGAPORE (AP) — It's Day 2 at the swimming world championships in Singapore. That means it's a chance for Summer McIntosh to add her second gold medal after winning the 400 freestyle on the opening day. The 18-year-old Canadian is trying for five individual golds across the eight-day event in Singapore. On Monday she's a strong favorite to get her second gold, this time in the 200-meter individual medley. She set the world record of 2 minutes, 05.70 seconds at the Canadian trials a few months ago. McIntosh is expected to be challenged by American Alex Walsh. Also in the field is 12-year-old Chinese Yu Zidi, whose age and astounding times are the talk of global swimming. The women's 100 butterfly is another eye-catching race. American Gretchen Walsh — Alex's older sister — is the favorite and set the world record of 54.60 earlier this year. Roos Vanotterdijk of Belgium and Australia's Alexandria Perkins will push Walsh. Two more finals are set. Qin Haiyang of China and Nicolo Marinenghi of Italy are the favorites in the 100 breaststroke. The Italian is the Olympian champion from Paris, and Qin won this event two years ago at the worlds in Fukuoka, Japan. The 50 fly final is wide open, but the quickest qualifiers were Maxime Grousset of France and Noe Ponti of Switzerland. There are also three semifinals Monday — the men's 100 backstroke, the men's 200 free, and the women's 100 backstroke. ___


Fox Sports
36 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
Summer McIntosh goes for her second gold on Day 2 at the swimming world championships
Associated Press SINGAPORE (AP) — It's Day 2 at the swimming world championships in Singapore. That means it's a chance for Summer McIntosh to add her second gold medal after winning the 400 freestyle on the opening day. The 18-year-old Canadian is trying for five individual golds across the eight-day event in Singapore. On Monday she's a strong favorite to get her second gold, this time in the 200-meter individual medley. She set the world record of 2 minutes, 05.70 seconds at the Canadian trials a few months ago. McIntosh is expected to be challenged by American Alex Walsh. Also in the field is 12-year-old Chinese Yu Zidi, whose age and astounding times are the talk of global swimming. The women's 100 butterfly is another eye-catching race. American Gretchen Walsh — Alex's older sister — is the favorite and set the world record of 54.60 earlier this year. Roos Vanotterdijk of Belgium and Australia's Alexandria Perkins will push Walsh. Two more finals are set. Qin Haiyang of China and Nicolo Marinenghi of Italy are the favorites in the 100 breaststroke. The Italian is the Olympian champion from Paris, and Qin won this event two years ago at the worlds in Fukuoka, Japan. The 50 fly final is wide open, but the quickest qualifiers were Maxime Grousset of France and Noe Ponti of Switzerland. There are also three semifinals Monday — the men's 100 backstroke, the men's 200 free, and the women's 100 backstroke. ___ AP sports: in this topic