
Manassero, Fox share PGA Canadian Open lead with plenty in pursuit
Fox also fired seven birdies and a bogey at TPC Toronto Osprey Valley, their 14-under par total of 196 putting the leaders one stroke clear atop a congested leaderboard, with 22 more players within four strokes of the lead.
On a day when as many as 11 players shared the lead at one point, Manassero was the first to reach 14-under with his sixth birdie of the day at the 15th.
He bogeyed 17, where he was in the left rough off the tee and missed a four-footer to save par, but he birdied the par-five 18th.
"It was a really good round," Manassero said. "I missed the short one on 17, and I did miss a couple more short ones today. I try to think of them just like a shot really, like a driver, like a six-iron, whatever. It's just a shot.
"It wasn't that hard for me to stay focused into what I was doing and not ruining (it) at the end."
Manassero, a five-time winner on the DP World Tour, is seeking his first US tour title. The 32-year-old Italian has revived his career after briefly walking away from the game in the midst of a prolonged slump. He claimed his first DP World Tour victory in more than a decade in March of 2024.
"It's definitely made me more mature and much better perspective towards golf, which at one point was everything," he said of the ups and downs of his career. "I have a better perspective towards, for example, a day like tomorrow."
Fox, 38, is aiming to build off his first US PGA Tour title, captured in a playoff at the Myrtle Beach Classic last month.
He launched his round with three straight birdies and had five on the front nine, bouncing back from a bogey at 11 -- where he was in the water -- with birdies at 12 and 18.
Stress-free golf
"To be honest, everything went pretty right," Fox said. "I drove it great. I think, if you do that round here, you give yourself lots of chances.
"Had a lot of good wedge shots, holed a few putts early. Just played really solid kind of stress-free golf for the most part."
Americans Lee Hodges and Mat McCarty and Taiwan's Kevin Yu were tied for third on 13-under 197.
Hodges bookended his seven-under 63 with eagles at the first and 18th, with three birdies in between.
Yu had eight birdies and a bogey in his 63 while McCarty had seven birdies in his 64.
Canadian Mackenzie Hughes and Americans Jake Knapp and Andrew Putnam were tied on 12-under, one stroke clear of a group of seven players on 11-under 199.
Ireland's Shane Lowry headlined a group of nine players on 200.
Fox said his victory last month had him feeling "more comfortable in my own shoes," but he with so many within striking distance he said that Sunday promised to be a shoot-out.
"Obviously there's a lot of good players behind me," he said. "I feel like it's going to take a pretty low (score) to get the job done."
© 2025 AFP

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


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Ledecky closes US swim championships with 1,500m free victory
Bobby Finke and Gretchen Walsh also grabbed their third wins of the week in Indianapolis, Indiana, to set themselves up for multiple medal campaigns in Singapore. Ledecky clocked 15min 36.76sec to win the 1,500m free by more than 25 seconds. Claire Weinstein, who swam in a different heat of the timed finals was second-fastest in 16:01.96. "I just wanted to put together a pretty even swim, hold a good pace,' Ledecky told NBC Sports. "That one hurt, but I'll take it, move on to Singapore," added the US great, who also won the 400m and a "really good" 800m free this week and finished second in the 200m free. Ledecky heads to a seventh World Championships aiming to add to her 21 world titles. "I'm excited," she said. "I mean, I have been to a lot of these, but I still feel like I get the same excitement, the same energy from the team." Finke won the men's 800m free in 7:43.13, more than six seconds ahead of Rex Maurer. Finke, who set the men's 1,500m free world record in defending his Olympic title in Paris, also won that event along with the 400m medley -- although he has indicated he won't swim the medley in Singapore. Walsh won the women's 50m freestyle in an American record-equalling 23.91sec to close out a stellar week that saw her win the 100m butterfly with the second-fastest time ever and the 50m fly in the fourth-fastest time ever. Jack Alexy won the men's 50m free in 21.36, the top time in the world this year. Santo Condorelli, the 30-year-old who has competed in the Olympics for both Canada and Italy, was second in 21.68 to earn a chance to represent the United States for the first time in international competition. Shaine Casas won the men's 200m individual medley in 1:55.73, just three-hundredths of a second in front of Carson Foster, Casas notching another victory after his triumph in the 100m butterfly. Alex Walsh won the women's 100m medley in 2:08.45 with Phoebe Bacon taking second in 2:09.22. © 2025 AFP


France 24
5 hours ago
- France 24
Lee seizes solo lead at LPGA Shoprite Classic
Lee, who shared the overnight lead with Elizabeth Szokol, teed off on 10 at the Seaview Hotel & Country Club and grabbed four birdies in her first nine holes. After her double bogey at the eighth she finished with a final birdie for an 11-under par total of 131 and a one-stroke edge over Japan's Mao Saigo and Ayaka Furue and Americans Jennifer Kupcho and Szokol. Lee, a 36-year-old whose career has been hampered by multiple injuries, had opened the 54-hole event with an impressive 63. "Today was totally different day, and I knew it's going to be complete different day so I didn't have any expectations," she said. "I was just playing golf, having fun out there. Made some birdies on the first nine -- it was fun." Saigo, who won her first major title at the Chevron Championship in April, carded a 67 highlighted by an albatross at the par-five third hole, where she holed out from 214 yards out with a seven-wood. "First time," said Saigo, who couldn't see the ball go in but said she knew it had by the reaction of the crowd around the green. Furue claimed her share of second with a bogey-free 66 while Kupcho posted the low round of the day with seven birdies in her seven-under 64, capped by a birdie-birdie finish at eight and nine. Szokol also overcame a double bogey, carding four birdies in a 69 that she classed as "pretty good" in the wake of Friday's 63. "Definitely hard to beat yesterday's," Szokol said. "Still, really solid day, hit some great golf shots and made some really good putts early on to save par. Finished on a birdie so going off on a good note for tomorrow." © 2025 AFP


France 24
6 hours ago
- France 24
Manassero, Fox share PGA Canadian Open lead with plenty in pursuit
Fox also fired seven birdies and a bogey at TPC Toronto Osprey Valley, their 14-under par total of 196 putting the leaders one stroke clear atop a congested leaderboard, with 22 more players within four strokes of the lead. On a day when as many as 11 players shared the lead at one point, Manassero was the first to reach 14-under with his sixth birdie of the day at the 15th. He bogeyed 17, where he was in the left rough off the tee and missed a four-footer to save par, but he birdied the par-five 18th. "It was a really good round," Manassero said. "I missed the short one on 17, and I did miss a couple more short ones today. I try to think of them just like a shot really, like a driver, like a six-iron, whatever. It's just a shot. "It wasn't that hard for me to stay focused into what I was doing and not ruining (it) at the end." Manassero, a five-time winner on the DP World Tour, is seeking his first US tour title. The 32-year-old Italian has revived his career after briefly walking away from the game in the midst of a prolonged slump. He claimed his first DP World Tour victory in more than a decade in March of 2024. "It's definitely made me more mature and much better perspective towards golf, which at one point was everything," he said of the ups and downs of his career. "I have a better perspective towards, for example, a day like tomorrow." Fox, 38, is aiming to build off his first US PGA Tour title, captured in a playoff at the Myrtle Beach Classic last month. He launched his round with three straight birdies and had five on the front nine, bouncing back from a bogey at 11 -- where he was in the water -- with birdies at 12 and 18. Stress-free golf "To be honest, everything went pretty right," Fox said. "I drove it great. I think, if you do that round here, you give yourself lots of chances. "Had a lot of good wedge shots, holed a few putts early. Just played really solid kind of stress-free golf for the most part." Americans Lee Hodges and Mat McCarty and Taiwan's Kevin Yu were tied for third on 13-under 197. Hodges bookended his seven-under 63 with eagles at the first and 18th, with three birdies in between. Yu had eight birdies and a bogey in his 63 while McCarty had seven birdies in his 64. Canadian Mackenzie Hughes and Americans Jake Knapp and Andrew Putnam were tied on 12-under, one stroke clear of a group of seven players on 11-under 199. Ireland's Shane Lowry headlined a group of nine players on 200. Fox said his victory last month had him feeling "more comfortable in my own shoes," but he with so many within striking distance he said that Sunday promised to be a shoot-out. "Obviously there's a lot of good players behind me," he said. "I feel like it's going to take a pretty low (score) to get the job done." © 2025 AFP