logo
Lottie Woad loses more ground in Women's Open as Miyu Yamashita sets pace

Lottie Woad loses more ground in Women's Open as Miyu Yamashita sets pace

Rhyl Journal5 days ago
Woad, tournament favourite in just her second event as a professional after winning the Scottish Open last week, was on the charge after her sixth birdie of the day at the 14th before suffering a big setback at the par-four 16th.
Japan's Yamashita followed her first-round 68 with a bogey-free 65 to open up a three-shot lead over compatriot and joint overnight leader Rio Takeda, who carded a 69 on another blustery day at Royal Porthcawl.
Squeaky clean 🧽
Miyu Yamashita is the first player to card a bogey-free round here at the 2025 @AIGWomensOpen. pic.twitter.com/aMIvHm1NoA
— LPGA (@LPGA) August 1, 2025
Switzerland's Chiara Tamburlini, Thailand's Pajaree Anannarukarn and American Lindy Duncan are all tied for third, four shots further back on four under.
Another big group, including 2021 Women's Open winner Madelene Sagstrom and Germany's Laura Fuenfstueck – still out on the course having played 12 holes – are tied on three under.
Woad, Wales' Darcey Harry and American world number one Nelly Korda are among another group of eight, are tied in 11th on two under.
Surrey's Woad, who also won the Irish Open and finished tied for third at The Evian Championship in her final weeks as an amateur, began the day five shots behind the leaders after a first-round level-par 72.
The 21-year-old parred the first five holes on Friday before birdies at the sixth and eighth took her to the turn on two under.
Four more birdies and a bogey in the next five holes lifted her up to fifth on the leaderboard on five under, but after another par at the 15th, a penalty drop at the 16th, where she two-putted after chipping on to the green, saw her drop three shots.
Woad told Sky Sports: 'It's probably playing the toughest hole of the day. I hit a good drive but pushed the three-wood a bit and it went in the one thick bit over there.
'I got a bit unlucky with that but then took my medicine afterwards and ended up making a seven.
Lottie Woad is on the charge. 🔥
6 birdies. 🚀 47 spots climbed. 📈 pic.twitter.com/TBt5DSPBGq
— AIG Women's Open (@AIGWomensOpen) August 1, 2025
'I'm happy with how I recovered after it. I was a bit angry after that but I just had to move on quickly.'
Woad parred the final two holes – she missed a birdie putt on the 18th – to finish the second round alongside 22-year-old Harry as the highest-placed home nations players.
Harry followed up her opening-round 70 with a 72, which could have been better but for double bogeys at the 10th and 15th.
Mimi Rhodes, the leading Brit heading into the day after an opening-round 69, carded a 74 to sit in a big group tied in 19th place on one under, while Charley Hull is a shot further back, tied in 29th place, after she birdied the last for a 71.
New Zealand's defending champion Lydia Ko slipped out of contention after posting a second successive 73 to sit two over, while American Lillia Vu, the 2023 Open champion, missed the cut after rounds of 74 and 77 left her seven over.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jonathan Edwards' triple jump world record 30 years on - 'I still pinch myself'
Jonathan Edwards' triple jump world record 30 years on - 'I still pinch myself'

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Jonathan Edwards' triple jump world record 30 years on - 'I still pinch myself'

Thirty years ago today Jonathan Edwards jumped 18.29m, a distance that no one else has been able to match, though he insists he is at peace with Britain's only world record being beaten soon Jonathan Edwards will never tire of being called a world record holder. But 30 years on from his greatest hop, skip and jump in Gothenburg, he no longer watches the latest generation of pretenders from between his fingers. ‌ With a 'quantum leap' in shoe technology that has seen records tumble across the track and in the field, Edwards has made peace with the fact his mark will eventually be beaten. Equally he admits: "I'd be upset... It would be pretty cool to be on my deathbed and still a world record holder.' ‌ And yet heading towards another World Championships in Tokyo, there seems little chance of the only global record still in British hands being broken. ‌ 'It's an amazing thing, I still have to pinch myself,' Edwards says. 'I'll still be out walking with my wife and go 'I've jumped farther than anyone else in the world.' It's just an amazing feeling and I never get tired of it. But I'm at the stage now where, if you go back 10 years I'd have been really nervous.' Those who worked next to Edwards during his time as an analyst on TV remember entire studios falling silent when the likes of Christian Taylor were gearing up for an attempt at eclipsing his 18.29m. American Taylor came within eight centimetres a decade ago, while Spain's Jordan Diaz Fortun posted the third best distance on record, 18.18m, in Rome last summer. Except Edwards insists stepping away from being on screen helped him to be more at peace with the moniker being taken - even if the wait goes on into a fourth decade. 'When I was still working in the sport, doing the media stuff, I felt a much closer connection to it and it was almost as if everyone was looking for my reaction, a schadenfreude type thing,' he recalls. 'That was always a bit bizarre. But now I feel a sense it's been an incredible bit of time and it's not diminished if it goes now. I'd like to hold on to it for as long as possible but I'm resigned to the fact it will be broken some time soon. That's fine.' ‌ With the passing of time it can easily be forgotten that Edwards entered the 1995 Worlds as the record holder, jumping 17.98m three weeks before in Spain, and with his first jump became the first man to break 18m, with 16cm in change. Then came the second, unbeatable attempt, elevating triple jump into a new stratosphere. Between leaps Edwards remembers: "I kind of had no control over my emotional state in the sense I was still ready to jump and I had a big smile on my face." ‌ As for the celebrations, they were muted and he almost went to bed hungry. "I was in drug control for a long time did various interviews and didn't leave until midnight," he recalls. "I got out of the stadium and there was a McDonald's that looked open but people were finishing off their meals. They wouldn't let me in. There was a coach inside, Leif Alnes, who is Karsten Warholm's coach now, trying to explain who I was to let me in. But they wouldn't." Eventually he went back to his main sponsor Puma's hotel - with whom he has recently released a long-form podcast detailing his career - and tucked in to whatever food they had left. ‌ And while he harbours no real envy towards the current generation of athletes, the physics graduate would have loved to have experimented with the technology that is propelling the latest crop to performances never seen before. 'I understand the biomechanics and it would have been a really interesting challenge. It's amazing that the sport hasn't had the technological advances compared to other sports. ‌ 'It really has stayed a little bit in the dark ages. There have only been incremental changes up until recently. But these spikes and shoes have been a quantum leap,' he says, though he feels the impact is more pronounced for those on the track than in the field. 'It's much more difficult in the jumps than it is in hurdles. There isn't the same force going through the plate and cushion. 'My thing was running very fast and maintaining that speed through the jumps. My jumping ability per se wasn't outstanding but I could marry it with speed.' 'I loved a hard feeling, an immediate response off the ground. Finding the right frequency to give you something back would have been tricky. But at least I've got an out when someone breaks my record.'

I was once Scotland's top golfer but haven't played here for seven years – I'm buzzing to tee it up at Trump Aberdeen
I was once Scotland's top golfer but haven't played here for seven years – I'm buzzing to tee it up at Trump Aberdeen

Scottish Sun

time8 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

I was once Scotland's top golfer but haven't played here for seven years – I'm buzzing to tee it up at Trump Aberdeen

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) EXILED-SCOT Martin Laird is hoping to turn the clock back five years to the last of eight career wins when he plays his first tournament on home soil since 2018. The 42-year-old Glasgow-born PGA Tour player is a surprise entry for the $2.75 million Nexo Championship at Trump International outside Aberdeen. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Martin Laird speaks with his caddie at the practice range at Trump International Credit: Getty 3 He hasn't teed it up in Scotland competitively for several years Credit: Getty 3 U.S. President Donald Trump recently opened a new course at his Aberdeen venue Credit: AP Laird, who claimed a fourth PGA Tour title at the 2020 Shinners Hospital For Children Open, last competed in the land of his birth at the Scottish Open at the Renaissance. Back in 2011 he reached a career-high of 21 in the world, making him the highest-ranked Scot at the time. But he can't wait for play to start this week after revealing: 'I haven't been back here for a couple of years, even non-competitively. 'But to be here in Scotland again to play in a tournament is brilliant. 'The way the Scottish Open falls was always a tough one for me for a few years. Unfortunately, I wasn't in a position where I could just come over for that. 'There were a lot of tournaments around that time that I had to stay and play in and the week after the Scottish Open, it's the Barracuda tournament and I've got a really good record in that, so that was one I always wanted to play. 'Then I didn't qualify for the Scottish Open for a few years. But this was kind of a no-brainer, because I ended up getting less in America as they have cut their cards to 100 from 125. 'So, you might see me over here at least in two more tournaments and maybe even more.' After only two of the over-50s managed to finish in red figures at last week's wind-blown PGA Seniors Championship, Laird fears that the course at Balmedie may again be close to unplayable if the forecast of gusts this week proved accurate. 'It's spectacular, but flipping hard,' he said. 'They need to get the tees right, otherwise on some holes, even if you hit a good drive, you are hitting long irons into small targets and with 25-30mph crosswinds, it almost gets a bit unplayable. Hilarious moment Donald Trump's golf caddie appears to subtly drop ball in prime spot before he arrives to take shot 'I saw the scoring last week with a 14 over cut and that just shows you what this place is capable of as I have never seen a 14 over cut in my life.' It has been decided to bring several of the tees forward in an effort to at least partially wind-proof the links and that was music to Calum Hill's ears. The 30-year-old two-time DP World Tour winner from Fife got his first taste of the track a month ago when he played a practice round with close buddies Connor Syme and Grant Forrest in sunshine and 10mph winds. And he recalled: 'It felt quite straightforward. Then on Monday it looked much trickier. 'The difficulty here is that it's not like some links course where you get a bit of leeway. It's fairways or bushes and it's quite penal. You'll have a lot of reloading. 'It's very strong off the tee and the greens are slightly upturned so you have a lot of runoffs, and if you get it wrong it could be like ping pong. 'I think I started triple-bogey, double-bogey and I didn't know where I was the first few holes.' Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page

Josh Taylor not willing to 'play the lottery' with his health as Scottish boxing hero lifts lid on shock retirement
Josh Taylor not willing to 'play the lottery' with his health as Scottish boxing hero lifts lid on shock retirement

Daily Record

time11 hours ago

  • Daily Record

Josh Taylor not willing to 'play the lottery' with his health as Scottish boxing hero lifts lid on shock retirement

The former undisputed champion of the world hung up his gloves for good last week Josh Taylor admits he could have carried on his boxing career - but it could have came at the expense of his health. ‌ The Prestonpans fighter - who reigned as super-lightweight world champion of the world between 2021 and 2022 and the only UK boxer to ever hold all four major belts in a division - announced his retirement from the sport last week after being advised to pack it in on medical grounds. ‌ Taylor says he made the decision to call it quits after learning he had suffered damage to his left eye retina in the wake of his loss to Ekou Essuman at the end of May. ‌ The 34-year-old - who was also a 2014 Commonwealth Games gold medallist, reveals that he could have carried on fighting if his own-well being did not come first. Speaking to iFL TV, the ex 135-pound champion said: "It was the right decision for my health. I would have loved to continue. "It's all healed up now as I had laser surgery on my eye. They thought they saw a wee tear in my retinal tissue and in the end they found six tears. ‌ "So I thought 'right, that's it, I've got to look after my health now'. I probably could have continued but it was a big risk to take. "I was literally one punch away from going blind in that eye. ‌ "Could I have continued? probably. But given the risks from what I got told and given what I have achieved in the sport, it's the best decision I have to make for my health. Taylor finished his career with three consecutive defeats to Essuman, rival Jack Catterall and American star Teofimo Lopez. And the Scot concedes he is still coming to terms with putting up the gloves for good. "I've had a couple of weeks to digest it now but it's all still a bit raw and emotional", he added. "It's a big of f****** heartache still but I am getting there. ‌ "I have got six belts sitting in my living room that I can sit and look at, think about and be proud of. "I am very proud of what I have achieved for Scottish boxing and to pave the way for the next generation coming through. I feel very proud that I have put it back on the map. "It's still quite raw knowing it's the end and that I haven't gone out on my own terms. "I have had problems with my eye since 2019 and had three operations on it. I'm not playing the lottery with my health anymore."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store