
Highlights: 2025 BMW Charity Pro-Am, Final Round
Watch the best moments from the fourth and final round of the 2025 BMW Charity Pro-Am at Thornblade Club in Greer, South Carolina.

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Indianapolis Star
2 hours ago
- Indianapolis Star
Best public golf courses in Indiana for 2025: See photos from around the state
April 19, 2012: A view of the 18-hole Pete Dye Course carved into the rolling hills adjacent to the West Baden Springs Hotel. Photo Provided By French Lick Resort Indiana University's Pfau Golf Course. Stefan Krajisnik/for IndyStar Fans watch as Steve Stricker waves after winning the 2019 U.S. Senior Open at Notre Dame's Warren Golf Course. (South Bend Tribune File Photo/Robert Franklin) Harrison's Isabella Reynolds putts on hole 3 during an IHSAA golf match, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2019 at Coyote Crossing Golf Course in West Lafayette. Nikos Frazier | Journal & Courier Golfers take to the putting green before an IHSAA girls golf tournament, Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2020 at at Coyote Crossing Golf Course in West Lafayette. Nikos Frazier | Journal & Courier Former Purdue coach Gene Keady and Bart Burrell, right, look on as Leroy Keyes, left, reacts after sinking a long putt on No. 6 during Keady's Legacy golf tournament Friday at Coyote Crossing. John Terhune/Journal & Courier A bird walks across the thirteenth before the Birck Boilermaker Classic, Tuesday, July 27, 2021 in West Lafayette. Nikos Frazier / Journal & Courier Players putt around the putting green during the Birck Boilermaker Classic Pro-Am, Monday, July 26, 2021 in West Lafayette. Nikos Frazier / Journal & Courier Spectators and golfers walk along the Kampen Golf Course during the first round of the Boilermaker Invitational, Saturday, April 10, 2021 at Purdue University's Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette. Nikos Frazier / Journal & Courier Aiden Hale tees off on hole one during round three of the Men's City Golf Championship, Saturday, July 20, 2019 at Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette. Nikos Frazier | Journal & Courier A view of Kampen Course, part of the Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex. Purdue Athletics Communications Rock Hollow, in Peru, Ind. Tom Lang Special To The DFP An aerial view of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home of the Indianapolis 500 race, and the Brickyard Crossing golf course. Mark J. Rebilas/Imagn Images Mi Jung Hur hits a drive on hole 8 during the Indy Women in Tech Pro-Am at Brickyard Crossing Golf Course on Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2017. Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar Around 140 players competed for the $2 million dollar pursue Thursday, Sept. 26, 2019, during the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) Indy Women in Tech Championship at the Brickyard Crossing golf course, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Indianapolis. Grace Hollars/IndyStar Around 140 players competed for the $2 million dollar pursue Thursday, Sept. 26, 2019, during the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) Indy Women in Tech Championship at the Brickyard Crossing golf course, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Indianapolis. Grace Hollars/IndyStar Around 140 players competed for the $2 million dollar pursue Thursday, Sept. 26, 2019, during the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) Indy Women in Tech Championship at the Brickyard Crossing golf course, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Indianapolis. Grace Hollars/IndyStar Golfers make their way through the course during the Indiana Pacers annual golf outing at the Brickyard Crossing Golf Club on Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2018. Michelle Pemberton/IndyStar Members of Mi Jung Hur's group tee off onto the seventh green during the Indy Women in Tech Pro-Am at Brickyard Crossing Golf Course on Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2017. Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar FILE FROM 2009 --- Andy Winings lines up his putt on the 8th hole during the third round of the Indiana Men's Open Thursday afternoon at Brickyard at the Crossing Golf Course. Matt Kryger / The Star
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
U.S. Open qualifying: 50-year-old Justin Hicks ties for medalist in West Palm Beach sectional
Golf's Longest Day needed extra time in West Palm Beach. Nine 36-hole U.S. Open sectional qualifiers were held on June 2 from Florida to New Jersey, and from Maryland to Washington, to fill the final 47 spots in the U.S. Open June 12-15 at the Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pa. Of the 744 players began the day with hopes of making the field, only six percent would make it. Advertisement The Florida qualifier at Emerald Lakes in West Palm wasn't over until June 3 and it produced a variety of players who punched their ticket to Oakmont. Justin Hicks of Wellington leads a U.S. Open sectional qualifier at Emerald Lakes in West Palm Beach with play suspended. The round will resume on June 3 at 7:30 a.m. Justin Hicks, 50 years old, tied for medalist honors at 11-under-par 133 with former LSU player and Shreveport, La., resident Philip Barbaree and amateur Frankie Harris of Boca Raton, a junior at South Carolina. Auston Truslow of Fort Lauderdale, who has conditional Korn Ferry Tour status, defeated University of Florida sophomore Luke Poulter in a playoff for the final qualifying spot after both finished at 10-under. Luke Poulter (left), caddying for his father Ian Poulter in the 2022 JP McManus Pro-Am, is tied for third in a U.S. Open sectional qualifier at Emerald Lakes in West Palm Beach, with play suspended because of weather. Hicks, who shot 65-68, has played in three PGA tour events this season and missed the cut in all three. Barbaree, 26, who plays on PGA Tour Americas, birdied eight of his first 13 holes in the second round and shot 64. Harris eagled the par-5 first hole in the second round and didn't make a bogey until No. 18 to finish with a 67. Advertisement Poulter, who eagled the first hole and birdied the next two before play was suspended the night before at 6:10, finished with a bogey-free 65 after play resumed on June 3. Truslow completed a 66 with five of six birdies during one stretch. Blades Brown, a 17-year-old from Nashville who turned pro earlier this year, would have joined the Poulter-Truslow playoff had he not bogeyed his final hole. He beat Thomas Ponder III, an Korn Ferry Tour member who played at Alabama, in a playoff for second alternate. U.S. Open Sectional qualifiers Emerald Lakes Golf Club, West Palm Beach Qualifiers Justin Hicks 65-68–133 Advertisement Philip Barbaree 69-64–133 Frankie Harris (a) 66-67–133 Auston Truslow 68-66–134 Alternates Luke Poulter (a) 69-65–134 Blades Brown 65-70–135 Piedmont Driving Club, Atlanta Mason Howell, 17 and the eighth-ranked player on the American Junior Golf Association, and Big Ten Player of the Year Jackson Buchanan shot lights-out at 18-under 126 to tie for first. Auburn senior Jackson Koivun, who made his PGA Tour debut at The Memorial last week, Florida State sophomore Tyler Weaver, and former University of Georgia player Will Chandler tied for third at 11-under. Qualifiers Mason Howell (a) 63-63—126 Jackson Buchanan 63-63—126 Advertisement Tyler Weaver (a) 66-66—133 Jackson Koivun (a) 69-64—133 Will Chandler 70-63—133 Alternates Hayden Buckley 68-66—134 Steven Fisk 66-68—134 Canoe Brook Country Club, Summit, N.J. Korn Ferry Tour member James Nicholas, a Yale graduate, won by one shot over PGA Tour player Chris Gotterup and Korn Ferry Tour member Roberto Diaz. Qualifiers James Nicholas 67-68—135 Chris Gotterup 71-65—136 Roberto Diaz 65-71—136 Benjamin James (a) 67-70—137 Alternates Max Theodorakis 71-67—138 Garrett Engle (a) 69-69—138 Duke University Golf Club, Durham, N.C. Miles Russell of Jacksonville Beach had three birdies on the front nine of his first round, but made only one more birdie over the final 27 holes and is the first alternate at 138. Chandler Blanchet of Jacksonville, a Korn Ferry Tour member, notched one of the final spots by closing with five pars in a row. Miles Russell of Jacksonville Beach is the first alternate for the U.S. Open out of a sectional qualifier at Duke University. Qualifiers Zach Bauchou 71-64—135 Advertisement Alistair Docherty 72-64—136 Alvaro Ortiz 73-63—136 Emilio Gonzalez 69-67—136 Trent Phillips 70-67—137 George Kneiser 69-68—137 Chandler Blanchet 68-69—137 Alternates Miles Russell (a) 68-70—138 Webb Simpson 72-66—138 Kinsale Golf and Fitness Club, Columbus, Ohio Cameron Young made a birdie on the first playoff hole to win a 5-for-1 playoff to knock out Chase Johnson, Eric Cole, Max Homa and Rickie Fowler. Jacksonville product and Palm Beach Gardens resident Bud Cauley finished second to reach his first U.S. Open and Ponte Vedra Beach resident Lanto Griffin finished third to qualify for his fifth. Qualifiers Erik Van Rooyen 64-67—131 Advertisement Bud Cauley 69-68—137 Lanto Griffin 69-68—136 Justin Lower 68-69—137 Harrison Ott 67-71—138 Cameron Young 71-68—139 Alternates Chase Johnson 68-71—139 Eric Cole 70-69—139 Lambton Golf & Country Club, York, Ontario, Canada Vince Covello of Ponte Vedra Beach (144) and Tyler Mawhinney of Orange Park (145) failed to qualify. PGA Tour member Kevin Velo, who has made only three of 13 cuts this season, is the medalist. Qualifiers Kevin Velo 65-67—132 Niklas Norgaard 64-69—133 Matt Wallace 67-66—133 Thorbjorn Olesen 67-67—134 Mark Hubbard 64-70—134 Victor Perez 66-67—134 Emiliano Grillo 69-65—134 Alternates Takumi Kanaya 69-66--135 Advertisement Max McGreevy 66-69—135 Springfield Country Club, Springfield, Ohio Zac Blair beat Kurt Kitayama, Dawson Armstrong of Jacksonville and amateur John Peterson in a 4-for-1 playoff for the final qualifying spot. Qualifiers Grant Haefner 68-65—133 George Duangmanee 68-67—135 Maxwell Moldovan 69-66—135 Zac Blair 68-68—136 Alternates John Peterson (a) 69-67—136 Kurt Kitayama 68-68—136 Valencia Country Club, Valencia, Calif. Preston Summerhays, an Arizona State senior, birdied six of nine holes and five in a row in his second round. Qualifiers Preston Summerhays (a) 69-63—132 Riley Lewis 71-64—135 Zachery Pollo (a) 65-71—136 Advertisement Alternates Lucas Carper 70-68—138 Matthew Sutherland 69-70–139 Wine Valley Golf Club, Walla Walla, Wash. Medalist Matt Vogt is a former caddie at Oakmont and now is a dentist in Indiana. He is from Cranberry Township, Pa., 26 miles from Oakmont. Qualifiers Matt Vogt (a) 68-68—136 Brady Calkins 68-69—137 Alternates Spencer Tibbits 69-69—138 Clark Sonnenberg (a) 70-68—138 Woodmont Country Club, Rockville, Md. Ryan McCormick, a Korn Ferry Tour member, had 11 birdies and only one bogey in 36 holes to easily win the qualifier. Qualifiers Ryan McCormick 66-66—132 Trevor Cone 69-68—137 Bryan Lee (a) 70-69—139 Marc Leishman 70-69—139 Advertisement Alternates Sebastian Munoz 71-68—139 Peter Uihlein 73-67—140 Bent Tree Country Club, Dallas (May 19) Qualifiers Rasmus Neergaard Petersen 66-65—131 James Hahn 66-66—132 Adam Schenk 64-68—132 Lance Simpson (a) 79-65—134 Cameron Tankersley (a) 68-66—134 Carlos Ortiz 66-68—134 Johnny Keefer 66-69—135 Alternates Doug Ghim 69-66—135 Cameron Tringale 69-66—135 Tarao Country Club, Shiga, Japan (May 19) Qualifiers Yuta Sugiura 68-66—134 Scott Vincent 67-67—134 Jinichiro Kozuma 68-67—135 Alternates Riki Kawamoto 67-68—135 Taichi Kho 64-71—135 Walton Heath Golf Club, Surrey, England (May 19) Jordan Smith 64-70—134 Frederic Lacroix 67-68—135 Advertisement Joakim Lagergren 69-66—135 Guido Migliozzi 68-67—135 Sam Bairstow 70-66—136 Jacques Kruyswijk 66-71—137 Edoardo Molinari 66-71—137 Andrea Pavan 70-67—137 Matthew Jordan 63-74—137 Robin Williams 68-69—137 Alternates Ryan Lumsden 66-71—137 Björn Åkesson 72-66—138 This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: U.S. Open qualifying: Justin Hicks, 50, ties for first in West Palm Beach


USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
Report: Steelers' Aaron Rodgers and DK Metcalf build chemistry at Cam Heyward's golf event
Report: Steelers' Aaron Rodgers and DK Metcalf build chemistry at Cam Heyward's golf event New Steelers QB Aaron Rodgers is making up for lost time — building chemistry with his star wide receiver DK Metcalf at veteran defensive tackle Cam Heyward's Iron for Impact charity golf event. According to The Standard on social media, the pair were spotted at Heyward's annual outing: "Aaron Rodgers & DK Metcalf already building chemistry. Spotted today at Cam Heyward's 'Irons for Impact' Golf Outing. That didn't take long." During his time in Seattle, Metcalf spent some offseasons golfing with then-Seahawks QB Russell Wilson — but he's never played with someone as decorated as Rodgers, who won the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am with PGA pro Ben Silverman. Rodgers has ample time to connect with his other top wide receivers — Calvin Austin III, Roman Wilson, and Robert Woods — at mandatory minicamp, which kicks off on Tuesday, June 10. For up-to-date Steelers coverage, follow us on X @TheSteelersWire and give our Facebook page a like.