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Tour Rundown: Poston’s second win on tour | Irish Open champion hails from a new land

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A true fan of professional golf tournaments commented this week on how valuable the perceived-as-lesser events truly are. They may not measure greatness in the way that major events do, but they measure survival and achievement in the way that quarterly bonuses and interviews can. These events change the lives of tour players. That made cut leads to another chance next week. That late-Sunday birdie leads to exempt status next year. The measuring stick is different but, just as meters are to yards, it still measures something that matters … a lot. With that in mind, let’s run down what we saw this week on Tour Rundown. And, Happy Independence Day to those of you in the USA.

PGA Tour: John Deere Classic is Poston’s second win on tour

J.T. Poston came out like a man possessed on Sunday in Silvis, Illinois. He reeled off birdies at the first three holes, to reach 22-under par. No other golfer would approach that number, although Emiliano Grillo tried. The Argentine arrive at 19-deep with a birdie at the 10th hole. He would make bogey at 12 and 14, but recover with one final birdie at 18, and tie for second with Christian Bezuidenhout of South Africa.

A bit before Grillo’s arrival at Station 19, Poston had slipped to 20-under with consecutive bogeys at five and six. The needle would not move for the 2019 Wyndham winner for another 11 holes. Inconceivably, Poston made 10 pars in a row, and remained atop the field. No one took a run at him until late, and by then, it was nearly over. Playing companion Denny McCarthy had his struggles on the day, but managed a top-ten placement. Down the stretch, Poston made birdie at the penultimate hole for a bit of breathing room. He finished with a 21-under par total and a three-shot margin of victory.

DP World Tour: Irish Open champion hails from a new land

Adrian Meronk sang a singular note this week on the DP World Tour. His run of birdie-birdie-eagle at the 15th through 17th holes in round four ensure that, forever and always, he would be the first son of Poland to win on the DP World Tour. In all the years under its former name, not one citizen of Polonia broke through to raise a chalice. Now the flag of white and red has a favorite son to cheer in all events, from here on out.

Betting money might have seen Jorge Campillo, already twice a winner on tour, break through for a third career title. The Spaniard could never get on the run that he needed on Sunday. Each pair of birdies was always followed with a bogey, and the Iberian settled for a top-ten placement. Betting money would not have seen Ryan Fox bookend his opening 64 with another on Sunday. The New Zealand native was two island all week: rounds one and four were brilliant, while the middle two were bumpy and uncertain. Fox stood nine-under par on the day as he headed to 18. Needing a final birdie to finish at 61 and 19-deep, the Kiwi settled for bogey and 17-under.

Fox the runner-up and Meronk the champion will do battle over the coming weeks at the Scottish, and then the Open, championships. Meronk’s work on the final day featured just one bogey, and just five over the entirety of the 72 holes of competiion. As he nears 30 years of age, now might be the time to make a statement in a major event.

Korn Ferry Tour: The Ascendant bids Dou safe passage to PGA Tour

Ryan McCormick had controlled The Ascendant since Thursday, but Sunday was not his day. The 54-hole leader tumbled twelve positions into a tie for 13th, unsealing an envelope of opportunity for his pursuers. Carl Yuan reached 17-under par and a tie for the lead, but made bogey at the last to finish at 16 below. Jeremy Paul stood at 16-deep on the 16th tee, but played the closing stretch in one-over figures to check out at 15 strokes saved. Cut the deepest was Augusto Núñez. The Argentin reached 17-under with two to play, but posted a pair of bogeys coming home, and tied for third with Paul and Brandon Matthews.

Who survived? Zecheng “Marty” Dou, that’s who. He had the sort of round going that McCormick and the rest of the field craved. Dou made six birdies against zero bogeys through 17 holes on Sunday, and had a firm grasp on the winner’s plate with one hole left. When his tee shot found a fairway bunker, Dou went into preservation mode. He played safely out, pitched onto the green, and took two putts for bogey and a one-shot victory. With the victory, Dou jumped from 19th to 2nd on The 25 list for season-long status, just behind Yuan. Both will tee it up on the PGA Tour in the fall.

PGA Tour Canada: Prince Edward Island Open chooses Carlson as champion

While other tours have passed the halfway point in their 2022 schedules, PGA Tour Canada is barely beyond the quarter pole. The PEI Open was the fourth of eleven scheduled events on the 2022 schedule, which culminates at the Tour Championship in September, in Kitchener, Ontario. Brian Carlson of the USA held off Chris Wilson of Canada on Sunday, to win his first event of 2022 and move into the top spot on the season-long Fortinet Cup chase. On the heels of a cancelled event at Elk Ridge in Saskatchewan, PGA Tour Canada looked to rebound, and it did so quite well.

Carlson’s back nine on Sunday was enviable. He had five birdies and four pars on the cleanest card of the contenders. Ironically, he failed to make birdie at the easiest hole on the inward half, the par-five 18th. No matter, as the chasers all had at least one bogey coming home. It wasn’t until the penultimate hole that Carlson and Wilson traded places. Wilson made bogey to drop to 17 under, while Carlson’s final birdie elevated him to 19 below. Wilson made one last run at a playoff, but his birdie at the last served only to separate him from the USA’s Austin Hitt, who finished in third.

The tour reconvenes at TPC Toronto in three weeks, and contestants will certainly be champing at the bit to establish position as the home stretch emerges in the distance.

PGA Tour Latinoamérica: Montenegro wins tour finale; Meissner advance to KFT

The Bupa Tour Championship of PGA Tour Latinoamérica evolved into the tournament that everyone wanted to win, but nearly no one could win. 36-hole leader Cristobal del Solar crashed with 84 on Saturday, tumbling down the leader board. Manav Shah, Andrés Gallegos, and José de Jesús Rodríguez each came to the par-five 16th with a chance at the title, and each walked away with bogey six and a missed opportunity.

Even eventural winner Jesús Montenegro had his struggles over the closing stretch. Standing eight-under par with four holes left, the Platense took a rip at the massive, 245-yard par three fifteenth, and came away with double bogey. Able to steady his nerves with a massive par putt at the next, the Argentine closed with three pars for a two-shot victory over Gallegos and Shah. Also coming out in fine form was the USA’s Mitchell Meissner. Despite not winning an event during the 2022 campaign, Meissner finished on top of the TotalPlay Cup standings, and earned the first of ten promotions to the Korn Ferry Tour for 2023.

 

Ronald Montesano writes for GolfWRX.com from western New York. He dabbles in coaching golf and teaching Spanish, in addition to scribbling columns on all aspects of golf, from apparel to architecture, from equipment to travel. Follow Ronald on Twitter at @buffalogolfer.

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5 Things we Learned: Friday at the U.S. Women’s Open

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Dumbo flies again! There is certainly a half-generation of golf fans without the slightest idea of how well In-gee Chun, aka Dumbo, can golf her ball. The Korean was the It Girl from 2015 to 2018. She won three LPGA events, with two being major championships. She returned to Korea to cure her homesickness, but made the occasional foray back to the Americas. In 2022, she captured a fourth LPGA title and, guess what? It was a third, unique major title.

The halfway cut line was set at four over par. Those at plus-five and beyond had their stay in Tinseltown cut short, at least when it comes to working rounds of golf. Among the 87 who fell on the high side of the cut line, Lydia Ko stood out as the biggest name. Others given a two-day furlough were Lilia Vu, Megha Ganne, Chizzy Iwai, and Leona Maguire. Making the cut on the number are Lottie Woad, Celine Boutier, Mao Saigo, and amateur Asterisk Talley. If you follow world football, imagine the feeling of relegation on a weekly basis. That’s the 36-hole cut in professional golf.

We learned five things on Friday at Riviera Country Club, and we’d love to share them with you. Find a comfy place and brighten the screen on your device. It’s time for Five Things We Learned on day two at the US Women’s Open.

Part One: the biggest movers

A golfer’s feel appears or slips away overnight. Although Saturday is known collectively as Moving Day, it doesn’t come with as sudden and final a feeling as Friday. Move the wrong way on Friday and you’re down the road. Improve in the proper direction and you save your week. Both Mao Saigo and Rio Takeda opened with plus-five rounds of 76, then signed for 70 on day two, and made the cut on the number.

Moving the other way were Stephanie Kyriacou (70-78) and Ina Yoon (68-79). Their respective eight- and eleven-shot declines propelled them from title contention to tournament departure. Minjee Lee and Minji Kang (seven shots higher) along with Rose Zhang (five shots) made the cut, but saw their opportunity for victory take a serious body shot.

Part Two: the leaders

Allison Lee and Ruoning Yin took the conservative path to the 36-hole medal. Lee posted four birdies and a bogey for a total of 68 on day two. Yin had two birdies and sixteen pars for her second consecutive card of 69. Their 138 places them one shot clear of the aforementioned Dumbo Chun, who followed an opening 71 with 68. First-round leader Jennifer Kupcho added seven shots to her total, from an opening-day 66 to a follow-up 73, yet remained within the inner circle of leaders at -3, tied with Chun and four others. Four more golfers sit at minus-two, two shots behind the top duo. An even dozen of golfers sits within two shots of the lead.

The day’s biggest move of gravitas came from Nelly Korda. After a disappointing 73 on Thursday, the world number one improved six shots, thanks to a five-birdie round of 67. Korda slid inside the top ten with her recovery, and certainly reclaimed her place as most frightening chaser at Riviera. No one is likely to shoot in the low 60s at Riviera, but Korda just might post a mid-sixties score on Saturday, to seize the lead on Sunday morning.

Part Three: Ams verse Champs

Five current amateur golfers were among the 68 golfers to reach the weekend. Kiara Romero posted the best non-pro score on Friday, a one-under 70, to move from plus-two to plus-one figures. She is joined there by Aphrodite Deng, who reversed those numbers for her two rounds. Maria Jose Marin (143), Farah O’Keefe (145), and Asteriks Talley (146) joined the #WeDidIt brigade to earn a spot for the final two rounds.

Six former US Open champions, led by In-gee Chun(2015), also punched a ticket for round three. Allison Corpuz (2023), Maja Stark (2025), Ariya Jutanugarn (2018), A Lim Kim (2020), and Minjee Lee (2022) preserved their dream of a second US Open trophy for the mantle. Nineteen amateurs failed to earn a post for the final 36-holes, while five former champions joined them on the sidelines. Yuka Saso, twice a winner in this event in the past half-decade, missed the cut by five shots. 24 amateurs against eleven former titleists suggests that it is easier for the young to qualify, but harder for them to find success.

Part Four: the golf course

Scoring went up by .6 shots per player, from round one to round two. Statistically speaking, it became harder to make the cut as the day wore on. Birdies dropped by 50, while pars remained constant. Both bogeys and doubles increased markedly. The first and the sixth holes played under par on the front nine, while the second and ninth were nearly tied for most difficult traces on the road to the turn.

Coming home, holes ten, twelve, fifteen, and eighteen played as an impregnable quadrilateral. Odds are, you gave a shot back on each of them. Despite number seventeen’s accessibility for birdie, no one got out of the back nine alive. If conditions continue toward the extreme, Riviera will extract a pound of flesh from the contenders over the weekend.

Part Five: what to expect

From my vantage point, the tee times to watch are the 4:55 EST and the 5:05 slots. Nelly Korda pegs her ball in the sixth-last pairing with Sora Kamiya. The little-known Kamiya will get an up close and personal look at the crowds that follow the best in the world. Korda will need to ignore Kamiya’s expected struggles and golf her own ball. Ten minutes later, Lauren Coughlin begins play with Casandra Alexander at her side. It’s a similar situation, with the experienced Coughlin alongside an unseasoned partner.

Both Sei Yong Kim and Gaby Lopez have turned in strong performances, and their 5:15 pairing might produce some explosive numbers. From back in the pack, the tasty duo of Brooke Henderson and Jeeno Thitikul at 4:20, might see double digits in birdies. The unexpected at unknown Riviera is likely, so your guess is as good as mine.

 

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5 Things we Learned: Thursday at the U.S.. Women’s Open

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Gone are the days when the U.S. Women’s Open was held at Scenic Hills or Churchill Valley. Fine courses that they are (or were, as Churchill Valley went bankrupt a decade ago) there is something to be said for the venue. Not all Women’s Open playings need to take place on Men’s Open venues, but some should. This week in Los Angeles, the Women’s Open visits Riviera Country Club for the first time. Down the road, we will visit Inverness, Oakmont, Interlachen, Oak Hill, Chicago Golf, and Merion. That is quite the murderer’s row (1927 Yankees reference) of golf clubs.

What can we expect from the 2026 tournament? Greatness and uncertainty. Unlike the PGA Tour, which visits Riviera each February, the LPGA does not, so the women will not have nearly the body of work over the George C. Thomas layout. Maybe that’s a good thing. Maybe they’ll play #10 smarter than the men do. Maybe they’ll figure some things out that their male counterparts can not. For today, we’ll try to find five things to learn, and share them with you.

First, this ain’t your momma’s U.S. Open course

How do we know? Well, so far, only one previous champion currently sits inside the top thirty. That would be Minjee Lee, the 2022 winner at Southern (NC) Pines. Lee made par on her first nine holes, the inward side at Riviera. She dropped birdie putts on the first and ninth holes (ten and eighteen for her day) and tallied another seven pars, for 69. She sits three shots off Jennifer Kupcho’s opening 66. Don’t worry about Kupcho; we’ll get to her. After Lee, defending champion Maja Stark ranks T30 at even par, joined by three other, former winners.

What Minjee did, is the sort of thing that wins U.S. Open titles. She guided her ship safely past swells, and made a move when the waters calmed. The fewer the bogeys, the more likely Minjee figures in the outcome on Sunday evening in Pacific Palisades. Off the tee, Lee was unmatched. She hit 14 of 14 fairways. Her iron play was a bit loose in comparison. She putted for birdie on 12 of 18 holes, which meant that her recovery short game was on point. Lee was ten yards longer on measured driving holes than the field average, and was below the field average (a good thing) in putting.

Second, the amateurs beat a loud drum

Three of the world’s top amateur golfer posted 70, placing them four off the lead, in a tie for 14th place. Canada’s Aphrodite Deng, Spain’s Paula Francisco Llaño, and Colombia’s Maria José Marin, showed the professional world that their game is strong. Both Deng and Francisco Llaño collected five birdies on the day. Should they match that output on day two, and minimize the foozles, they’ll be the topic of conversation on Saturday morning. Marin, the 2026 Augusta National Women’s Amateur champion and an NCAA team semifinalist last week, played a game similar to Minjee Lee: few mistakes and few taken risks.

The last amateur to post the low medal score for 72 holes was Jenny Chuasiriporn in 1998. She lost a playoff to Se Ri Pak, who matched her plus-six effort at Blackwolf Run. The last amateur to win the U.S. Women’s Open was Catherine Lacoste in 1967. The amateurs are stronger than they’ve ever been, but the professionals have not allowed them to close the gap. A victory by one of the college set would be a cannon shot heard round the world. Could it happen? Absolutely. Is it likely? Not at all.

Third, let’s talk Kupcho

Jennifer Kupcho won the inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur. She won three times on tour in 2022, including the Chevron, a major title. She won a fourth event in 2025, but has not established the winning credentials projected on her after 2022’s marvelous coming-out.

Kupcho hails from Colorado, and spent four years in the Carolina Piedmont, at Wake Forest Universtiy. Neither of those locales cries out I’ll be at home at Riviera, but here we are, after a seven-birdie performance. Kupcho posted birdie on each of her first three holes, and added four more (against two bogeys) to assume a one-shot advantage over Korea’s Sei Young Kim.

Kupcho drove the ball decently, approached moderately well, but putted lights out on Thursday. Her 26 putts were tied for best in show on day one. There might just be something about the putting surfaces at Riviera that aligns with Kupcho’s vibe. If that is the case, just get the ball on the green, anywhere, and let the flatstick do the lifting.

Fourth, how young is Sei Young?

Sei (pronounced “So”) Young Kim won a dozen times from 2015 to 2020. She took time off from winning until 2025, shen she captured a thirteenth LPGA title. Like Kupcho, Kim has hardware from one major event, the 2020 Women’s PGA Championship. How to explain the five years away from victory? No idea. When Sei Young was in contention during the prime of her career, the outcome was a foregone conclusion.

What to expect over the next three days at Riviera? Anyone’s guess. It might be the 2015-2020 Sei Young, or it could be the 2021-2025 version. Kim began her day with birdies at 10 and 11, then settled into a stretch of pars before her solitary bogey at the 4th (her 13th) hole. Kim regained her composure and reeled in three birdies to close the front nine. Her four-under performance trails Kupcho alone, and there is a real chance that Sei Young will produce a second score in the 60s and take a bit of control of the tournament.

Fifth, we’re giddy for Gaby

Although I cannot place my finger on why, it seems that each year, Gaby Lopez pops up on the U.S. Open leaderboard. She hasn’t figure out how to remain in contention, but here we are, in 2026, and Lopez is once again in the mix. The three-time champion on the LPGA circuit had a stunning first nine holes, turning in minus-five. She reached six deep at her tenth hole, but then gave three shots back coming home. Which Gaby will show up on Friday, and for how long? If back-nine Gaby can somehow channel front-nine Gaby, all outcomes are within reach. If the loose play continues, Lopez’ wiki page will add one more T41 to her majors column.

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Photos from the 2026 U.S. Women’s Open

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GolfWRX Tour Photographer made the trip from the Memorial Tournament across the country to the U.S. Women’s Open at Riviera. Check out links to all the photos below!

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