Health scare could end Colin Montgomerie’s 2024 season: ‘I’m not well’

“I have kept it quite quiet but I’m not well so we just keep going and we will get through to Sunday.”

When Colin Montgomerie talks, the golfing world listens. And even on those occasions when he didn’t talk, those glowering, seething silences would still speak volumes.

This week, the host of this week’s Staysure PGA Seniors Championship at Trump International Golf Links on the outskirts of Aberdeen made an eyebrow-raising and concerning admission.

After a 1-under 71 in the first round, Monty revealed that this over-50s showpiece may be his last event of 2024 due to ongoing health issues.

“I haven’t been well the last six months, I have been very poorly,” said the 61-year-old. “I have been taking a lot of time off. I have never done that in my life.

“I might take the rest of the year off. I need to, I’m not well. “Asked to elaborate, Montgomerie would only say that his problems were “internal.”

With the kind of enduring properties you’d get with a cast iron rivet, Monty continues to soldier on. On the face of it, a 71 over this exacting, unforgiving links wasn’t bad at all. Try telling Montgomerie that.

“Colin Montgomerie of old would have shot 66,” he said with the kind of yearning sigh that could’ve been accompanied by a wistful Perry Como song.

“Colin Montgomerie at 61 shoots 71. It is as simple as that. I maximize every score right now. That is what I do every round. It’s frustrating. You can’t score 67 when you have played 67-ish.”

He followed with a 73 in the second round of play to still sit inside the top 15.

If the tools of his long-standing trade do get shoved away at the end of this week, Montgomerie was asked about alternative pastimes. “How’s your gardening?” chirped one of the media men.

“It’s about to become an awful lot better,” chuckled Monty as he conjured up a delightful image of him edging the grass and gently tending his hardy Geraniums.

“There’s lots of grass to do, I can’t wait. I’ll be like Bob MacIntyre’s father. But me putting the clubs away in August? It’s unheard of.”

Annika Sorenstam, Juli Inkster inside top 5 at U.S. Senior Women’s Open, where Kaori Yamamoto leads

JoAnne Carner, 85, shot 80 on Friday, the eighth time she has shot her age or better in the event.

Kaori Yamamoto fired a second straight 4-under 67 on Friday to lead the 2024 U.S. Senior Women’s Open but two of the winningest golfers in LPGA history are in striking distance.

Juli Inkster posted a 3-under 68 in the second round at Fox Chapel Golf Club in Pittsburgh and is 2 under for the tournament, six back of Yamamoto. Right there with Inkster at 2 under is Annika Sorenstam, the 2021 USSWO champ.

Sorenstam leads the LPGA all-time with 72 wins. Inkster is tied for sixth with 31.

“I’m a bit afraid of Annika Sorenstam and Juli Inkster,” Yamamoto said, adding, “but I’m actually excited to escape from them.”

Yamamoto, 50, earned her spot in this year’s field after winning a qualifier by six shots. Her back-to-back 67s gives her the 36-hole tournament record.

A year ago, she was at the USSWO but as a caddie for her best friend, Eika Otake. Now she’s leading it.

“So far I can’t believe my position,” she said Friday. “But yeah, I’m doing well. I’m proud of my golf today.”

2024 U.S. Senior Women's Open
Kaori Yamamoto discusses strategy with her caddie on the 15th hole during the second round of the 2024 U.S. Senior Women’s Open at Fox Chapel Golf Club in Pittsburgh. (Jeff Haynes/USGA)

Yamamoto is playing in a tournament in the U.S. for the first time.

Lisa Grimes got to 5 under, good for solo second, before play was halted for darkness at 8:22 p.m. ET. Stefania Croce is solo third overnight at 4 under and Mikino Kubo is solo fourth at 4 under.

Sorenstam and Inkster are tied for fifth with Christa Johnson. Catrin Nilsmark is ninth at 1 under. No other golfers are under par through two days.

JoAnne Carner, 85, shot her age Thursday and then posted an 80 in Friday’s round. She has now shot her age or better eight times in the U.S. Senior Women’s Open, and has done it in six of her last seven rounds in the championship. But, Carner’s two-day total of of 23 over left her 15 shots off the overnight projected cutline of 8 over.

Did Barstool’s Riggs make a hole-in-one at Bandon Dunes? And what’s the rule on a ball being lodged against the flagstick?

Riggs set Twitter ablaze when he inferred that he’d made an ace at the famous Oregon resort.

Barstool Sports’ Sam “Riggs” Bozoian missed this week’s edition of the Fore Play podcast because he was off playing Bandon Dunes.

So although he wasn’t part of the twice-weekly podcast, he lit the Twitterverse (X-verse?) ablaze on Friday when he posted that he’d just made an ace at the famous Oregon resort that houses five of the top 14 courses on the Golfweek’s Best top 100 U.S. public-access layouts list.

Via social media, Riggs said he was buying drinks for those on hand at Bandon Dunes after he posted this photo, which infers that he made an ace:

It’s tough to see in the photo if any part of the ball is below the lip of the hole. But if it’s not, rule 13.2c of the USGA Rules and Interpretations explains this scenario in detail.

13.2c. Ball Resting Against Flagstick in Hole

If your ball comes to rest against the flagstick left in the hole, and any part of your ball is in the hole below the surface of the putting green, your ball is treated as holed.

If no part of your ball is in the hole below the surface of the putting green:

Your ball is not holed and must be played as it lies.

If the flagstick is removed and your ball moves (whether it falls into the hole or moves away from the hole), there is no penalty and it must be replaced on the lip of the hole.

According to the National Hole-In-One Association, a tee shot hit by an amateur golfer on a par 3 goes into the hole one out of every 12,750 times.

Golf instruction: Tips to master making short putts

It’s time to eliminate three-putts on the green for good.

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It’s time to eliminate three-putts on the green for good.

Eliminating three-putts can make the largest difference when it comes to reaching that next milestone with your scores. Three putts typically occur in the five feet and under range around the hole.

This week, Golfweek’s fitness guru and long driver Averee Dovsek demonstrates three simple tips to help master short putts. These tips will help amateurs combat common habits and mistakes.

Say goodbye to anxiety or the yips around short putts and get ready for your scores to drop.

If you’re interested in any of Averee’s fitness content, click here.

If you’re looking for more instruction, click here.

Make golf easier? That’s the goal of Topgolf’s The Sure Thing club

This special golf club that can only be found at Topgolf locations.

Golf may never be easy for most of us, but Topgolf has something new that might make beginners take to the game better.

The official language from Topgolf is “Make Golf Less Hard” but however you want to phrase it, this might be the thing that works for you or someone you know.

It’s called The Sure Thing and it’s a special golf club that can only be found at Topgolf locations.

Topgolf says the club is “designed in collaboration with Callaway engineers” and it should help newbies hit the ball more solid and get it where we all want it to go: airborne.

The club face is huge with a 20-degree loft and the shaft is shorter that traditional drivers.

Topgolf Sure Thing club
The Topgolf Sure Thing golf club.

“At Topgolf, we exist to bring joy through more ways to play the game of golf, and The Sure Thing is one way we’re delivering on that purpose,” Topgolf CEO Artie Starrs said in a media release. “We want everyone to experience the thrill of hitting the ball solidly and into the air, and designing a club with new players in mind is our way of helping to make that happen.

“I remember the first time I hit a solid shot into the air as a kid and we want to enable that thrill for everyone.”

Topgolf is offering players one free order of boneless chicken wings per bay on Monday, Aug. 5, for trying out The Sure Thing.

Why isn’t U.S. Open winner Bryson DeChambeau playing golf at the Olympics? Here’s why.

In the simplest terms, DeChambeau didn’t qualify. His association with LIV Golf is a big reason why.

Welcome to FTW Explains, a guide to catching up on and better understanding stuff going on in the world. This is FTW Explains: The Olympics.

Love him or hate him, Bryson DeChambeau is playing like one of the best golfers in the world in 2024.

The 30-year-old who grew up in California and now resides in Texas won his second U.S. Open title this year with a memorable finish at Pinehurst No. 2. DeChambeau — who is nicknamed “The Scientist” and also has monikers for each of his clubs — got an up-and-down out of the bunker from more than 50 yards away and onto the green, where he sank a four-foot putt on the final hole to beat Rory McIlroy by a single stroke.

DeChambeau also finished in the top 10 at the Masters and second in the PGA Championship this year. He’s ninth in the World Golf Rankings.

So, as golf gets underway at the Summer Olympics in Paris, France, you might be wondering: Why isn’t one of the best American golfers there?

The answer is simple, but also sort of complicated.

A lot of it has to do with DeChambeau playing on the controversial Saudi-backed LIV Golf instead of on the PGA Tour.

When boiled down, the reason DeChambeau isn’t in France is because he didn’t qualify. Qualification takes place across a two-year period where points are piled up at events deemed eligible by the Official World Golf Ranking.

But the LIV Golf League is not accredited by the OWGR. And so, DeChambeau’s only chance to qualify was to play well enough at majors to boost his ranking high enough to make it.

One would think that a world-ranking of ninth would suffice, but the other obstacle DeChambeau faced in qualifying is that he is from one of golfing’s strongest countries. For the Olympics, a maximum of four players per country inside the OWGR’s top 15 can compete.

While DeChambeau is ninth in the world, he’s the sixth American in the OWGR. Ahead of him are Patrick Cantlay at eighth, and the four U.S. players who are competing in the Olympics in Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Wyndham Clark and Collin Morikawa.

There are some LIV golfers competing in the Olympics. If a country didn’t have at least two players inside the top 15 of the OWGR, two outside of the top 15 could qualify. So, Jon Rahm and David Puig are there for Spain, Abraham Ancer and Carlos Ortiz are representing Mexico, Joaquin Niemann and Mito Pereira of Chile are competing, and so is Adrian Mernok of Poland.

DeChambeau, meanwhile, is hopeful for 2028, when the Olympics will be played in his native California.

He told ESPN after winning the U.S. Open:

“Am I frustrated and disappointed? Sure, you could absolutely say that, but I made the choices that I made and there’s consequences to that and I respect it. But hopefully, sooner rather than later, we figure out this great game of golf, so we can get past all of that and move forward into showing how awesome this sport actually is around the globe.”

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Team USA Olympic golf team: Meet the men and women competing in Paris 2024

Xander Schauffele and Nelly Korda are back to defend their 2021 gold medals and leads Team USA.

Golfers will tee off at the Summer Olympics in Paris, France on Thursday when the men’s individual competition begins. The men’s final wraps up on Sunday, Aug. 4, and the women’s competition begins the next day and ends on Saturday, Aug. 10.

In all, golf at the Olympics will feature 60 competitors from 38 different countries.

Golf has a bit of a weird history at the Olympics. It debuted in the second-ever Summer Games in 1900, was played again in 1904, and then went on a long hiatus and didn’t return again until 2016.

In men’s play, the U.S. has won gold twice, with Charles Sands taking the top prize in 1900 and then Xander Schauffele winning in Tokyo in 2021. The same is true for the women, where Margaret Abbott won in 1900, and Nelly Korda captured gold in 2021.

This year, there are four men and three women who will compete for Team USA on the greens at the Summer Games. Let’s meet them.

Wyndham Clark

PARIS, FRANCE – JULY 31: Wyndham Clark of Team United States tees off on the 14th hole during a practice round on day five of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Le Golf National on July 31, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)
  • Age: 30
  • From: Denver, Colorado
  • Last win: Clark finished 17-under at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on Feb. 4 to beat Sweden’s Ludvig Aberg by a stroke. Clark also won the 2023 U.S. Open.
  • Olympic history: This is Clark’s first appearance in the Olympics.

Nelly Korda

EVIAN-LES-BAINS, FRANCE – JULY 14: Nelly Korda of the United States plays her second shot on the 10th hole during the final round of the Amundi Evian Championship at Evian Resort Golf Club on July 14, 2024 in Evian-les-Bains, France. (Photo by Valerio Pennicino/Getty Images)
  • Age: 26
  • From: Bradenton, Florida
  • Last win: Korda finished 14-under to win the Mizuho Americas Open on May 19. A month before, she won the Chevron Championship, an LPGA Major. In all, Korda has six LPGA Tour victories this year. Simply put, she’s one of the best golfers in the world right now.
  • Olympic history: She finished 17-under to beat Japan’s Mone Inami in the 2021 Summer Games.

Collin Morikawa

Jun 22, 2024; Cromwell, Connecticut, USA; Collin Morikawa tees off on the third hole during the third round of the Travelers Championship golf tournament at TPC River Highlands. Mandatory Credit: Gregory Fisher-USA TODAY Sports
  • Age: 27
  • From: La Canada, California
  • Last win: Morikawa finished 14-under to win the Zozo Championship by six strokes on Oct. 22, 2023. He won the PGA Championship in 2020 and the British Open in 2021. Morikawa hasn’t had the best luck in 2024 but placed in the top five at the Masters and PGA Championship, and in the top 20 in the other two majors.
  • Olympic history: Morikawa finished tied for fourth at the 2021 games.

Lilia Vu

Jul 28, 2024; Calgary, Alberta, CAN; Lilia Vu lines up her putt on the 17th green during the final round of the CPKC Women’s Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Sergei Belski-USA TODAY Sports
  • Age: 26
  • From: Fountain Valley, California
  • Last win: Vu won the Maijer LPGA Classic on June 16 in a playoff over Grace Kim and Lexi Thompson. In 2023, she won two majors, taking the British Open and the Chevron Championship.
  • Olympic history: This is Vu’s first appearance in the Olympics.

Xander Schauffele

Jul 21, 2024; Ayrshire, SCT; Xander Schauffele celebrates with Claret Jug after winning the Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Troon. Mandatory Credit: Jack Gruber-USA TODAY Sports

Rose Zhang

CALGARY, ALBERTA – JULY 28: Rose Zhang of the United States acknowledges the crowd on the 15th green during the final round of the CPKC Women’s Open at Earl Grey Golf Club on July 28, 2024 in Calgary, Alberta. (Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images)
  • Age: 21
  • From: Irvine, California
  • Last win: Back in May, Zhang won the Cognizant Founders Cup, finishing 24-under to beat Sweden’s Madelene Sagstrom by two strokes. In 2023, she won her LPGA Tour debut less than two weeks after winning a national title for Stanford.
  • Olympic history: This is Zhang’s first Olympic appearance.

Scottie Scheffler

Jul 17, 2024; Ayrshire, SCT; Scottie Scheffler, the number one ranked golfer in the world and 2022 and 2024 Master Tournament champion on the 12th green during practice rounds at the Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Troon. Mandatory Credit: Jack Gruber-USA TODAY Sports

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Someone in Minnesota hit a mosquito control helicopter with a golf ball

If you’ve been to Minnesota in the summer, you’ve experienced the mosquitoes.

If you’ve been to Minnesota in the summer, you’ve experienced the mosquitoes.

That’s why different agencies in the state fly mosquito control helicopters, to combat the swarms of the small buzzy annoyances.

Last Friday, however, a golfer at The Refuge Golf Club in Oak Grove, Minnesota, about 35 miles north of Minneapolis, hit one of those helicopters, according to a report by Minnesota TV station WCCO.

Now, the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office is looking into the incident. A helicopter pilot for the Metropolitan Mosquito Control District reported the situation last Friday morning. He said during flight he could see a golf ball coming at the helicopter. Upon landing, he saw the damage to the aircraft caused by the golf ball and reported it.

There are a few unknowns, however. Authorities investigating don’t know who did it, nor can they confirm if it was intentional. Those helicopters do fly low as they need to be able to direct the spray.

“Helicopters are an essential part of mosquito control operations,” said Metropolitan Mosquito Control District Executive Director Daniel Huff, adding that larval control by helicopter is “the safest and most effective way to protect the public from disease and annoyance caused by mosquitoes.”

The best public-access and private golf courses in Washington, ranked

Our hundreds of raters weigh in on the best public-access and private courses in Washington.

Looking to play the best golf courses in Washington? Welcome to our annual Golfweek’s Best ranking of public-access and private courses.

Following are the rankings for both types of courses, as judged by our nationwide network of raters. The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce all our Golfweek’s Best course rankings.

The courses on the first list allow public access in some fashion, be it standard daily green fees, through a resort or by staying at an affiliated hotel. If there’s a will, there’s a tee time – no membership required.

KEY: (m) modern, built in 1960 or after; (c) classic, built before 1960. For courses with a number preceding the (m) or (c), that is where the course ranks on Golfweek’s Best lists for top 200 modern and classic courses in the U.S.

* indicates new or returning to the rankings

Best public-access courses in Washington

Gamble Sands
Gamble Sands in Washington (Courtesy of Gamble Sands/Brian Oar)

1. Chambers Bay
University Place (T40m)

2. Gamble Sands
Brewster (T49m)

3. Wine Valley
Walla Walla (T134m)
Book your tee time at Wine Valley today

4. Gold Mountain (Olympic)
Bremerton (m)
Book your tee time at Gold Mountain today

5. Palouse Ridge
Pullman (m)

T6. Salish Cliffs
Shelton (m)

T6. Indian Canyon
Spokane (c)

8. Kalispel
Spokane (c)

9. White Horse*
Kingston (m)
Book your tee time at White Horse today

T10. Suncadia (Rope Rider)*
Cle Elum (m)
Book your tee time at Suncadia today

T10. Suncadia (Prospector)*
Cle Elum (m)
Book your tee time at Suncadia today

Best private courses in Washington

Aldarra in Washington (Courtesy of Aldarra)

1. Aldarra
Sammamish (T161m)

2. Sahalee (South/North)
Sammamish (T184m)

T3. Seattle GC
Seattle (c)

T3. Suncadia (Tumble Creek)
Roslyn (m)

5. Tacoma G&CC
Lakeland (c)

Still smoking and now 85, JoAnne Carner has weekend dreams as U.S. Senior Women’s Open approaches

The once long-bombing Carner has lamented over a loss of distance, but she might have found something.

JoAnne “Big Mama” Carner still smokes cigarettes, though she’s tried to quit from time to time. The 85-year-old joked that she might quit again this week given how many stairs there are from the bag room to the locker room at Fox Chapel Golf Club in Pittsburgh.

Carner, a 43-time winner on the LPGA, won both her U.S. Women’s Open titles in the state of Pennsylvania – at the Kahkwa Club in Erie in 1971 and Rolling Green Golf Club in Springfield five years later. Her first USGA title dates back to the 1956 U.S. Girls’ Junior.

At this year’s U.S. Senior Women’s Open, Carner’s 50th career USGA championship, she has a more modest goal of making the cut. The top 50 and ties in the field of 120 will play the weekend in Pittsburgh.

“I haven’t made it yet,” she said of her five previous appearances.

And it’s not getting any easier, of course, with players more than three decades her junior. Not to mention the fact that Tuesday’s practice round was washed out and she has yet to see the 1923 Seth Raynor design.

For the past couple of years, the once long-bombing Carner has lamented over a loss of distance. She’d be happy to hit it 220 yards, but hits it about 205 to 210 right now. Last Tuesday, she had a lesson with Tom Cooper, the new head pro at Carner’s club, Pine Tree, in Boynton Beach, Florida.

“He was demonstrating how screwed up I was,” she said. “I was getting too wristy and too upright.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CR89vMvsxJv/

It also doesn’t help that the greens at Pine Tree, which normally run fast, are at about an 8 on the Stimpmeter as the superintendent works to deepen the root structure.

The oldest player to compete in a USGA championship, Carner opened with an 80 last year in Portland. She has shot her age or better six times in the championship’s five-year history. At the inaugural U.S. Senior Women’s Open at Chicago Golf Club, Carner matched her age, 79, in the opening round.

The eight-time USGA champion has a familiar face back on the bag in Trevor Marrs, an Evans Scholar and Michigan State graduate who has caddied for her twice before. Marrs uses his vacation days to spend the week with a sporting legend.

Carner will again use a cart this week because her chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) makes it too difficult to walk hills. The par 71 layout will play to 5,964 yards.

Juli Inkster, who finished runner-up at the first two editions of the Senior Women’s Open, said she hears from fellow Pine Tree members Beth Daniel and Meg Mallon that Carner is out every day working on her game.

“When you go to the range, I call it my church,” said 64-year-old Inkster. “I’m just out there, put my headphones in, listen to the Giants game or music. It’s my peaceful time.

“I think that’s the same way with JoAnne. She’s done it for so long. But she plays because she loves the game. There is no one telling her to go out there and hit balls.”

JoAnne Gunderson Carner with the U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship trophy. (Copyright unknown/Courtesy USGA Archives)

While Carner has garnered much of the attention in the short but storied history of this event, all five past champions are in the field: Laura Davies, Helen Alfredsson, Annika Sorenstam, Jill McGill and Trish Johnson.

Carner is one of six World Golf Hall of Fame members at Fox Chapel. She’s joined by Juli Inkster, Hollis Stacy, Carol Semple Thompson, Sorenstam and Davies.

Amateur Carol Semple Thompson, a seven-time USGA champion, received a special exemption this week. The native Pennsylvanian sunk a 27-foot putt on the final hole at Fox Chapel to clinch the 2002 Curtis Cup for Team USA. She went on to captain victorious Curtis Cup squads in 2006 and 2008. Thompson, 75, owns the record for most USGA championship appearances with 121.