Photos: Golf legend Gary Player through the years

View photos of Gary Player throughout his Hall of Fame career, including nine major victories.

Gary Player is a golf giant.

A nine-time major champion, Player earned the nickname “The Black Knight” thanks to his dashing looks and outfit choices on the course.

Born on Nov. 1, 1935, and with more than 150 worldwide career wins to his name, Player has been much more than just a champion golfer. He has dedicated his life to growing the game throughout his native South Africa and the world.

Player became just the fourth golfer to earn a career grand slam with his win at the 1965 U.S. Open at Bellerive. From there, he would go on to five more majors. As a senior, Player would tack on nine more major championships.

Following his playing career, Player continued his work as a global ambassador for the game. Sharing stories, swing tips and even showing off his fitness prowess, Player has been an endearing figure within the game throughout eight decades.

From helping underprivileged children across the globe to having a hand in designing over 400 golf courses, Player has made an impact well past his wins on Tour.

Promising Australian golfer issues update on lost vision in his left eye in freak accident: ‘All I can see is black’

The 20-year-old Australian golfer was struck in the eye and transported to a hospital.

Jeff Guan, a talented up-and-coming pro, has no vision in his left eye after a freak accident on a golf course in Australia in September.

Three holes into his round at a pro-am event at the New South Wales Open at Catalina Club in Batemans Bay, New South Wales, the 20-year-old Australian golfer was struck in the eye and transported to a hospital before being airlifted to an eye specialist in Canberra and later to a hospital in Sydney.

“Nothing. It’s just black. All I can see is black,” Guan told Australian Golf Digest in his first interview since the incident in September.

Guan also wrote a long post on his social media account. “I remember this: As my whole group teed off on the third tee, my playing partner and I (whom I shared the cart with) hit our drives on the right-hand side of the fairway.”

They drove off to their balls and Guan’s partner hit his second shot and then Guan did the same. He was struck by an errant shot as he was putting his club back in his bag.

“The instant ringing and pain rushed to my head, and I dropped to the ground,” he wrote.

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Guan has undergone several operations on his left eye and spent time in multiple hospitals, where some of the top vitreoretinal surgeons have tried to save his eye after the force of the blow fractured his eye socket and traumatized his eyeball. His recovery is expected to take between six months to a year. One promising sign: three weeks after the incident, his eye pressure decreased.

“Though this was the first piece of positive news, my doctors told me that my injury was severe,” he wrote. “During my nights in hospital, I almost drowned in thoughts about the injury and my future in the sport. Not only was I utterly distraught by the news I had received, but the whole situation made me very depressed and somewhat angry … The frustration is unbearable. Why did this happen? How in the world am I supposed to recover, return, and be the same player I was, or even better?”

Just a week earlier, Guan who won the 2022 AJGA Junior Players at TPC Sawgrass and represented Australia on the Junior Presidents Cup team the same year, made his PGA Tour debut at the Procore Championship in Napa, California, missing the cut.

Guan ended his post with some words of optimism. “As a kid, I have always had a lot of perseverance and persistence. I will continue to work hard and do my best to achieve my dream,” he said. “I will be back.”

You can show your support for Guan here: asf.org.au/projects/jeffr

UCLA men run away with Preserve Golf Club Collegiate title to wrap up fall season

The Bruins are trending as they wrap up their fall season.

CARMEL, Calif. – The UCLA men’s golf team set its season on a new track Tuesday at the Preserve Golf Club Collegiate, surging in the final of three rounds to a 10-shot win over San Diego State and 11 other squads at Preserve Golf Club.

The Bruins entered the final round trailing San Diego State by a shot after the opening 36-hole day Monday. UCLA combined to shoot 11 under in the final round, good for a 23-under 841 total at the hilly Tom Fazio-designed layout at the expansive Santa Lucia Preserve on the Monterey Peninsula. Cal Poly was the host team.

The victory followed on the heels of a second-place finish at the Golf Club of Georgia Collegiate Invitational last week. That result followed fifth-place and seventh-place finishes to start the season. UCLA coach Armen Kirakossian said Tuesday that his squad had played well enough in each event, except for struggles to finish.

“Honestly, I think it was just a learning thing,” Kirakossian said. “In Georgia, we actually played a great final round and just got beat by a great Duke team that day.

“We felt like we kind of got over the hump of, you know, of getting a lead and then actually performing. Then today, I think the guys probably felt very comfortable. And they just went on and had a great final round.”

Senior Pablo Ereno (68-74-66–208) led the Bruins on the individual leaderboard, finishing one shot behind Colorado State’s Jay Pabin (69-69-69–207). UCLA senior Omar Morales (68-73-70–211) finished tied for sixth individually, and Baylor Larrabee (70-70-72–212) finished ninth.

The high finishes have added meaning for Morales and Ereno, who are in position on the PGA Tour University standings to earn status on the Korn Ferry Tour.

Morales was in fifth place before the Preserve tournament, meaning he was in position to earn status on the Korn Ferry Tour for the remainder of that tour’s 2025 season after the NCAA Championship in May, and also the right to skip to the final stage of PGA Tour Q-School for the next season, among other benefits. The PGA Tour U standings will be updated Wednesday.

Ereno was in 12th place on those standings heading into the Preserve tournament, which would give him status in May for the remainder of the North America Swing of PGA Tour Americas and an exemption into second stage of PGA Tour Q-School. If the strong finish Tuesday moves him into the top 10, he would be in position to earn conditional status on the Korn Ferry Tour for the remainder of the 2025 season after May, exempt status for the 2025 North America Swing of PGA Tour Americas and an exemption into second stage of PGA Tour Q-School.

Kirakossian said his players embrace such opportunities, but for now his squad is thrilled with its first win of the fall season.

“I always remind the guys that you just have got to stay hungry, that where you want to be needs to continue to be in in the future, that you’re pushing every single day to improve,” the Bruins coach said. “That doesn’t mean that we won’t celebrate this one on the way home. It’s a cool way to finish the fall, for sure.

“The unique part is that everyone’s contributing, yet everyone still has stuff that they probably want to work on for the spring.”

Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson fails to advance at LPGA Qualifying but earns Epson Tour status for 2025

A total of 43 players advanced to December’s Final Qualifying.

Hailey Davidson came up short in her quest to become the first transgender golfer to earn an LPGA card. Davidson closed with an even-par 72 at the second stage of LPGA Qualifying at Plantation Golf and Country Club in Venice, Florida, on Friday.

A total of 43 players advanced to December’s Final Qualifying. Davidson’s four-round total of 2-over 290 put her six shots back of the cut line.

Davidson does, however, leave with limited Epson Tour status for the 2025 season. She becomes the second transgender golfer to earn status on the developmental circuit. Bobbi Lancaster earned status in 2013 through Stage I of LPGA Q-School but never actually competed in an official event.

Players who finished in the top 80 but did not advance to Final Qualifying will be placed into Category I on the Epson Tour Priority List for 2025. Remaining players who completed 72 holes will be placed into Category K, in order of their qualifying finish. For context, 217 players were ahead of Category K on the 2024 Epson Tour Priority List at the start of the year.

Davidson declined to take questions on Friday when approached by an LPGA official after her round.

Hailey Davidson looks on after hitting a shot at LPGA Qualifying in Venice, Florida. (LPGA photo)

Letter called for repeal of policies

Earlier this week, the Independent Women’s Forum shared a letter with Outkick signed by more than 275 female golfers that was sent to the LPGA, USGA and IGF (International Golf Federation) last August calling for the organizations to repeal all policies and rules that allow biological males to compete in women’s events.

The letter states that “it is essential for the integrity and fairness of women’s golf to have a clear and consistent participation policy in place based on a player’s immutable sex.”

The LPGA sent a memo of its own to players in August stating that the tour planned to conclude a lengthy review of its current Gender Policy by year’s end and would implement any updates to the policy before the 2025 season.

In 2010, the LPGA voted to eliminate its requirement that players be “female at birth” not long after a transgender woman filed a lawsuit against the tour.

Earlier this year, Davidson came within one spot of qualifying for the 79th U.S. Women’s Open, the biggest championship in women’s golf. She had primarily competed on NXXT Golf until the Florida-based mini tour announced in March that competitors must be a biological female at birth to participate.

A three-time winner on the tour, Davidson ranked second on the mini tour’s season standings at the time of the ban. She had played nine times this season on the NXXT.

Watch: Check out this suped-up golf cart with a 180 HP Yamaha R1 engine

Don’t expect to this see down at your local muni anytime soon.

Ok, so this isn’t really about golf, but the guys at Grind Hard Plumbing Co. have created perhaps the craziest golf cart.

Not actually a plumbing company, Grind Hard is a group of friends in South Dakota who like to make custom motorized vehicles. Their website also has a cool selection of merch.

In a video on their YouTube channel, Grind Hard shows off a golf cart that was suped-up with an engine from a Yamaha R1 street bike. The R1 is famous for how fast it is. And this golf cart flies, although the narrator admits there’s no front brakes, questionable rear brakes, a could-be-better roll cage and a frame that they actually broke during one of the rides.

This particular video is about an hour long but you get the gist of everything in the first minute or so. Just don’t expect to this see down at your local muni anytime soon.

Sweden’s Maja Stark takes control in Malaysia at steamy Maybank Championship

Play was suspended on Friday due to dangerous conditions.

A string of four consecutive birdies midway through Maja Stark’s second round gave the 24-year-old Swede a slim lead at the 2024 Maybank Championship in steamy Malaysia. Stark posted a second consecutive 6-under 66 to move to 12 under for the tournament, one stroke ahead of Marina Alex, Narin An, Wei-Ling Hsu and Haeran Ryu.

“I’ve been struggling a bit with my putting this whole year,” said Stark, “but I feel like I really had an easier time seeing the lines here than I usually do.”

With three top-10s this season, including back-to-back runner-up finishes at the Chevron Championship and JM Eagle LA Championship last spring, Stark holds the second-round lead for only the second time in her brief LPGA career.

Play at Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club was suspended on Friday due to dangerous conditions at 2:10 p.m. local time and resumed at 4:10 p.m.

“We ran up 18 because we saw the clouds surrounding us,” said Stark, “and looking outside, I’m happy we did run.”

Rookie Gabi Ruffels carded a 66 to move into solo eighth. Ruffels is now two weeks into her first fall Asian swing as an LPGA member. She has four top 10s in 21 starts this season.

“I feel like at the start of the year there were a lot of, I guess, one-week breaks and not a lot of I guess two-, three-week breaks. I feel like it’s kind of been a little bit better towards the second half of the year,” said Ruffels of her schedule.

“But I feel like traveling across Asia is never easy as well. I feel like in those moments you kind of have to tell yourself how lucky you are to be doing what you’re doing, and we get to be in Malaysia, Korea last week and Japan next week. It’s pretty cool what we do.

“You know, when times get tough I just remind myself that we’re so lucky.”

Caitlin Clark is getting golf lessons from a former LPGA player ahead of pro-am with Nelly Korda, Annika Sorenstam

Clark mostly wants to pound drivers, telling her coach, “Oh, I just want to kill it.”

Before Caitlin Clark nearly made an ace that went viral on TikTok, the WNBA megastar had a lesson with Martha Foyer-Faulconer.

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The Crooked Stick pro, who played on the LPGA from 1987 to 1995, was amazed by Clark’s ability to make quick adjustments.

“Within the time we were working, we saw some drastic changes,” said Foyer-Faulconer, who had another lesson with Clark on Wednesday afternoon in Carmel, Indiana. This time the focus was on short game. Foyer-Faulconer noticed in the TikTok video that Clark was quite tense in her shoulders.

It’s all part of a tune-up before Clark plays alongside World No. 1 Nelly Korda and LPGA icon Annika Sorenstam at the upcoming Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican in Belleair, Florida. Clark will take part in the event’s pro-am on Nov. 13 and Women’s Leadership Summit the day prior at the club.

Last summer, Clark created a frenzy at the John Deere Classic Pro-Am when she played alongside Zach Johnson and Ludvig Aberg. Johnson called the Iowa legend “transcendent.”

After the Indiana Fever were knocked out of the playoffs last month, Clark joked that she planned to become a professional golfer during the offseason.

Caitlin Clark learning she is right-eye dominant with boyfriend Connor McCaffery and former LPGA player turned instructor Martha Foyer-Faulconer at Crooked Stick Golf Club (courtesy Foyer-Faulconer ).

Foyer-Faulconer grew up in Carmel and won three Indiana high school titles as a golfer, but her first love was basketball. In the LPGA media guide, Foyer-Faulconer listed her favorite moment in golf as playing basketball with Julius Irving. She once played one-on-one against “Dr. J” during a party at the tour’s Atlantic City stop.

Needless to say, it’s a thrill for Foyer-Faulconer to work with Clark, who is shopping around for a golf home in the Hoosier State. Foyer-Faulconer confirmed that the 22-year-old is nuts about the game and described her as a raw talent. It helps, too, that the weather of late has been ideal for her to grind.

“It’s also part of her DNA,” said Foyer-Faulconer, “because she’s going to do things well. She wants to be as good as she can in everything she touches. She’s very driven and passionate. It’s fun to work with her.”

On the lesson tee, Foyer-Faulconer worked first on Clark’s setup, moving her a bit farther away from the ball. The 2024 WNBA Rookie of the Year was eager to get rid of her slice and mostly wanted to pound drivers, telling her coach, “Oh, I just want to kill it.”

Foyer-Faulconer noted that they first needed to get all the parts working together in unison, so they began with wedges. It wasn’t long, however, before Clark had driver back in hand, and there was rapid improvement.

Foyer-Faulconer said it was almost like pushing a button.

“Some of this stuff you can’t teach people,” she said. “They just either have it or they don’t.”

Schupak: Ten years (to the day) after his social media blunder cost him the presidency of the PGA, Ted Bishop deserves reinstatement

“There is not a single day that goes by that I don’t think about that and I don’t regret it.”

Ted Bishop has booked his trip for the PGA of America’s upcoming annual meeting, his first time back in a decade. The 38th president of the association of more than 30,000 golf club professionals is attending for one primary reason – to see Crystal Morse, the head professional at The Legends Golf Club, the course he operates in Franklin, Indiana, receive the PGA’s Player Development Award.

There’s a bit of delicious irony that just weeks removed from the 10-year anniversary of Bishop’s impeachment as president of the PGA for making sexist comments on social media that his female protege, who also doubles as Bishop’s co-head coach of the Franklin Community boys and girls golf teams, is being honored with a national award on Nov. 5 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. If that isn’t rich enough for you, Bishop, 70, is scheduled to receive the Sam Snead Award from the Metropolitan Section of the PGA on Nov. 14, recognizing his “exceptional contributions to the Met section and the broader golf community.”

“I was humbled beyond words when the Met PGA informed me of this great honor,” Bishop said in a release announcing the award. Speaking to Golfweek, he added, “This is one of the greatest honors ever bestowed upon me.”

Ten years ago, Bishop was humbled in a very different way, ousted from his volunteer job less than a month before his term was to end.

“It seems like it was 100 years,” Bishop said. “But there is not a single day that goes by that I don’t think about that and I don’t regret it. The biggest regret of my life is the way it all ended.”

On Oct. 23, 2014, Bishop said he felt compelled to defend the record of Hall of Famers Nick Faldo and Tom Watson, who had been disparaged in Ian Poulter’s recently-released autobiography. On Twitter, he wrote, “Faldo’s record stands by itself. Six majors and all-time RC points. Yours vs His? Lil Girl.”

If Bishop’s message was unclear due to the 140-character limit of Twitter, he elaborated on Facebook.

“Used to be athletes who had lesser records or accomplishments in a sport never criticized the icons. Tom Watson (8 majors and a 10-4-1 Ryder Cup record) and Nick Faldo (6 majors and all-time Ryder Cup points leader) get bashed by Ian James Poulter. Really? Sounds like a little school girl squealing during recess. C’MON MAN!”

PGA President Ted Bishop addresses attendees of the 96th PGA Annual Meeting.

It’s hard to fathom that Twitter (now X) has been around for a decade but Bishop’s politically incorrect tweet offended a wide swath of the game he purported to represent. Despite deleting the posts in short order, he was subsequently canceled before that term became in vogue.

Bishop apologized for abusing his position of power but the PGA’s board shifted into damage control mode and when Bishop refused to step down, it voted to impeach him. As a result, he wouldn’t be classified as an A-5 member, the designation of a past PGA president. He’s the only past PGA president required to pay dues and still earn his recertification. Nor has he been invited to PGA Championships and Ryder Cups, or bestowed any other courtesies extended to past presidents, including serving the customary role as honorary president as well as captain of the U.S. side at a PGA Cup and for a Junior Ryder Cup team.

The punishment never seemed to fit the crime for an individual who at closer glance had championed the women’s game, hosting every significant statewide women’s golf championship in Indiana at his facility since it opened in 1992. He helped create the Indiana Women’s Open and hosted the first 10 years of its existence. Both of his daughters – Ashely, who works at the Legends GC along with her husband, and Ambry, the women’s head golf coach at St. John’s University for the past two decades and an assistant pro at the Saint Andrews Golf Club in New York, had followed in his footsteps.

One of Bishop’s supporters told him that the PGA gave him the death penalty for shoplifting. Ken Willis of the Daytona Beach News-Journal wrote: “There’s reaction, there’s overreaction, and there’s the utter carpet-bombing exhibited by executives of the PGA of America, whose blitzkrieg actually took down just one man.”

What may have bruised Bishop most was that then-PGA CEO Pete Bevacqua stood by as the board cut him loose. (Only LPGA great and CBS Sports golf commentator Dottie Pepper, who was an independent director on the PGA board, abstained from the otherwise unanimous vote.)

“A guy I hired, promoted and formed a tremendously productive working relationship with,” is how Bishop described Bevacqua in a photo caption in his book “Unfriended,” of the two of them in happier times. “I can’t help but feel betrayed and unfriended by Pete more than anyone else.”

From left: PGA of America CEO Pete Bevacqua, Donald Trump and former PGA of America President Ted Bishop at a news conference in 2014.

Bishop was elected to PGA membership in September 1985 and had served in a leadership capacity at either the section or national levels since 1989. He began his two-year term in office in 2013 and almost immediately, he became embroiled in the anchoring debate, thrust into the spotlight as the voice of the PGA’s controversial stance opposite the USGA and its proposed Rule 14-1b. He had been portrayed mostly as a hard-nosed, no-nonsense maverick who delighted in going against the grain – for example, when he unexpectedly chose Tom Watson as the next Ryder Cup captain.

Bishop did a lot of good in his role as PGA president – though some might argue he found hearing his own voice too intoxicating – and then one day it was all over due to a foolish few words he typed on social media. Bishop struggled with the adjustment.

“I mean, I was bitter. I just had a bad attitude. I was kind of getting focused on maybe some of the wrong things,” he said.

“I felt many emotions after my impeachment,” he wrote in his autobiography “Unfriended.” “Embarrassment, despair, rejection, betrayal, anger and depression would best describe my mental state in the weeks that followed my unceremonious fall from grace in golf. It was an extremely tough time for my family and me.”

Time has healed some of the wounds. Tom Watson, who Bishop championed as U.S. Ryder Cup in 2014, former PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem, and Donald Trump, before he shifted into politics, were among his friends who lent their support. A few weeks after Bishop was removed from his post, past USGA president Glen Nager, who departed a similar volunteer job on not-the-best-of-terms, reached out to Bishop and offered what proved to be some wise words of wisdom.

“He told me something at the time that I didn’t really realize how true it was, but he couldn’t have been any more accurate. And he said, ‘You know the difference between you and me? You basically spent your entire life serving the PGA of America.’ And he said, ‘I served USGA, but in a much shorter capacity.’ And he said it took him about a year to get over everything that kind of happened at the end of his term with the USGA. And he said, ‘It will take you probably five years to get over this.’ You know what? He was right, almost to the day.”

But that changed in the fall of 2019 when Bishop made a trip to the PGA’s then-headquarters in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, at the encouragement of Tony Pancake, the director of golf at Crooked Stick in Carmel, Indiana, and the 2024 PGA Club Professional of the Year, and Mike David, the executive director of the Indiana PGA Section. The two longtime Bishop supporters orchestrated behind the scenes for Bishop to be given an opportunity to address the board and say his peace. David and Pancake accompanied Bishop on the trip but weren’t permitted to sit in on the meeting. It was the first time Bishop had stood in front of the board since he’d been impeached and he asked for forgiveness and for his rights as a PGA president to be reinstated.

“I remember walking out of there, and I told Tony and Mike, “You know what? I don’t know what’s going to happen from here, but I’ll tell you this, I feel like I’ve had the weight of the world lifted off my shoulders, and I feel like this finally brings closure to this situation.”

In 2017 or 2018 – he couldn’t be sure – Bishop already had made amends with Bevacqua. (Multiple calls and texts requesting an interview with Bevacqua weren’t answered before this story was published.)

“We reconciled everything, and I feel like we’re good friends today,” Bishop said.

In fact, Bevacqua sent an email on Bishop’s behalf asking for his PGA rights to be reinstated, but that request and Bishop’s efforts at the board meeting fell on deaf ears. That decision reeks of hypocrisy given how the PGA’s leadership handled a more recent situation. In 2018, Paul Levy was in the middle of his presidency with the PGA when he was arrested and charged with suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol. Despite the fact that Levy could have injured or killed innocent motorists while behind the wheel in his condition, the PGA stood by him and Levy served out the rest of his term and retained all the privileges of a past president when his term in office concluded.

David, for one, continues to campaign to the national officers on Bishop’s behalf, and mused that his unceremonious exit as PGA president still bothers him more than he will admit.

“I’m dumbfounded that we have not reinstated him,” David said. “A 10-year sentence is long enough. From the standpoint of the Indiana PGA, we feel he deserves better than this. He has served his time and the continued ban at this point is ridiculous.”

Rory McIlroy catches the lid of the Wanamaker trophy as PGA of America president Ted Bishop passes it to him after McIlroy won the 2014 PGA Championship.

Bishop could’ve crawled into a hole and disassociated himself from the PGA but instead he dove into his work as general manager and director of golf at The Legends Golf Club in Franklin, Indiana, a daily-fee facility where he oversaw the construction and development of what originally was a 45-hole complex. He’s assumed the role of full-time superintendent, too, and often can be found behind the front desk or answering the phone. He also poured his energy into his local section and became involved in several committees for the Indiana PGA section, and in the last five years he’s found his greatest fulfillment in coaching and mentoring high school teams.

Bishop bursts with pride when he talks about the Franklin Grizzly Cubs women’s team, which has won the mid-state championship six straight years and just won the first sectional since 2005, the first regional since 1999 and finished fifth in the state.

“I’ve gotten as much pleasure coaching the girls as I have the boys,” Bishop said.

He’s simply trying to keep up with wife Cindy, who coached the school to several titles when daughters Ashely and Ambry starred for the team.

“It’s like my career almost has come a complete 360,” Bishop said.

And while the PGA’s board has yet to see the light, it couldn’t ignore the success that Morse, Bishop’s co-coach, has made on the development side of the game at his facility; moreover, the Met PGA honor proves that many PGA professionals are willing to forgive one mistake and look at Bishop’s full body of work.

He was hard at work with his son-in-law in the back kitchen at his club while Asheley was prepping for a catering job when the Met PGA phoned him with the news of the Sam Snead Award. Bishop didn’t need to be given an award to know he’s been making a difference both near and far, but it did feel like validation.

“He broke down and was so emotional when he hung up the phone,” Ashely recalled.

Ten years later, Bishop’s career deserves to be remembered for more than two words. He’s demonstrated in his second act that golf is better with him in it.

This story has been updated to correct a typo.

NCAA champ Adela Cernousek shoots 66 at LPGA Qualifying; transgender golfer Hailey Davidson improves after 69

The top 35 and ties after four rounds advance to December’s Final Qualifying.

Isi Gabsa didn’t want to admit it, but she reckons this is probably her 10th trip to LPGA Qualifying School. The 29-year-old German has been there enough to know the goal is always to win at the no-cut event.

The top 35 and ties after four rounds at Plantation Golf and Country Club advance to December’s Final Qualifying. Gabsa carded a 5-under 67 on Wednesday to sit two strokes behind a trio at 9 under that includes two amateurs.

“I think it was just one of those days where the bad shots just end up in a good spot,” said Gabsa of her bogey-free day on the Panther Course.

Texas A&M’s Adela Cernousek, who won the NCAA Championship last spring, carded a 66 on the Panther Course that included two bogeys. Cernousek holds a share of seventh at the midway point, three behind the leaders. She has Stacy Lewis’ father, Dale Lewis, on the bag this week in Venice, Florida. The two-time major winner and victorious Solheim Cup captain is married to A&M head coach Gerrod Chadwell.

LPGA Q-Series: Qualifying stage leaderboard

Cernousek, one of 19 amateurs in the field, will have to turn professional to participate in Final Qualifying, should she advance.

“I didn’t really set any goals,” said the Frenchwoman. “Just try to do my best and see what happens at the end of this week.”

2024 U.S. Women's Open
Adela Cernousek hits a tee shot on the 10th hole during the second round of the 2024 U.S. Women’s Open. (Photo: John Jones-USA TODAY Sports)

UCLA’s senior Zoe Campos, who is also playing this week as an amateur, holds a share of the lead at 9 under alongside fellow amateur Ashley Menne and Roberta Liti. Both Campos and Menne, who wrapped up her collegiate career at Arizona State last spring, carded 67s. Liti followed an opening 66 with a 69.

Other notables include former Wake Forest standout Rachel Kuehn, who moved up the leaderboard to a share of 33rd after a second-round 70. Former Solheim Cup player Matilda Castren vaulted up after a 68 to a share of 28th.  Former USC standout Amari Avery shot 69-71 and is T-19.

Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson followed an opening 78 on the Panther Course with a 69 on the Bobcat. Davidson moved from 171st after Round 1 to 108th.

All players who complete four rounds at Plantation will receive Epson Tour status. Davidson would be the second transgender golfer to earn status on the developmental circuit. Bobbi Lancaster earned status in 2013 through Stage I of LPGA Q-School but never actually competed in a official event.

Golfer dies on Oregon course after tree crushes him: ‘Wrong spot at the wrong time’

There was nothing about the conditions that would have led anyone to think a tree could come down.

A 68-year-old man was killed last weekend when a tree snapped on the Oregon golf course he loved playing, pinning him to the ground.

Bob Dunn, who split time between Tillamook, Oregon, and a home in Nicaragua, was playing the Mook at Alderbrook when the tree collapsed and killed him.

The managing partners of the course released a statement on Facebook.

“Bob was not only a dedicated member of our golf community, but also a beloved friend to many,” the statement read. “His presence on the course brought joy and camaraderie, and he will be profoundly missed by all who had the privilege of knowing him.”

 

According to a story in the Oregonian, his playing partner said nothing about the conditions would have led the group to believe a tree could come down:

“We were just in the wrong spot at the wrong time,” said Hugh Ragle, who was playing golf with Dunn and Dunn’s son on Saturday at The Mook at Alderbrook course. “That tree came down without any wind. Just a crack, and boom, it was down.”

Fellow golfers say Dunn was well-liked and known for his habit of walking the course. After retiring from NW Natural Gas Company, he moved to San Juan del Sur in Nicaragua, where he spent several months each year. In the rest of the year, he lived north of Tillamook, friends said.

Dunn was just getting ready for his return to Nicaragua but had scheduled a few more rounds with his buddies before he left, said Mark McClaskey, who golfed with Dunn several times a week.

Patrick Zweifel, a co-owner of The Mook, said maintenance crews removed probably 100 dangerous trees when he purchased the course two years ago. The alder tree didn’t show signs of being a problem at the time, he said. Now he plans to look again.

The Mook at Alderbrook was built in 1925.
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