Photos: Min Woo Lee through the years

View photos of Min Woo Lee throughout his young career.

Min Woo Lee is one of the biggest names that highlight an Australian resurgence in professional golf.

With Greg Norman and a handful of others laying the foundation for players like Geoff Ogilvy, Adam Scott and Jason Day, the next generation of Aussie men is highlighted by Cam Smith and Lee.

Turning pro at 19 years old in 2019, Lee has tallied two wins on the DP World Tour and continues to trend closer to a top 50 Official World Golf Ranking as he splits time between the two biggest golf tours in the world.

Registering three top-30 finishes in majors in 2022, Lee looks to finally step out of the large shadow cast by his older sister, multiple-time major winner Minjee Lee.

As he turns 25 in July, Lee appears to be joining his sister as a top player and a major contender in the coming years.

Min Woo Lee buries birdie putt, wins three-way playoff to capture European Tour’s abrdn Scottish Open

After a Sunday 64 Lee earned his second European Tour win in a three-way playoff.

Australian Min Woo Lee dropped an 8-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to capture the abrdn Scottish Open on Sunday, marking his second victory on the European Tour, this one coming against one of the circuit’s strongest fields in recent memory.

Lee edged Matt Fitzpatrick and Thomas Detry in the playoff, but first, he posted a 64 on Sunday, using six straight birdies on the front nine to get into bonus golf.

The native of Perth, Australia, deserved the win — he finished the last 43 holes of the four-day event at The Renaissance Club with an eagle, 15 birdies and just one bogey.

His other previous win was the ISPS Handa Vic Open in February 2020.

Ian Poulter had posted a 63 early in the day and shared the lead for a stretch, but the group passed him. Ryan Palmer and Lucas Herbert tied Poulter for second at 17 under for the tournament.

Jon Rahm, who appeared to be closing in prior to a weather delay, finished in seventh, just two shots off the leaders. Justin Thomas was T-8 at 15 under while Xander Schauffele (-14) and Scottie Scheffler (-13) both posted top-15 finishes.

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Dean Burmester cards four 2s in a row, posts back-nine 28 at Scottish Open

Dean Burmester recorded a back-nine 28, the lowest back this century, according to the European Tour.

Dean Burmester golfed his ball on Saturday.

In the third round at the abrdn Scottish Open, Burmester recorded a back-nine 28, the lowest back nine this century, according to the European Tour.

His scorecard shows four 2s in a row, two on par 3s and two hole-outs for eagle on par 4s.

On the 12th, he made a birdie putt from two feet. On the 13th, he holed out from 177 yards. On 14, another birdie putt, this time from eight feet. On the 15th hole, a 488-yard par-4, Burmester holed out from 210 yards.

For good measure, he then birdied the par-5 16th. That’s right, he went 7 under on a five-hole stretch.

His third-round 66 moved up into a tie for 31st.

Heading into Sunday’s final round, Burmester sits at 7 under, seven shots back of co-leaders Matthew Fitzpatrick and Thomas Detry. Jon Rahm is in solo third, one shot back at 13 under.

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Lynch: European Tour ‘security’ around Rory McIlroy was a joke, but no laughing matter

Whatever the cause, this man clearly has issues, but there won’t be many constituencies in golf who will find the humor in this.

To the extent that we think at all about security issues at golf tournaments, it’s typically in the context of spectators being ejected—justifiably so in instances of unruly behavior, questionably so if it’s because a rabbit-eared player heard a comment he didn’t like.

Security is conspicuous at most PGA Tour events, whether local police departments or companies hired to manage crowds. There’s another layer of security that passes largely unnoticed. High-profile players are assigned a uniformed police officer who does not stray from his side throughout the day. The Tour’s own security personnel also moves between groups.

Compare those protocols to what we witnessed Friday at Scottish Open, when a fan strode onto the 10th tee, snatched a club from Rory McIlroy’s bag, then proceeded to waggle it around for a time as though preparing to hit a shot as McIlroy, Jon Rahm and their caddies stared in disbelief. Eventually an official (one well-stricken in years, based on the video) approached and ushered the trespasser aside. Then two laggardly security officers showed up and frogmarched the man away, making a game attempt at appearing to do a job they had manifestly failed at.

McIlroy was unfazed. “It was a surprise, yes, but it was handled efficiently and everything’s okay,” he said after his round. “I had no idea who he was. Again, it was handled quickly and that was the end of it.”

But McIlroy pays others to be fazed for him, and we can assume his management team left the European Tour in no doubt what they thought of how the incident was handled. They won’t be alone in registering concern. Among other high-profile players and their managers, Friday’s Keystone Cops farce will have gone down about as well as a pint of cold vomit.

By its nature, golf allows fans closer to the action than most any other major sport. It’s the very charm of spectating. That proximity between athlete and admirer comes with an accepted amount of risk, of course, and we’re accustomed to occasional halfwitted horseplay. Like the tutu-clad chap who scampered onto a fairway in the final round of the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines last month, or the streakers who periodically enliven the Open Championship by showing their shortcomings.

The meddler at the Scottish Open seemed more creepy than his counterpart at Torrey Pines, but since there wasn’t a direct physical threat to a player or caddie the episode provided plenty of amusement for social media scrollers. If the man involved was suffering mental health issues, there was empathy. If he was over-served, there was mockery. Whatever the underlying cause, he clearly has issues. But there won’t be many constituencies in the golf world who will find the humor in this.

Despite what a few keyboard warriors were hollering, the onus was not on a caddie or player to wrestle this fan to the ground and retrieve the golf club. Anyone who has dipped a toe into the Twitterverse can testify to the worrying number of people out there who are clearly unwell, consumed with grievances, rage and conspiracy theories. Prominent athletes regularly receive threats from that quarter, and McIlroy is no exception. That’s why players expect both tournament organizers and Tours to protect them to whatever extent is possible. Like, for example, preventing a disturbed man from having unfettered access to the tee to do whatever he pleases while competitors are waiting to play.

It’s possible the personnel hired for security duty at the Scottish Open had little or no experience working a golf tournament. It’s also possible their understanding of what is required of them was deficient. But neither of those excuses holds true for the European Tour, which was made to look amateurish at best, negligent at worst. If there was one group on the course who might have expected competent security, this was it: McIlroy, Rahm, Justin Thomas. That the European Tour failed to provide adequate protection even on their first hole early on a Friday morning betrays an approach so casual it would be laughable, if it wasn’t so troublesome.

This incident comes at a time when the R&A is stressing how players must adhere to government rules around COVID and remain in a bubble during next week’s Open Championship. That task won’t have been made easier by every player and caddie being rudely made aware that their “bubble” can be burst by a random fan.

It’s easy to overreact to the misadventures of one troubled fan a world away who inspired a day’s worth of viral videos on social media. After all, no one was hurt and he was eventually taken to the hospital for assistance. But the ease with which he was able to act on his impulses—and the delay before security intervened—should not go unremarked upon.

It’s all funny, until the day it’s not. Because if these things were just a laughing matter, no one would have ever heard of Günther Parche.

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In first event since winning U.S. Open, Jon Rahm co-leads at Scottish Open

An odd incident just prior to the opening tee shot of the day didn’t throw Jon Rahm off his game, as he fired a second-round 65.

Three weeks ago, Jon Rahm stormed the back nine at Torrey Pines and claimed his first major championship at the U.S. Open.

He hasn’t teed it up since but so far, so good at the abrdn Scottish Open this week.

Rahm shot a second-round 65 and is tied with Thomas Detry after 36 holes at The Renaissance Club in North Berwick, Scotland. Those two have matched each other both days so far, shooting 66s on Thursday and 65s on Friday.

Rahm played the back nine first and threw six birdies on his score card to make the turn in 29.

“I think we were fortunate the first seven, eight holes, really no wind at all. So when you play an a links golf course with no wind, you can make some birdies,” Rahm said after his round.

There was a weird incident on the 10th tee box, his first of the day. As he and playing partners Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas were chatting before teeing off, a man walked on the tee box, took a club and head cover out of McIlroy’s golf bag and set up as if he was going to hit the head cover. As the golfers looked on in bewilderment, security approached the man and without incident, escorted him off the property.

abrdn Scottish Open: Leaderboard | Photos

The tournament has a stacked field and the big names are gathering near the top of the leaderboard, with Thomas, Matt Fitzpatrick, Lee Westwood and Ian Poulter all in the top 10 so far. McIlroy, however, is 1 under and is in a tie for 91st, 10 shots off the lead.

The 149th Open Championship is next week at Royal St. George’s in England.

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Security! Fan strolls onto tee, grabs Rory McIlroy’s headcover, iron at abrdn Scottish Open

A fan strolls onto a tee as if to hit Rory McIlroy’s headcover with an iron while McIlroy, Jon Rahm look on at abrdn Scottish Open.

A weird lapse in security appeared to have occurred at the abrdn Scottish Open on Friday when what appears to be a random fan walked onto the 10th tee box, grabbed Rory McIlroy’s dog-shaped driver headcover and an iron. He then set up as if he planned to hit the headcover off the tee with the iron.

McIlroy, playing companion and World No. 1 Jon Rahm, caddie Harry Diamond and several officials stood there apparently flummoxed for several seconds. It was the opening hole of the second round for McIlroy and Rahm, the recent U.S. Open champion who is the early leader at 11 under in the abrdn Scottish Open. Also in the pairing but not on the video was Justin Thomas.

McIlroy and Rahm were casually chatting when the fan confidently strolled onto the tee box and grabbed the iron and headcover as if he was supposed to be there. It took a second for McIlroy and Rahm to even notice anything strange was happening, and when the realization struck that something very odd was occurring, they remained calm and appeared to be looking around for security.

Several people on Twitter posted videos of the event, including this one from @deep_fried_egg.

The man placed the headcover on the tee and set up as if he planned to give it a whack with the iron. An official then spoke calmly with the man, and after a few more seconds somebody called for security. The man was then escorted off the tee, handing back the iron but trying to keep the headcover before a plainclothes and burly security officer grabbed the man by the arm and led him off the tee.

It was all very calm and very odd. McIlroy went on to make par on the hole en route to a second-round 71. He trails Rahm, who shot 65, by 10 shots after two rounds.

Sky Sports reports that police addressed the situation thusly: “Officers were alerted to a man causing a disturbance within the grounds of the Renaissance Club in East Lothian, around 8am on Friday, July 9. The 35-year-old man has been taken to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh and enquiries are ongoing.”

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Scottish Open: Connor Syme’s head not turned despite lure of Open Championship place

Like a siren singing on a rocky outcrop, the lure of an Open Championship place can be a major distraction.

Like a siren singing on a rocky outcrop, the lure of an Open Championship place can be a major distraction.

Three places for next week’s Sandwich showpiece are up for grabs in the last chance saloon of the abrdn Scottish Open but Connor Syme is not getting his head turned by this particular temptation.

After a four-under 67 at The Renaissance, the same score as fellow Scots David Law, Grant Forrest and Richie Ramsay, Syme is simply focusing on the task in hand.

Asked if those Open spots were a big incentive this week, Syme, who played in the 2017 and 2019 championships, said: “Not really. I know how special it is to play The Open. But it’s so up on the air. I’m just trying to have a good week here and see where that ends up.”

With an $8 million purse and some of the world’s best competing alongside him, the home comforts of the Scottish Open certainly stir the senses. “This is like a major for us lads,” added Syme, who has posted a third and a fifth on the European Tour this season.

Some of the other tartan lads made a decent fist of it, too, with Forrest, Law and Ramsay all sitting in the upper echelons on that four-under mark.

Robert MacIntyre, meanwhile, finished a stroke further back at 3-under after an eventful round. The world No. 51 began his campaign with back-to-back birdies on his first two holes but was level-par again by the turn.

The Oban left-hander finished with a flourish, though, and birdied three of his closing five holes which included a delightfully executed flop-shot on his final hole which trundled in for a two.

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Watch: Using a 90-foot eagle putt, Justin Thomas near the top at Scottish Open

With a number of big names in the field, Justin Thomas needed a big putt to get near the top of the leaderboard at the Scottish Open.

With a number of big names in the field, Justin Thomas needed a big putt to get near the top of the leaderboard during the first round of the abrdn Scottish Open.

Thomas holed a 90-foot eagle putt en route to a 65 in North Berwick, Scotland, and he sits a single stroke off the pace after the opening day of action.

On the par-5 7th hole, Thomas hit a long, winding putt that dropped, helping him fire a 32 on the front at a surprisingly forgiving Renaissance Club. Thomas closed out the round with birdies on two of the final two holes and trails only Jack Senior, who opened with a 64.

Thomas said he felt the course was even more there for the taking, but he enjoyed a relatively calm opening day.

“Bogey-free made it pretty stress-free. I was a little upset or disappointed with some of the iron shots I hit, felt I could have hit them closer, ” he said. “But it’s nice to play that last hole as well as I did to hopefully generate some momentum.”

The Rolex Series tournament, which features larger purses than many of the European Tour events, has attracted a number of top names. Lee Westwood is also at 6 under while Jon Rahm, Tommy Fleetwood, Matt Fitzpatrick, Ian Poulter and Ryan Palmer are among a thick pack two off the lead. Others in solid position after the opening round include Xander Schauffele (4 under), and Tyrrell Hatton (2 under). Rory McIlroy, Collin Morikawa and Billy Horschel all shot 70 and sit six off the lead.

The wind was not much of a factor during the first round but it’s expected to pick up as the week progresses.

While Thomas hasn’t been slumping, it’s been an unusually lukewarm stretch for the player who sits third in the Official World Golf Ranking and No. 6 in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings. He hasn’t cracked the top 10 in any of his last eight starts since winning The Players Championship, and he missed the cut at the PGA Championship on Kiawah Island, shooting a pair of 75s in the process.

When asked if he was hoping to face tougher conditions in preparation for next week’s British Open at Royal St. George’s, Thomas insisted he wasn’t thinking about next week.

“I don’t care,” Thomas said. “As long as I’m holding the trophy at the end of the week, I’m pretty pleased with that preparation for The Open.”

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