Jason Scrivener leads Scandinavian Mixed but there’s an Arizona Wildcat freshman tied for second

Jason Scrivener leads but just two shots back are two women, including a 19-year-old college student.

The Scandinavian Mixed 2022 is a unique event in pro golf, with a field of 78 men and 78 women from the DP World Tour and the LET competing against each other for one trophy and one first-place check.

After two rounds, Jason Scrivener is 12 under and holds a two-shot lead. He had eight birdies Friday, including four in a row on his back nine, en route to a 64. He’s 214th in the latest Official World Golf Ranking and has yet to win on the DP Tour.

There’s a three-way tie for second at 10 under and there are two women in that group, including Italian Carolina Melgrati, 19, who just finished her freshman year at the University of Arizona. She started her week with a 65 and was tied for the lead after the first round. A second-round 69 has her in contention to win as an amateur this week.

2022 Volvo Car Scandinavian Mixed
Carolina Melgrati on the 15th green during the 2022 Volvo Car Scandinavian Mixed Hosted by Henrik & Annika at Halmstad Golf Club in Sweden. (Photo: Naomi Baker/Getty Images)

“It is crazy! It is so great,” Melgrati said after her first round. “As soon as I got the invitation, I said yes, I’m playing because it is great to compete with professional golfers. It is amazing and that is also my dream, so it is coming true.”

Melgrati is joined at 10 under by Linn Grant, a former Arizona State standout who turned pro last September. Playing in her native Sweden, Grant won two weeks ago at The Mithra Belgian Ladies Open.

Also at 10 under is Mike Lorenzo-Vera.

The event has Volvo Car as the title sponsor, is co-hosted by Annika Sorenstam and Henrik Stenson and is being staged at Halmstad Golf Club in Halmstad, Sweden.

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Ian Poulter says he’ll appeal PGA Tour suspension; Sergio Garcia, Graeme McDowell hope to stay on DP World Tour

While Poulter could be headed to litigation, Graeme McDowell resigned his membership to “keep the moral high ground.”

Ian Poulter won’t surrender his PGA Tour membership without a fight.

While several of the notable LIV Golf players suspended by the PGA Tour already had informed the Tour that they were giving up their membership – including Kevin Na, Dustin Johnson and Sergio Garcia – Poulter said on Thursday that he elected not to resign his membership.

When informed that PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan had lived up to his word and suspended 17 players who had “willfully violated its regulations” by playing in this week’s LIV Golf Invitational Series debut near London, Poulter told the media, “I will appeal, for sure. It makes no sense given how I have played the game of golf for all this time. I didn’t resign my membership because I don’t feel I have done anything wrong. I have played all over the world for 25 years. This is no different.

“I am committed to playing around the world like I have done for so many years so it is a shame if they view this as different. Of course, it’s going to be sad, when you feel you haven’t done anything wrong and want to promote the game of golf. It’s a power struggle and it’s just disappointing.”

Poulter made his comments following the first round of the inaugural event of eight tournaments scheduled for the LIV Golf Invitational Series, which is funded by the Public Investment Fund, the sovereign wealth investment fund of Saudi Arabia and one of the largest in the world. It has backed and is financing LIV Golf Investments, the parent company of LIV Golf.

While Poulter could be headed down the road of future litigation with the PGA Tour, Graeme McDowell explained that he resigned his membership “out of an abundance of caution” and to “keep the moral high ground.”

“I actually resigned about 30 minutes before I teed it up today,” McDowell said. “It was a tough decision. I wanted to keep the moral high ground and kind of remain a member of the Tour because I really didn’t feel like I needed to resign nor that I should have to resign. It was a very difficult decision. I kind of resigned out of an abundance of caution honestly because I feel like it puts me in a less litigious situation regards getting drawn into anything unnecessarily. But like I say, I didn’t want to resign. I love the PGA Tour. It’s been great to me. This is not about the PGA Tour is a bad tour. This is about being able to add on additional opportunities to my golf career. Really hard.

“Unfortunately this is going to be short-term pain, but I think all the players that are here this week have only been strengthened in their confidence that we are making the right decisions here because we feel like the execution level that we’re seeing here, the passion, the love of the game of golf that these guys have at LIV, that’s why we’re here. I feel like confidence has been strengthened. Even in the face of consequences which we knew were kind of on the horizon.”

When told of the ban from playing the Tour, including sponsor invites, Sergio Garcia claimed it didn’t apply to him because he was no longer a member.

“That’s one of the reasons why I resigned because I didn’t want to get into my legal battles,” Garcia said. “I’m very happy to be here for many reasons. It’s going to allow me to do what I love, which is playing golf. It’s going to allow me to see my family more, spend more time with my kids, 4 and 2, spend as much time as I can, and I make a good living doing it. For me it’s a win/win. I’m excited for what’s coming. Excited to finally be here playing and see the reaction of the people and the players and everything. So it’s very exciting.”

Garica confirmed that he has no intention, however, of giving up his membership to the DP World Tour.

“Why haven’t I? Because I would like to still be a member,” he said.

Asked if he still hopes to participate in future Ryder Cups, he said, Definitely. First of all, I’m European, I love the European Tour. I played it for 23 years. Even though I played on the PGA TOUR, I always made sure that I kept my membership in Europe because I love The European Tour, and that’s one of the reasons why I wanted to stay a member of the European Tour.

And obviously we’re going to have to wait and see what the European Tour does. But I definitely would like to keep my membership there, play at least my minimum, and you know, get my — as good a chance as I can to make The Ryder Cup Team because I love that event. But I guess we’ll see. We’ll wait and see what happens over there.”

McDowell shared Garcia’s hope that Keith Pelley, who heads the DP World Tour, wouldn’t simply follow in lockstep with the PGA Tour and ban the participants in LIV Golf from competing on their home circuit. The second LIV event happens to conflict with the DP Tour’s Irish Open.

“Will Keith follow suit? I hope he doesn’t,” McDowell said. “I think he has a fantastic opportunity here with a lot of European players and European Tour players that would like to subsidize their schedule with other events, especially if we are not allowed to play on the PGA Tour. I really hope The European Tour makes a good decision. They may have to follow suit with what Jay and the PGA Tour are doing, so watch this space.”

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DP World Tour: 13 players WD or RETD at the Porsche European Open when hopes of making the cut were gone

Four of the 13 players who WD or RETD from the event carded an 80 in the opening round.

This week the DP World Tour (formally known as the European Tour) is in Hamburg, Germany, for the Porsche European Open at Green Eagle Golf Courses.

It’s a tough track.

How tough? Well, the cut came in at 4 over and the players currently in last heading into the final round are at 12 over.

But, it gets worse. Four of the 13 players who WD or RETD from the event carded an 80 in the opening round. One player, Sebastian Garcia Rodriguez, shot a 16-over (!!) 88.

Many fans on social media are upset with the players, stating it’s disrespectful to not only the event’s host but the sponsors of the tournament as well as the other players in the field.

South African pro Christiaan Bezuidenhout, who is currently 62nd in the Official World Golf Ranking, was among those who brought up the issue.

Victor Perez has the 54-hole lead at 5 under, and the highest-ranked player within striking distance is Tommy Fleetwood, who is even.

Here’s a complete look at the bottom of the leaderboard:

Screenshot from DP World Tour site.

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Dramatic finish earns Thorbjorn Olesen his sixth DP World Tour title at the Betfred British Masters

“I just gave it everything,” said Olesen, who entered with a three-shot lead but won by just one.

After a pair of late bogeys on the 14th and 15th holes it seemed as if Thorbjorn Olesen’s chances at the Betfred British Masters were shot.

Then for the second consecutive day the Dane eagled the 17th and birdied the 18th holes at The Belfry in England to win his sixth DP World Tour title and first since the 2018 Italian Open.

Olesen began the day with a three-shot lead and won by just one over Sebastian Soderberg, who shot a 4-under 68 to finish solo second at 9 under. Connor Syme, Richie Ramsay and Justin Walters finished T-3 at 8 under.

“It was obviously a pretty tough day and hit a lot of shots to the left,” said Olesen, who dropped shots on Nos. 1, 6 and 9. “I was really struggling. I somehow just kept going, and yeah, what a finish. Incredible.

“Standing on 17, I’m thinking I can make birdie, birdie and maybe get into a playoff,” he explained. “But obviously when I got the chance on 17, I prefer to take that. Eighteen is a tough hole, so par is a good score obviously. I just gave it everything.”

Over his seven previous starts this year Olesen made the cut five times but earned just one top-20 finish. The win is his first since being suspended after he was charged with sexual assault, being drunk on an aircraft and assault, but the 32-year-old was cleared of all charges last December.

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‘Guys had money in their pockets’: Greg Norman says Phil Mickelson’s comments made players leave Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Invitational series

Norman also said two former world No. 1s have registered for LIV Golf’s first event in London.

In an interview with ESPN, Greg Norman unearthed new details about his Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf Invitational series, as well as the damaging effects of Phil Mickelson’s controversial comments.

The two-time major champion and CEO of LIV Golf Investments said his 14-event upstart league was ready to go back in February, the same week Alan Shipnuck published Mickelson’s “scary motherf—ers” quote in a story for the Fire Pit Collective.

“Quite honestly, we were ready to launch on the Tuesday or Wednesday of Genesis,” Norman told ESPN. “We had enough players in our strength of field, or minimal viable product, ready to come on board. And when all of that happened, everybody got the jitters, and the PGA Tour threatened people with lifetime bans and stuff like that.”

“There’s no question (Mickelson’s comments) hurt,” Norman said. “It hurt a lot of aspects. It hurt the PGA Tour. It hurt us. It hurt the game of golf. It hurt Phil. So yeah, across all fronts. It wasn’t just specifically to us. But it definitely created negative momentum against us.”


Lynch: Three major championships will be cheapened in this season of Saudi sportswashing


Norman told ESPN at least 15 of the world’s top 50 players had committed to LIV Golf a week after SI.com’s Bob Harig reported that 15 of the world’s top 100 players had registered for the first event at Centurion Golf Club in London, June 9-11.

“To this day, we still have players under contract and signed,” Norman said of the players committed to the eight-event series. “The ones who wanted to get out because of the pressure of the PGA Tour gave back their money and got out. Guys had money in their pockets.”

More than 200 players registered for the first event, according to Norman, including two previous world No. 1s. Mickelson’s agent confirmed his client was one of lot to register, saying last week that Mickelson had also registered for the PGA Championship – where he’s the defending champion – and the U.S. Open.

“He’s always going to have an open door,” Norman said of Mickelson. “It’s going to be his decision, his decision only. He’s got a few things he has to work out himself, obviously, with the PGA Tour and where he wants to go with them and how he wants to go with them. I can’t read Phil’s mind because I haven’t spoken with him. From our perspective, I’m always going to be consistent in that I respect Phil. I respect what he’s done for the game of golf, and he’s always going to have an open door to any golf tournament he wants to go play as far as I’m concerned.”

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Adri Arnaus earns first DP World Tour win at home after marathon playoff in Spain

Adri Arnaus and Oliver Bekker became real familiar with the 18th hole at the 2022 Catalunya Championship.

Adri Arnaus and Oliver Bekker became real familiar with the 18th hole at the 2022 Catalunya Championship.

The pair played the final hole at the Stadium Course at PGA Catalunya Golf and Wellness in Girona, Spain, seven times on Sunday after a marathon six-hole playoff. Each player made par on the 18th during the first five extra holes, and after a Bekker bogey on the sixth time through, Arnaus made a three-footer for another par to win for the first time on the DP World Tour. Not only that, the Spaniard did it in front of his home crowd.

“I just tried to be so much in the present today and in the playoff, and it’s been a long playoff,” said Arnaus, who lost his first two playoffs on tour and previously had five runner-up finishes, two coming in Spain.

“I love the fans so much, they came to support and from Monday to Sunday it’s been an amazing week,” added Arnaus. “In the Open de España we were close, in a playoff as well, and this time again in a playoff and we made it so I’m super happy.”

The 27-year-old shot a 7-under 65 in the final round with five birdies and an eagle on the par-5 12th to finish tied with Bekker at 11 under and force a playoff. Richard McEvoy, Adrian Meronk and Laurie Canter finished T-3 at 9 under.

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Pablo Larrazabal rides birdie streak to home win in Spain at ISPS Handa Championship

“I knew that I had a low one in my bag and that’s what I did.”

Pablo Larrazabal hit the gas around the turn and sped off to his first win on home soil.

The 38-year-old Spaniard made five consecutive birdies on Nos. 9-13 en route to an 8-under 62 to secure a one-shot win at 15 under over countryman Adrian Otaegui at the 2022 ISPS Handa Championship in Spain for the second win of his DP World Tour season and seventh of his career.

“I knew that I had a low one in my bag and that’s what I did,” said Larrazabal. ” Today I holed putts and that was key. I mean, to shoot 62 in windy conditions with the flags out there, it was good.”

Hennie du Plessis and Aaron Cockerill finished T-3 at 13 under, with Antoine Rozner in fifth at 12 under.

The tour tees it up next week at the Catalunya Championship at PGA Catalunya Golf and Wellness in Spain, April 28-May 1.

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Bryson DeChambeau withdraws from Saudi International prior to second round

After shooting an opening-round 73, Bryson DeChambeau has WD’d from the Asian Tour event.

After an opening-round 73 at the Saudi International on Thursday, Bryson DeChambeau has withdrawn from the event citing injuries to both his left hand and left hip.

After a tie for 25th in the first event of 2022 at the Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii, DeChambeau withdrew from the Sony Open in Hawaii right before it was due to start citing a wrist injury.

He played last week at Torrey Pines but shot 70-72 in the first two rounds to miss the cut in the Farmers Insurance Open before heading overseas. It was his first missed cut since last July.

The Saudi event, which is no longer associated with the DP World Tour (formerly the European Tour), is now part of the Asian Tour. Saudi Arabia made a $200 million investment in the tour last year.

DeChambeau finished in a tie for 18th in 2021 and in a tie for sixth in 2019 in his two previous starts in the Saudi International.

He declined to speak to the media after the first round. Also on Thursday, a report by Sportsmail alleged that DeChambeau was offered $135 million to join the Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League. The 2020 U.S. Open champion replied from his official Instagram page that the report was “wrong.”

The report also alleged that the league is prepared to spend £1.5 billion (more than $2 billion) on players.

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Bryson DeChambeau denies being offered $135 million to join Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League

The report also alleged the breakaway league is prepared to spend more than $2 billion on players.

After a Wednesday Sportsmail report alleged that Bryson DeChambeau had been offered $135 million to join the Saudi Arabia-backed Super Golf League, the 2020 Masters champion replied from his official Instagram page that the report was “wrong.”

The report also alleged that the league is prepared to spend £1.5 billion (more than $2 billion) on players.

“I think every player has been contacted,” said Phil Mickelson. “I don’t think there’s a player that hasn’t been.”

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Both the PGA Tour and DP World Tour have threatened lifetime bans for players who leave for a rival golf league.

DeChambeau, 28, didn’t speak to the media on Thursday following his 3-over 73 in the first round of the Saudi International.

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Scott Jamieson, Sebastian Heisele tied for first round lead at Ras al Khaimah Championship

A topped iron shot was one of the highlights from round one.

Scott Jamieson and Sebastian Heisele each opened with a 7-under 65 to share the first-round lead at the DP World Tour’s Ras al Khaimah Championship in the United Arab Emirates.

After the past few events on the circuit – formerly branded as the European Tour – saw star-loaded fields, there were only two golfers inside the top 10 of the event’s first round who sit inside the top 100 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Jamieson was bogey free in taking a share of the 18-hole lead. The 38-year-old Scottsman was in position to win a few weeks ago at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship but stumbled in the final round, eventually signing for 5 over and dropping to T-10.

“My iron play was good today, I actually didn’t drive it particularly well,” he said of his Thursday effort. “There’s not a great deal of rough, so I was able to still hit is reasonably close.”

Heisele, who also was bogey-free in the first round, ranks outside the top 600 in the Official World Golf Ranking and is looking for his first DP World Tour victory. The 33-year-old’s last start was in September 2021 at the Italian Open, where he missed the cut.

The moment of the round belonged to Rasmus Højgaard, who found an, let’s just say, unique way to find the putting surface from over 240 yards. He went on to shoot 69 and was tied for 17th.

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