Ireland’s Joe Lyons holds on for wire-to-wire victory at Golfweek International Senior Invitational

The 51-year-old Irishman picked up his second win in the United States and his first as a senior.

CARTERSVILLE, Ga. – Joe Lyons entered Saturday’s final round at Cartersville Country Club with a three-stroke lead. Six under through 36 holes, the Irishman was confident in his ability to close, but knew it would be a tall task given the strength of the field and venue.

“One of the big selling points for us [Team Ireland] coming across is that it’s a WAGR-ranked event,” Lyons told Golfweek. “Our events aren’t so highly ranked. WAGR is important nowadays and we don’t have so many WAGR-ranked events across the pond.”

With the field rating being second only to the U.S. Senior Amateur, everyone in attendance knew it would be a battle for the ages.

Paired with Utah’s Shane McMillan and Oklahoma’s Michael Hughett, the trio traded blows throughout the day but never caught up to Lyons until the back nine. Just past the halfway mark, the pressure cooker that is playing for a championship, made for some fantastic golf.

On the par-3 13th, all three men found the bottom of the cup in two, covering each other’s birdies from well beyond 20 feet. McMillan’s putter would stay hot on No. 14, making birdie from 60 feet, giving him a share of the lead with four holes to play.

On the par-4 17th, McMillan dropkicked his drive left, nestling up against a tree. Taking an unplayable, he came away with a double to fall one back of Lyons heading to the final hole. Meanwhile, Hughett made a late charge. Calmly in control of his game, the Oklahoman clawed his way into a tie with Lyons at 4 under as they trekked to the 18th tee box.

All three men missed the fairway on the par-5 18th, leaving it anyone’s ball game.

“Probably the best shot I hit this week was my second shot into 18,” Lyons said. “I was in hardpan but there was Bermuda [grass] around the ball, I had to dig for it. I was hitting rescue and I knew I had to miss it left, I couldn’t miss it right.”

From about 235 yards out, Lyons ripped his 3-hybrid pin-high, just left of the greenside bunker, leaving himself a straightforward up-and-down opportunity to make birdie and win the championship.

McMillan double-crossed his second shot, making bogey while Hughett knocked his third shot to 12 feet for his potential tournament-winning birdie.

Lining up his pitch shot from around 25 yards out, Lyons did this:

Nearly making an eagle, Lyons tapped in for birdie, leaving the pressure on Hughett to force a playoff.

“I actually thought I holed it,” said Lyons. “I thought Michael (Hughett) might hole his [birdie putt] afterwards. I won’t say I was wishing him any bad luck or anything but my heart definitely slowed a little once he missed.”

With a 54-hole total of 5-under 211, the 51-year-old Irishman picked up his second win in the United States and his first as a senior.

Aside from taking home the trophy, Lyons’ favorite part of the week? The Southern hospitality shown by Cartersville Country Club and their volunteers.

“Hats off to everybody at Cartersville. The staff, the volunteers…the welcome we received was unbelievable and the golf course is really so well presented. The greens were amazing. It was a great week all-around.”

Joe Lyons, Team Ireland lead 2023 Golfweek International Senior Invitational

Rain made Cartersville Country Club in Georgia play longer than it did in the first round.

CARTERSVILLE, Ga. – Joe Lyons and his fellow countrymen are 18 holes away from a  wire-to-wire victory at the Golfweek International Senior Invitational.

Lyons maintained his three-stroke lead at 6 under despite a second-round 2-over 73. Off and on rain made Cartersville Country Club play longer than it did in round one, making scoring a premium. The wet conditions allowed Lyons to lean on his knowledge from back home and adapt it to the Bermuda grass he’s not fully accustomed to.

“I’m not all that new to Bermuda,” Lyons told Golfweek. “I have an idea. I still wouldn’t say I’m entirely comfortable on it [Bermuda grass]. Basically, I’m just hitting bunker shots out of the rough and trying to convince myself.”

One thing Lyons is a bit more familiar with? Leading.

“It’s always hard when you’re you’re out on your own in front. I’ve won events back home potter to post. It’s a difficult thing to do because you’re sleeping on the lead. You know the stats are not good for people following a low round but I’m very happy with today’s round.”

With a history of being able to close out championships, Lyons has a simple game plan for Saturday’s final round, albeit a difficult game plan to execute.

“Just try to play like yesterday.”

Giving chase are Utah’s Shane McMillan and Oklahoma’s Michael Hughett, both at 3 under. Behind them are two members of the ‘Georgia Mafia’, Bob Royak (2 under) and Mike Combs (1 under). Wes McNulty (1 under ) hopes to help Team Arkansas erase Ireland’s one-shot lead.

Three more players are in a tie for seventh at even par and another six players are within seven shots of Lyons, making every shot count come Saturday.

On the team side, Ireland holds a slight one-shot lead after a second-round charge from Team Arkansas.

All three players from Arkansas carded sub-par rounds, with McNulty (69) and Stan Payne (70) acting as the counting scores. Gordy McKeown carded a 1 under 71 to move inside the top 10 at 1 under for the championship.

Bob Royak’s Georgia team (even), one of five in the field, is three back of Ireland. South Carolina (1 over) and California (2 over) round out the top five. Five more teams are within eight shots of the lead.

With cool, breezy and sunny conditions anticipated for Saturday, plenty of scoring opportunities should make the final round a fun one.

Live scoring can be found on Golf Genius (GGID: 23GWISI).