with Bryan Angus

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Tuesday, June 23, 2026

PGA Tour : Travelers Championship Signature event..Full field

 PGA Tour : Travelers Championship Field

The last $20,000,000 signature event of the season goes this week at one of the Tour's shortest courses par 70, 6844 yard TPC River Highlands, a limited field, 8 of the top 10 are back at it, Rory will not play, Keegan Bradley has won two of the last three.

After the toughest challenge of Shinnecock Hills the 3 hour drive from Long Island with the help of the ferry, to TPC River Highlands will provide one of the easiest tests the players enjoy all year.

Don't believe me ?  Jim Furyk only needed 58 strokes to set a world record here in 2016 and Bradley won in 2023 with just -23 257.

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Who's hot, well Wyndham is top of the list winner in two of his last four tournaments, including the Byron Nelson and a 3rd at the Memorial. You would forgive a let down after he spent Monday counting the $4,500,000 he has in his jeans after his trip to Long Island !

Scheffler treats it like a pitch and putt with a win in 2024 and 3 consecutive top 5 finishes here since he got on his run from relative obscurity to the world #1.

Matt Fitzpatrick world #4 has already won 3 times this year on the PGA Tour and was 2nd at the Players and right in contention again last week.

Cam Young #3 and steady eddie Russell Henley #5 are playing and winning well.

Sam Burns was an inch away from winning last week, now has four top 10's. JP Poston remember won at Jack's place then T4 at the US Open.

Tommy Fleetwood was the 54 leader here before gifting the title to Bradley with bogey's in two of his last three holes.

Canadians

Corey Conners, Taylor Pendrith and Nick Taylor were all Top 50 in the 2025 FedEx points list.

Sudarshan Yellamaraju is an alternative this week so far.

Opinion 

After all the drama of the US Open in the wind and on arguably the toughest course they play all year, this week is such a let down, in quiet Cromwell, on another easy course.

Throwing a $20,000,000 signature event status on it seems obscene to me. Not one of these top 60 guys needs any more money, when other events on the schedule like the RBC Canadian Open for example, who's status under the two tier 2028 Model is in jeopardy of becoming a Track 2 event, could be better served.

Bryan Angus


DP World Tour returns with Italian Open in Torino..Entry list

 DP World Tour : DS Automobiles 83' Open d'Italia 

The DP World Tour returns to action after the US Open week  in New York, they are in Torino for the Italian Open.

Saddier defends

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Adrien Saddier will make his first defence of a DP World Tour title this week. Last year, the Frenchman celebrated a landmark 200th start with a breakthrough victory at Argentario Golf Club. A shot adrift of Martin Couvra ahead of the final round, he carded a closing 66 that featured a faultless back nine of 30 to win by two shots from his countryman.

Victory was the highlight of a memorable campaign that also featured a play-off defeat at the BMW PGA Championship on the Rolex Series as he finished ninth on the Race to Dubai Rankings to secure dual membership with the PGA TOUR for 2026. 

This is his first DP World Tour start of the year outside the Major Championships, having made six of his 12 cuts in his rookie campaign stateside so far.

Inside the field

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Players representing 29 nationalities are set to feature at the penultimate event of the European Swing. Italy is inevitably well represented with 19 players, including Molinari brothers Francesco and Edoardo who call Circolo Golf Torino their home club.

Francesco is a two-time winner of his home open, claiming the title in 2006 and 2016, and will likely draw big crowds as he makes his 22nd start at his national open and first since 2022.

 Fellow Major champion, Patrick Reed, is another big-name draw as he looks to build on his lead in the Race to Dubai Rankings Delivered by DP World. American Reed is one of ten winners on Tour this season teeing it up, with 2019 Italian Open winner Bernd Wiesberger and South Africa's Casey Jarvis and Yurav Premlall also among those.

Joaquín Niemann, a DP World Tour and PGA TOUR winner, has received a tournament invite to compete, while American pair Charley Hoffman and Ryan Palmer are making rare forays over to Europe.

The venue

Since a three-year stay at Marco Simone came to an end in 2023, the Italian Open has been held at the Adriatic Golf Club Cervia and Argentario Golf Club and this season sees a return to Circolo Golf Torino for the first time since 2014.

There are 22 players – including defending champion Saddier - who were in the field then that are also in action 12 years on. 

Since then, new tee boxes have been put in place at the second and third, while the 514-yard 12th will play as a par four instead of a par five as it previously played 17 yards longer. The course plays at approximately 1250 feet above sea level so expect increased driving distances off the tee too.

Founded in 1920, the club features two 18-hole courses - the Blue and Yellow. The Blue course - host venue this week - was designed by John S. F. Morrison, 1956 and redesigned by Graham Cooke before the Open d'Italia 1999. The course record is held by Japan’s Yuta Ikeda, who carded an eight-under-par 64 in 2006. A $40,000 prize pot is up for grabs through the Course Record Presented by Nexo.

Event history

Founded in 1925, the Italian Open is into its 83rd edition and has been an ever-present on the DP World Tour schedule since its founding campaign in 1972.

In the event's history, two players - Auguste Boyer and Flory Van Donck - have won the title four times - the most by any player. 

From 2019 to 2019, the event formed part of the Rolex Series and saw Ryder Cup players Tyrrell Hatton, Thorbjørn Olesen and Wiesberger triumph. 

Household names of the sport including Tony Jacklin, Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle and Sam Torrance have all won the title as has Richard Boxall, a member of the World Feed commentary team this week

DS Automobiles returns as title sponsor, having previously supported the event between 2021 and 2023.

Open qualification

The Italian Open is the penultimate event in The Open Qualifying Series (OQS), a route for players to earn their place at this summer's Open Championship. One place will be available for Royal Birkdale to the highest placed finisher, not already exempt.

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)


Monday, June 22, 2026

The Week of Wyndham at US Open....Final Results, Conners T23.

   USGA : US Open at Shinnecock Hills    Leaderboard  Results

Wyndham Clark completed a wire-to-wire victory on a dramatic final day at Shinnecock Hills as he held off a strong challenge from Sam Burns on his way to capturing a one-shot triumph and his second U.S. Open in four years.

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The American entered the final day with a six stroke cushion but his second major win was far from a procession to victory.

Clark mixed five bogeys with two birdies during a fourth round 73 that included impressive scrambling and moments of brilliance as he went on to win his second major title.

"I mean, the first one was amazing, and this one seems even better," he said after his victory.

"I think especially after such a sour taste last year in this championship, to have some redemption and win this again is -- I mean, gosh, it's almost surreal.

"Last year was so tough, a terrible year. I left this place in shambles, and it's amazing what a year can do. I'm leaving here this Sunday as a champion, and I'm just so blessed."

Clark began the final round with a routine par at the first, but the momentum quickly shifted away from the overnight leader for the first real time all week.

A missed green with both of his approach efforts at the par‑four second forced him into an early bogey save, which became a sign of the grind that lay ahead.

Further superb scrambling at the fourth reminiscent of Saturdays' round kept him at -6 but a misjudged third at the par‑five fifth rolled back to his feet and opened the door for Sam Burns, who was surging with four birdies in his first eight holes and ad suddenly cut Clark's lead to one.

Burns, however, handed one back at the ninth, missing from outside eight feet to restore Clark’s two‑shot cushion. Clark then steadied himself with a near‑hole‑out from the rough at the same hole, tapping in for par as the championship tightened around him.

The back nine delivered the day’s most dramatic swings.

Burns’ final chance came at the 18th, where his birdie effort looked destined to drop before stopping a fraction short. His superb 67 set the clubhouse target at -3 but Clark still had three holes remaining.

After finding the rough from the tee at 16, Clark muscled his second back into position and reached the back of the green with his third. From just inside 25 feet, he poured in a massive birdie putt, unleashing a fist pump that as he restored his two‑shot advantage.

"To make birdie there was honestly a bonus," Clark reflected.

"I just wanted to make par. That was one of the pivotal points of the tournament. "

Yet the tension wasn’t finished. A three‑putt bogey at the 17th meant Clark walked to the 72nd hole with a single stroke in hand. His tee shot found the right rough, but his second managed to chase onto the front portion of the green. From there, he produced a superb first putt to leave a tap‑in for victory.

Clark rolled it in to seal a one‑shot win, completing a gritty, resilient performance under immense pressure. As he walked off the 18th green, his father embraced him and told him, “That’s the toughest round you’ve played,” a fitting summary of a champion who refused to let the U.S. Open slip from his grasp.

"I mean, he's never been there to see me win. Not only that, to finally have him there for a win is amazing, but especially on Father's Day. I know in '23 it was obviously a great Father's Day present for him, but I know he wanted to be there here in person.

"So for him to surprise me was amazing, and so I can't wait to spend more time with my dad tonight and celebrating this, because it's not just my win. It's my team. It's John Ellis, who helped get me here; it's Big Wave; it's my agent; it's my swing coaches, my trainers, and then obviously my family.

"There's a lot of people behind me, so I was happy that he could be here."

DARK TIMES

Clark's victory comes a year after he struggled to keep composure following a missed cut in this tournament in 2025 at Oakmont, and it was something he has addressed multiple times throughout the week and again after victory.

Speaking about the difference a year can make, Clark said he had to pull himself out of a really dark time after last year's event to get back to being able to this position.

"I mean, after what happened at Oakmont was obviously the lowest point. People probably didn't see what happened after, but you know, it was a really tough two, three days for me. I was in a dark place, didn't really go outside much. It was a really negative, dark place.

"Yeah, I mean, at that moment I just felt a lot of my career, world ranking, reputation, everything just dwindling. That's a terrible feeling.

"Yeah, I would say in that moment I definitely didn't think I'd be here this year doing this, but with that being said, I did a lot of work in the offseason on my golf swing, on the things I needed to do. I would say as this year, I started hitting it better and started seeing the results, then yeah, I started gaining my confidence.

Clark also had to overcome the noise of the crowd rooting for both Burn and playing partner Scottie Scheffler, who was going in search of the career grand slam on his 30th birthday.

"Man, they definitely didn't want me to win. It's pretty rare in an Open Championship or a major to have fans kind of boo against your shots or cheer for bad shots.

"It was tough, but I'm proud of myself that I battled through. I mean, things really could have gotten away from me. I stood tough. Yeah, I would have liked to have won by more, but as long as you win, it doesn't matter."

He came out on top of all of it, and now Clark's own golfing legacy is firmly cemented in U.S. Open history as one of several players only to win this event multiple times.

Sam Burns finished in solo second to record his third straight top ten at the U.S. Open on -3 with Tom Kim at -1 the only player under par for the third major of the year.

Scheffler was one of three players in a group on level par, joining Keith Mitchell and J.T. Poston, while Tyrrell Hatton, Gary Woodland, Sam Stevens and Joaquin Niemann rounded out the top ten.

EDIT>>>> Canada's lone representative Corey Conners ended his week T23 69 72 71 73 +5.

Rory McIlroy T32 69 71 73 73 +6 and will not play in this week's Signature event at The Travelers at TPC River Highlands.

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Winds will subside on Sunday at Shinnecock Hills, Corey Conners T13.

 

Southampton Round 4 weather forecast

According to Accuweather, the forecast for Sunday calls for a high of 78*f (25*c) with winds out of the west-southwest at 8 mph gusting to 18 mph (12-29km/h)  which should make for easier conditions to play in. 

There will be some cloud coverage but the rain shouldn’t join in with a probability of precipitation in the 25% range.

Canada's lone representative Corey Conners begins play T13 69 72 71 +2, he will play at 1.19pm paired with Keegan Bradley.

Rory, Tommy say US Open still far from over.....

 USGA : US Open at Shinnecock Hills  Tee Times  Leaderboard

Rory McIlroy believes that if there's ever a course you can come back to win from seven behind at the halfway stage it's this one, while Tommy Fleetwood says that anyone who has made the cut at the U.S. Open still has a chance at lifting the title.

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The last time the championship was held at Shinnecock Hills in 2018, Brooks Koepka came from five behind Dustin Johnson after 36 holes to win. To claim a seventh Major title, McIlroy will need to make up two more than that on current leader Wyndham Clark, who sits at -7.

The Northern Irishman went out in two-under 33 but had a tumultuous start to his back nine, dropping a shot on each of the 10th, 11th and 12th holes.

"The back nine was a bit of a battle," said McIlroy after signing for a second-round 71 to sit at level par for the tournament.

"Started with, you know, three bogeys in a row to start the back. Couldn't stop getting myself to hit it over the back of the green those three holes and then played pretty good from there on in.

"That one mistake on 15, bad chip shot from over the back. But you know, the wind felt like it was laying down first the first few holes. Then it certainly got back up again, sort of around when we made the turn.

 So, you know, I think anyone on this side will feel like they got the rough end of the draw, but still feel like I'm in the tournament and in with a decent chance."

McIlroy stressed that chasing Clark does not mean chasing pins, noting that Shinnecock Hills punishes impatience.

"I think Brooks was pretty far back going into the weekend in 2018. So, yeah, if there's a course where you feel like you still have a chance if you're seven back going into the weekend like I am, it's definitely this one.

"I think, you know, and this is -- when you are chasing, it's sort of counterintuitive, but for me if I can limit my mistakes, I know that everyone else in the field is going to make bogeys, so if I can limit my mistakes and pick off a few birdies here and there, I think that's -- hole a couple more 20-, 25-footers than other guys, that's really the strategy.

"I think you still have to play smart, try to keep the ball under the hole, hit it into the middles of the greens and take your chances when they present themselves.

Fleetwood, who played alongside McIlroy,had this to say : 

"So it's, yeah, and that's kind of what a U.S. Open's like or a major, you know, you know that if you're on that cut mark and you grind it out and you battle to make the cut, you just never know what can happen over the weekend, depending on condition."

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)

Sunday at US Open, Clark's big lead, 54 hole results, TEE TIMES

  USGA : US Open at Shinnecock Hills  Tee Times  Leaderboard

Wyndham Clark will take a six‑stroke lead into the final round of the U.S. Open, strengthening his bid to become a two‑time champion and the first wire‑to‑wire winner of the championship since Martin Kaymer in 2014.

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Clark, who sits at -7, carded a level par 70 on day three at Shinnecok Hills that saw him increase his overnight lead by two shots to tie the fourth‑largest 54‑hole lead in U.S. Open history.

It was a round marked by as many moments of brilliance as it was frustration, but a solid performance around the greens crucially allowed him to separate himself on a day where Shinnecock tested every player.

"It was very up and down, holy smokes," Clark said afterwards.

"I hit some good shots; I hit some terrible shots. Yeah, I was a little frustrated with myself with some of the execution.

"You know, at the end of the day, I improved my lead, which is awesome, and I shot even par on a very tough golf course.

"Yeah, the more I'm getting away from -- when I've finished, I'm getting more and more okay with some of the mistakes I made. But yeah, overall, good day.

The 2023 champion began his day with a three-putt bogey and his overnight lead cut briefly to two strokes, but he quickly regained composure and an excellent approach with his second to the par-five fifth saw him record his first birdie of the day .

Having scrambled par at seven, a mistake from the fairway at the eighth found him out of position and unable to scramble a par, but his lead remained unchallenged despite making the turn one-over for his round.

The back nine was slightly more dramatic after making birdie on the 14th, instantly dropping a stroke at 15 before once again finding the green in two on the par five 16th and seeing in the putt for eagle.

He then book-ended his day with another three-putt bogey at the 18th, but it was several par saves that he highlighted as the key to his score on Saturday.

"I mean, the one on 7, I was into the grain, I didn't hit the best of chips, but it looked like I hit it to 4 feet, which is normally good. But that putt was diabolical, and I could three-putt from there, it was so sloped. The fact I made that one was huge.

"Then the one on kind of 10 and 11, those ones were -- I was in jail and hit really good shots and then made the putts. Those are kind of the three that stand out to me.

"I mean, my mindset was good. Just a couple of -- the course changed so much. It was very soft and easier to be more aggressive. The fairways got rock hard, so I was spinning my irons a little bit more, and I had some squirt to the right. The greens were bouncing a ton.

"That little adjustment, maybe I didn't make as quick as I would have liked. But knowing tomorrow it's going to be like that, I can prepare for it.

"But yeah, if I can go out there and try to hit a lot of fairways, it would be a dream to hit 18 greens. That would be -- that's kind of my goal is to just get as many looks as I can with how I'm putting, and hopefully I'm hoisting the trophy tomorrow.

He will play his final round Sunday with World Number One Scottie Scheffler, who will celebrate his 30th birthday as he seeks to follow in Rory McIlroy's footsteps and complete the Grand Slam with a U.S. Open victory.

Scheffler was one of just two players on Saturday at Shinnecock to card an under par round, and currently sits T2 with Tom Kim, Sahith Theegala, and Sam Stevens.

Speaking of his final round pairing, Clark admitted it was nice to have a six stroke cushion on the world's best player but insisted he wouldn't be protecting a number

Scottie is the best player in the world right now,” Clark said. “It’s nice to have a six‑shot lead on him.

“I’m not thinking about my lead. If I go out and execute and go through my process, I like my chances.”

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Windy US Open Saturday morning on Shinnecock Hills, TEE TIMES, Live scoreboard..

USGA : US Open at Shinnecock Hills  Tee Times  Leaderboard

WEATHER ; 545am EST Sunrise to a deep blue, lightly clouded blue sky, crisp 16*c with a W wind gusting to 62km/h the story for the early tee times.

The cut fell at +4. 

Notables missing the cut Jon Rahm 68 78, Koepka 73 77, DeChambeau 70 75, Si Woo Kim 74 73, Fowler 71 74, Lowry 73 73, Cantlay 74 72, Hovland 76 69 and Reed 72 73 Adam Scott 73 75.  

Note >>>>  Shinnecock Hills GC aided and abetted by Mother Nature has allowed only 10 players under par and the leader Wyndham Clark at -7 is an anomaly since he played late Thursday night when the wind that blew all day died down, so he could make a few birdies that are the difference as Saturday's play begins. The rest of the field begins at just -3.

Canadian story

Corey Conners

Corey Conners T22  +1  69 72 is the lone Canadian playing the weekend despite missing 4 putts within 6 feet on Friday afternoon.

MC Sudarshan Yellamaraju T73 +5 73 72 bogey's at 2 of last 4 holes.....

MC Nick Taylor T73 +5 74 71 birdies at 2 of last 5 holes was not enough..

MC Ben Silverman T107 +8 74 74.


Contenders Saturday TEE TIME pairings

(Begins 9am EST)

1250  1st  Tommy Fleetwood, Ludvig Aberg

1.12   1st  Justin Rose, Ben Kohles

1.28   1st  Corey Conners, Aaron Rai

2.01   1st  Brian Harman, Scott Scheffler

2.12   1st  Rory McIIroy, Maverick McNealy 

3.23   1st  Collin Morikawa, Tom Kim

3.34   1st  Xander Schauffele, Sam Stevens

3.45   1st  Matt Fitzpatrick, Wyndham Clark

more to follow....click on my scoring/ tee time links above

Bryan Angus