with Bryan Angus

Thanks for joining me today. I look forward to your comments . They are always welcome here on FairwaysPlus. Bryan Angus bryanangus4@gmail.com



Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Rank & File return in Belgium, Soudal Open...Full TEE TIMES

  DP World Tour : Soudal Open Tee Times Leaderboard

After the drama of last week's PGA Championship won in spectacular fashion by DP World Tour veteran Aaron Rai and the ultra rich $20,000,000 signature events leading up to it for the top players it is time for : 

The heart and soul of the DP World Tour, the rank and file return to action for the Soudal Open in Belgium with a regular $2,750,000 total purse which is almost $1,000,000 less then Rai won for winning last week !!

Aaron Cockerill

Canada's Aaron Cockerill is still trying to kick start his year with owgr #494, and a Race to Dubai #144 he is moving the wrong way, like many of the 156 here, all looking to improve their status week to week, to get comfortably inside the top 100 to start, then go from there

One good top 20 finish can do wonders, Aaron has had promising starts but needs to put 4 rounds together on a regular basis to succeed on this or any tour.

Group 51 10th tee 1435  Aaron Cockerill, Davis Bryant USA, Richard Stern, RSA

more to follow..

Bryan Angus

From Wolverhampton to the Wannamaker.. Aaron Roi and family...

  The Wanamaker Trophy weighs 34 pounds - luckily Aaron Rai doesn't have to lift it alone.

Aaron Rai and Gaurika Bishnoi

To watch Rai put together the back nine of 31 that made him a Major winner at the US PGA Championship, you could have been forgiven for thinking he was something of a lone wolf.

That steely determination and laser focus does not look to lend itself to much interaction with others but to observe the man without a club in his hand is a different story.

ROOTS

EDIT>>> To understand Aaron's background and why an Englishman is dark skinned, his mother Dalvir's family emigrated to England from Kenya when she was 14. His father Amrik was born in England from Indian parents.

The family story is set in Wolverhampton. For Canadians think of culturally dominated Brampton, Ontario. Indian, Pakistani, Muslims etc have migrated mainly for jobs to this area.

Wolverhampton was part of the Industrial revolution, a wool manufacturing hub, smack in the middle of England, on the West Midlands just north of Birmingham, 2.5 hours NW of London.

It is here Aaron was first given a set of toy plastic golf clubs at four, in the middle of soccer mad Wolverhampton, golf was not the normal activity of an Indian kid.

WIFE

After Rai rolled in the par putt which effectively sealed his status as a Major champion, one of the first people he went to was wife Gaurika Bishnoi.

Bishnoi is a professional golfer in her own right who has been previously ranked as India's top female player and Rai is delighted to have both her personal support and professional observations.

"She's been incredible," he said at the press conference following his victory. "I'm not exaggerating when I say that I wouldn't be here without her. Both as a companion, as a friend, as someone I'm sharing my life with, but also as a real support system for my game.

"She's a professional golfer herself. So her mindset, her advice, her thoughts, whether it's technique or the way I'm holding myself is absolutely invaluable. She encompasses so many different sides in her opinions.

"We even had a conversation yesterday for probably 30 minutes in the car just before we got back to the hotel, just speaking a little bit about today. Again, some of the things that she mentioned in the conversations were really with me today.

"Yeah, I really wouldn't be here without her."

That means Bishnoi has now been directly involved in two Rai wins since they were wed last summer, with her caddying for him at the Masters Par Three Contest, a competition she could have perhaps won on her own.

Amrik and Aaron Rai and Jason Timmis

Aaron's dad Amrik, left, was there for his win in Abu Dhabi

PARENTS

While Gaurika is a relatively new member of Team Rai, parents Amrik and Dalvir have been there from the beginning, providing the support and making the sacrifices for which parents of athletes are often known.

Amrik is a common feature at events in which Rai is playing and while he was not at Aronimink on Sunday, his presence is always there in Aaron.

"It's probably hard for me to really express everything that I feel towards them," said Aaron. "I think I'll get way too emotional to speak.

"Yeah, starting with my dad, he was with me every day that I went to practise from the age or four to five years old. He actually quit his job and started to focus on my golf from a really young age.

"I used to read a lot about golf. He used to obviously be really active in everything he did with me around the game.

"My mum has been absolutely incredible as well. She works extremely long hours to just provide for the house really, especially with my dad also not working as much. So she did a lot of things and her support has been phenomenal.

"Obviously, I would love to share this with them. It would be amazing if they were here. I can't put into words how much they've done in terms of the support, in terms of the care, in terms of love. Again, I wouldn't be here without them at all."

COACHES

It was then 20 years ago that coaches Andrew Proudman and Piers Ward came on board and they were joined around 15 years ago by physio Andrew Caldwell.

They have been there for Rai's journey through EuroPro Tour, HotelPlanner Tour, DP World Tour, Rolex Series champion, PGA TOUR champion and now Major champion and as ever, Rai does not make light of their impact.

"They've been phenomenal," he said. "Andrew Proudman and Piers Ward are the two guys involved with Me and My Golf. I've known Andrew since I was four years old. He used to work at the pro shop on the driving range me and my dad used to go to. I was four, he was 18, so I was there before he turned professional.

"I met Piers when I was eight, nine years old. So we grew up in the same city. They started to coach me very soon after that. I was probably ten years old. When I call them my coaches, I almost feel disrespectful calling them just my coaches. They've been so much more to me than that from a young age, also as a teenager, and also on this journey as a professional golfer. They've been my mentors, my big brothers. They've almost been like family to me.

"They just go above and beyond for me in every single way. They've played a huge part in this trophy and a huge part in my development as a golfer."

That Rai is not only willing but eager to give credit where it is due in a sport that is, perhaps more than any other, an individual pursuit says a lot about the man.

A man for whom it seems nobody has a bad word.

RORY

“He’s just such a good guy," says Rory McIlroy. "Hard worker, humble, just an absolute gentleman.”

LIFE LESSONS

And the credit for that? Of course Rai will take none himself.

"I think a lot of that has come from upbringing: my mum, my dad, my siblings," he said. "Golf was always a very big part of my life from a very young age, but my mum and my siblings were very fast to continue to reinforce the importance of just being a good person and trying to do the right things away from golf.

"And that was consistent from a very young age, from the age of five, six years old. I think as I've continued to develop as a junior, as an amateur, as a professional, golf in itself is an extremely humbling game.

"There's so much hard work and discipline that goes into acquiring the skills to become better, but you also realise that nothing is ever given in this game at any point, whether it's a tournament, whether it's a practice round, whether it's even away from a tournament week. All of these things have to be done diligently and require focus.

"It's very humbling as well. 

So I think you put all of that together, the game requires the focus and attention, but the humility just goes hand in hand with the game and my upbringing as well."

Rai's life is about to change. In 31 almost perfect blows of a golf ball on the back nine at Aronimink he has gone from a golfing star to a golfing superstar and a star in the world of all sport.

But much like he handled that back nine, it's hard to see him getting carried away. The man who now rubs shoulders with golfing royalty in Florida is still the boy from Wolverhampton.

And that may bode well for more Major success.

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)

Monday, May 18, 2026

Aaron Rai, one of the good guys, wins Wannamaker, ..Final Results including 3 Canadians

  PGA Championship : Aronimink GC  Leaderboard Results

Aaron Rai won his first Major title at the US PGA Championship with a back-nine masterclass in composure that blew the field away at Aronimink Golf Club.

Aaron Rai

He entered the final day two shots off the lead and at +1 through eight holes of his round, there was little sign of the brilliance to come.

An eagle on the ninth then helped set in motion a back nine of 31 where he simply did not put a foot wrong.

His 68-foot putt for birdie on the 17th will be the most remembered of his 65 blows that got him to -9 and handed him a three-shot victory over Jon Rahm and Alex Smalley.

With victory, Rai becomes just the 14th non-American to lift the Wanamaker Trophy and the first Englishman since 1919 when ‘Long’ Jim Barnes won the second ever US PGA Championship three years after also winning the inaugural contest.

The win is Rai’s fourth on the DP World Tour and first since he won a second Rolex Series title at November’s Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship.

His only win so far in 2026 was at the Masters Par Three Tournament alongside wife Gaurika but Major glory now moves him up to 5th on the Race to Dubai Rankings.

"It's been a bit of a frustrating season," said Rai, who has struggled with back and neck injuries in 2026. "So to be stood here is definitely outside of my wildest imagination.

"But I think just really good consistency over the last few weeks in terms of practice, body's been feeling great, and really enjoyed the course this week and continued to hold the rounds together as the week went on. Phenomenal to be stood here.

"It definitely feels like a journey. Everyone playing in the field this week has a great journey to be able to share, and I'm no exception to that.

"So much goes into it from being a junior golfer to developing the game to have aspirations of turning professional. Then you realise once you turn professional how good some of these guys are and how strong the level of professional golf is, not just on the PGA TOUR, the DP World Tour, and all the feeders that go into it.

"So, yeah, it's a really long journey to even get to compete at Major Championships at events like the PGA. Yeah, to be stood here, it still hasn't sunk in for sure. Amazing journey."

Rai looked serene in making routine pars at the 14th and 15th but Schmid got up and down from the sand for a birdie on the 13th to get within one as the leader came to the potentially pivotal par-five 16th.

Showing nerves of steel, Rai hit a perfect tee shot and then put his second to 17 feet for another potential eagle 3,  getting down in two for another birdie and to restore his two-shot lead. 

None of the others in contention late on Sunday except for an inspired Rahm were matching his shotmaking.

That advantage was three as Schmid bogeyed the 15th and then Rai produced a Major moment for the ages, holing from 68 feet on the 17th to take a four-shot advantage up the last and suddenly all the tension of the last 71 holes was gone.

With his win :  * $3,690,000, 1st Major, 15th owgr, 5th Race to Dubai, lifetime entry into US PGA Championship, 5 year exception into all the majors, 2nd Englishman to win PGA Championship.

Rahm T2, would birdie the 16th in a -2 68 to trim the advantage -6 and Smalley T2– who had earlier bogeyed the eighth and birdied the ninth, finished eagle-bogey-birdie to sign for a 70 -6 both won $1,804,000

Early in the day, American Justin Thomas carded a closing -5 65 to finish T4 four shots off the lead -5  alongside Schmid and Swede Ludvig Åberg, one clear of Rory McIlroy T7 -4, Xander Schauffele -4 and Cameron Smith -4

Earlier in the day, Kurt Kitayama equalled the lowest final round in Major history with a bogey free 30/33, 63 that got him into T10 at -3 alongside Chris Gotterup, Patrick Reed and Justin Rose.

EDIT>>>>> Canada's Nick Taylor was in the penultimate pairing with Rahm, holding his nation's hopes of being just the 2nd male after Mike Weir to win a major. 

He continued his steady play at -5 until he rescued a wayward drive with a bogey at the 10th, then the wheels came off with 5 bogey's in his last 6 holes for 40 and a closing 74 T26 E. $125,523

His fellow countrymen Taylor Pendrith 71 T44 +2 $50,348 and Corey Conners 72 T55 +3. $34,186.

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Who will in the Wannamaker ?....Sunday Live scoreboard / TEE TIMES

 PGA Championship : Aronimink GC  Tee Times Leaderboard

Alex Smalley produced a brilliant, gutsy performance to take a two-shot lead into the final round of the US PGA Championship.

Alex Smalley

The American entered the third round in a share of the lead but on a day when 14 players would sit atop the leaderboard at some point, he bogeyed three of his first four holes to fall back.

As a player without a professional win, the World #78 could have possibly been forgiven for staying in the pack but to his immense credit he fought back at Aronimink Golf Club.

After turning in 37, he came home in 31 and a 14-footer on the last handed him a 68 and a -6  total.

There was then a five-strong group at -4 made up of two-time Major champion Jon Rahm, Ryder Cup star Ludvig Åberg, two-time Rolex Series winner Aaron Rai, German Matti Schmid and Canadian Nick Taylor.

Two-time reigning Masters champion Rory McIlroy, Race to Dubai Rankings leader Patrick Reed, 2024 US PGA champion Xander Schauffele and another American in Maverick McNealy were at -3 with 30 players within 5 shots of the lead including current owgr #1 Scott Scheffler who has struggled like all the rest but although T23 67 71 71 -1 still has an outside chance.

"It's a difficult golf course," Smiley said. "Conditions are tough. It's been windy the last few days. Greens were a little firmer today. I anticipate it's going to be that way tomorrow, too, just because of the forecast. It's going to be hot. It's going to be sunny. There's not going to be a whole lot of moisture on the golf course, I would imagine.

"Any time you can shoot under par on a golf course of this calibre, under these conditions, I think anybody would take that. So I'm hoping to put up another under-par score tomorrow. I recognise that it will be difficult because the golf course is playing difficult. The hole locations are probably going to be difficult as well.

"We'll just add them up at the end of the day and see where that takes me."

For Schmid and Nick Taylor, who both carded rounds of 65, a win would also represent a new chapter, although the Canadian already has five PGA TOUR titles, but this would be his first major, and Canadian men's first since Mike Weir won the Masters in 2003.

Rahm is looking to become the first Spanish winner of this event and he carded five birdies and two bogeys on Saturday, while Åberg made four birdies and two bogeys in a 68.

Rai was among the leaders after six birdies and two bogeys but he dropped a shot on the last before Smalley's big finish.

EDIT >>> the world's bookies aren't giving much more than even money on a Sunday playoff

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Nick Taylor 65 T2, 30 in contention at PGA Championship.... 54 hole results.. Sunday pairings

   PGA Championship : Aronimink GC  Tee Times Leaderboard

With a superb scrambling bogey free round of 65 on moving day, Canada'a Nick Taylor, reknown for playing well on the toughest courses has shot himself right up to the front of the pack T2 -4.

In 54 holes he has only 3 bogeys which is incredible on this Aronimink GC, 44 pars and 7 birdies, 5 of them today.

He is #1 in scrambling, T2 in strokes gained. All this bodes well for him tomorrow, however the pack in contention is enormous for what will be a cavalry charge to the finish sometime on what is forecast to be a hot sunny Sunday to decide the 108 PGA Championship.

There are 28 guys from -1 to -4 and the lead at -6 is a 29 year old American owgr #78 Alex Smalley looking for his1st win. To his credit he was +3 through 4 holes for 37, but his back nine was terrific with 5 birdies 31 and 67 69 68 -6, and a 2 shot lead.

Canadians 

Nick Taylor, of Canada, reacts on the 18th green during the first round of the Sony Open golf event at the Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Matt York)

Nick Taylor, of Canada,

Nick Taylor T2  69 72 65 -4

Taylor Pendrith T45  72 72 67 +1

Corey Conners T54  68 73 72  +3

Sudarshan Yellamaraju 75 75 MC

Sunday

The first of 41 pairings are off the 1st tee at 7.40am EST. 

Group 27: 1205 Scheffler, Puig

Group 35  1325  Rose, Niemann

Group 37: 1355 Reed, McNealy

Group 38: 1405 McIlroy, Schauffele

Group 40: 1425 Taylor, Rahm

Group 41: 1435 Smalley, Schmid

It is impossible to pick a winner with this many players in contention. 30 or more in all, makes it difficult for anyone player to achieve separation no matter who they are. 

McIlroy, Rahm, Schauffele, Rose, Aberg, Reed, Matsuyama, Koepka, even Scheffler who  did not make a move T23 67 71 71 -1 still have a chance, just to name a few...

So I expect the old Cavalry charge Sunday afternoon with the likelihood of a playoff.


Bryan Angus

Patience key, Conners/Taylor paired together, PGA Championship... Saturday pairings, Live scoreboard

  PGA Championship : Aronimink GC  Tee Times Leaderboard

WEATHER : Philadelphia is expecting a warm mostly sunny day with temperature reaching 27*c (80*f) with a SW wind reaching 21km/h (13mph).

Morning 8am-12pm mostly sunny temperature rising rapidly 16*c -24*c

Afternoon 1pm-5pm  peak temperatures 27*c (80*f), abundant sunshine.

Evening 6pm-11pm  temperatures will drop 27*c to 20*c as clouds arrive with chance of showers overnight.

The weather has warmed up, with the wind dying down, shifting from NW to SW, the penal pin placements from Friday are more accessible today, the cut fell at +4 resulting in 82 players or 41 pairings all getting set with the lead only -4, many feel like they have a chance, 58 players within 4 shots of the lead

Canadians at the US Open

Canadians (Tee times 1st tee) 7.45am is the opening pair.

11.50am  Nick Taylor T30 69 72 +1

11.50am  Conners T30  68 73 +1

8.30am   Taylor Pendrith T41 72 72 67 +1

Sudarshan Yellamaraju 75 75 MC


Other notable pairings

9.15    Justin Rose, Brian Harman

10.30  Matt Fitzpatrick, Martin Kaymer

11.00  Rory McIlroy, Brooks Keopka

1.40  Scott Scheffler, David Puig

2.30  Hideki Matsuyama, Chris Gotterup

2.49  Alex Smalley, Maverick McNealy

 

Saturday thoughts 

* The American media covering the event are as one, fully expecting Scheffler to make the most of moving day at -2, despite a poor driver, only 7 fairways

* Rory " I shot myself back in contention, I think with the weather improving, the pins at least more accessible you could get on a run on the front nine with your wedges to get a few under par" 

* Canadians Corey Conners /Nick Taylor together, will be encouraging each other and at T30 +1 a good start will go a long way  to becoming a factor.

* With this field so bunched due to the severity of Aronimink, there is nobody getting away from each other, and that opens the door for everyone.

* A key word from all the Friday interviews apart from the pin placements was "Patience." Par is a very good score, bogey's are to be expected, birdies will be plentiful today in ideal conditions so I expect scoring to be lower, and those who have patience will be rewarded.

Bryan Angus




Friday, May 15, 2026

Aronimink's stern test has field bunched, 36 hole results...

 PGA Championship : Aronimink GC  Tee Times Leaderboard

The Aronimink GC and some cold windy mornings is the combo that is stumping the worlds best after with round 2 winding down and the clubhouse lead only -4.

Aronimink GC_07_16_18_17_jpg

Follow the live scoring by clicking on my links above.

Final Edit 8pm  26/05/15

With Aronimink proving a tough adversary, cold (for these pampered pros) early mornings, and according to Scheffler "some of the toughest pin placements" he had ever encountered, the result for the top 100 golfers is a leading score of only -4 after 36 holes.

Alex Smalley 67 69 -4 and Maverick McNealy 69 67 -4 share that distinction.

However the field remains so bunched heading into the weekend there are 26 players within 4 shots and if you count the +1's, 40 players within 5 shots.

The weather is forecast to warm up considerably reaching nearly 30*c by Sunday afternoon and the wind will shift from NW to a much warmer SSE.

So Aronimink will firm up, become faster, especially thee greens which a tough enough as it is already.

Chris Gotterup somehow posted the lowest score of 65 today so it can be done, but I can't see anyone running away with it, the formula, get it in the fairways to be able to hit appropriate approaches, then who can make the most putts will reveal the eventual winner.

Canadians (The cut fell at +4)

Nick Taylor T30 69 72 +1

Corey Conners  T30  68 73 +1

Taylor Pendrith T68 72 72 +4

Sudarshan Yellamaraju 75 75 MC

Notes

*M/C.   Tommy Fleetwood, Tyrrell Hatton, Bob MacIntyre, Stewart Cink who is dominating the Senior Circuit, Adam Scott, Bryson DeChambeau, Viktor Hovland amongst the well knowns who will not win the PGA Championship this year.

*Garrick Higgo was penalized 2 shots for being "late", MC by a shot...

* Rory T30 74 67 +1 is back in the game as is the other favourite Scott Scheffler T9 67 71 -2

* This is shaping up to be a big bunched group coming down the stretch on a lovely Sunday afternoon, all with a shot, either a dead heat, or a winner by a nose, would not be unlikely.

Bryan Angus