Jon Rahm took some advice from legend Jack Nicklaus and it paid off on Thursday with a seven-under 64 in his first professional round to seize the Quicken Loans National lead.
Rahm, a 21-year-old Spaniard, made a bogey-free start to his professional career at Congressional Country Club to grab a one-stroke lead over Venezuela’s Jhonattan Vegas at the Tiger Woods-hosted tournament.
South Africa’s Ernie Els, who won one of his four major titles at Congressional in the 1997 US Open, was in a pack of eight sharing third on 66.
Photo: AFP
After sharing 23rd as the low amateur at last week’s US Open in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, Rahm chatted with 18-time major champion Nicklaus, seeking some lessons on his new career.
“Jack knows a lot about golf and a lot about life,” Rahm said. “He has so much experience and he never said anything too complicated. He told me to just be myself and not try to do more than what I can do.”
“I certainly put that on today and played probably some of the best golf I can play,” he added.
Rahm, a former world amateur No. 1, who idolizes the late Spanish star Seve Ballesteros, began on the back nine at the tricky par-three 10th, but cleared the water and made par.
“I was really anxious on the tee,” Rahm said. “I knew I had one of the hardest par-threes I am going to play all week in front of me. A six-iron over water, hit a good shot on the green, two putt and I got my round started.”
A 27-foot birdie putt at the 12th followed and Rahm dropped his approach at 14 inches from the cup for a tap-in birdie, then closed his first nine holes with another 27-foot birdie putt.
He made the turn with a five-foot birdie putt at the first hole, then sank a 30-foot birdie putt at the fifth.
“A downhiller, it broke quite a bit and I made it,” Rahm said. “It was a good putt, probably the best putt I hit all day.”
Rahm put his approach inches from the cup to set up a birdie at the par-five sixth and sank another five-foot birdie at eight to seize the lead. He missed a 10-foot birdie putt at the par-five ninth, but tapped in for par and the lead.
“I was comfortable with the driver. I was hitting it really straight and long,” Rahm said. “Thanks to that, I was able to be a little more aggressive to some of the pins.”
“My main focus was trying to keep my expectations down. I did not want to think this was going to be easy. It is not,” he added.
Vegas fired seven birdies as well, but he found a bunker off the tee at the par-three second to set up his lone bogey.
“I am happy with where I am at,” Vegas said. “Amazing to shoot 65 on this course, which is probably one of the toughest we play all year.”
Els played a course where he won a US Open for the second week in a row, after Oakmont last week where he took the 1994 title in a playoff. He used caddie Ricky Roberts at Congressional just as he did 19 years ago.
Taiwan’s Tai Tzu-ying on Saturday crashed out of the BWF All England Open Badminton Championships in Birmingham, with South Korea’s Se Young-an denying the world No. 3 Tai a chance at a fourth All England title. In a replay of their semi-final showdown last year, the world No. 2 Se again beat Tai, saving four match points in a thrilling deciding game to prevail 17-21, 21-19, 24-22. Tai won the women’s singles title in Birmingham in 2017, 2018 and 2020. In the three times the two superstars faced each other prior to Saturday, Tai, 22, had only come out on top once, when
ON ANOTHER LEVEL: In a pregame speech, Ohtani urged his teammates ‘to throw away their admiration’ for the US, because they ‘came here to surpass them, to reach the top’ Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout had dreamed of this moment, along with millions of fans throughout Japan and the US: the two biggest stars on the planet, longtime teammates, facing each other at 60 feet, 6 inches, the world title at stake. Of course, the count went full on Tuesday night, and Ohtani got Trout to swing under a slider on the outside corner, sealing Japan’s 3-2 win and their first World Baseball Classic (WBC) title since 2009. “This is the best moment in my life,” Ohtani said through a translator. Ohtani, the two-way star who has captivated fans across two continents, was
DEFENSE SKILLS: The top four seeds — Akane Yamaguchi, An Se-young, Tai Tzu-ying and Chen Yufei — entered the semi-finals, which were to be played last night Taiwan’s Tai Tzu-ying on Friday advanced to the semi-finals after she saw off He Bingjiao of China at the BWF All England Badminton Tournament in Birmingham. Tai, the world No. 3 who is seeking her fourth All England Open title, showed more good form, winning 21-12, 21-11 in just 33 minutes. She entered the match with an 11-4 head-to-head advantage over her Chinese opponent. Tai’s dominance emerged halfway through the first game as she pulled away from being tied 11-11 to win while only conceding one further point. He looked to attack, but Tai’s defensive skills were up to the challenge. In game 2, the
With cherry blossoms reaching full bloom in Tokyo, Japanese sports fans erupted in jubilation yesterday, after their compatriots defeated the US to win the World Baseball Classic (WBC). More than a hundred people gathered near Shimbashi Station in the city center to get special newspaper editions celebrating the victory. The scene quickly turned chaotic, with police officers jumping in to help hand out copies. “I am so proud as a Japanese national,” said Yuji Takeno, a 33-year-old company worker who was among those gathered in Shimbashi. “I also play baseball for leisure and it makes me want to work harder, that’s how