Friday, May 9, 2025
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Suspension could keep social media star Wes Bryan from playing in Wyndham Championship

Wes Bryan, one of the most popular players at the Wyndham Championship, may not be able to play in this summer’s event at Sedgefield Country Club.

Bryan, a Columbia, South Carolina native, known best for his trick shots and YouTube presence, announced Wednesday night that he has been suspended from PGA Tour events because he played in a social media influencer event run by the rival LIV Tour two weeks ago at Doral.

Bryan has played at Sedgefield in recent years.

The winner of the RBC Heritage in 2017, Bryan no longer has full status on the PGA Tour, but has played in three Tour events this year. In January, Bryan tied for 25th at the Farmers Insurance Open.

Bryan said he does not know the length of his suspension, but said he would appeal through the PGA Tour process.

Bryan’s brother, George, playing with Sergio Garcia, won the Miami event, a nine-hole scramble in a playoff.

Triad trio in top 20 entering final round of ACC Championship at Sedgefield

Wake Forest’s Macy Pate and Virginia Tech’s Morgan Ketchum, former teammates at Reagan High, are tied for 13th entering the final round of the ACC Women’s Championship at Sedgefield Country Club.

Pate shot 71 and 75 Wednesday while Ketchum shot 72 and 74 to join three other players at 2-over-par 146, 12 shots behind the leader, Andrea Revuelta of Stanford, at 10-under. Florida State’s Lottie Woad is one stroke behind at with teammate Mirabel Ting at 8-under.

Virginia Tech’s Emily Mathews, a Mebane native, shot 76 and 71 to tie for 18th, one shot behind Pate and Ketchum.

Stanford and FSU are running away from the field in the team race. Stanford is at 15-under 561 and FSU is three behind. Virginia is third at 575. Wake and North Carolina are tied for fourth at 583.

Wake senior standout Maria Lopez-Chacarra, who made the cut at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, struggled to 148.

McIlroy nearly played against N.C. teams for ETSU

Just imagine, a young Rory McIlroy winning the Atlantic Sun Conference championship and playing on North Carolina courses against the likes of Tar Heel teams from Belmont, Campbell and Gardner-Webb.

Though rarely mentioned in the media, McIlroy did sign a letter of intent to play at East Tennessee State in Johnson City back in 2004. But after a successful year as an amateur, McIlroy decided to skip college and focus on major amateur events for a few more years.

From 2003 to 2013, ETSU competed in the Atlantic Sun before rejoining the Southern Conference. Belmont, Campbell and Gardner-Webb have since left the conference, but Queens joined in 2022.

According to various accounts, McIlroy’s father, who worked multiple jobs to support his son’s golf development, wanted him to play in college.

The 35-year-old McIlroy, who completed golf’s Grand Slam with a victory in the Masters on Sunday, turned pro in 2007. By 2009, McIlroy had made enough money to buy his parents a new home.

McIlroy has played well in North Carolina. He won his first PGA Tour event in 2010 at Quail Hollow, the first four triumphs at the Charlotte course.

Ford ties victory record as Tar Heels edge Elon

While Rory McIlroy was winning his first Masters title Sunday, the nation’s top-ranked college golfer, David May of North Carolina, won another tournament.

May overcame an opening-round 72 to finish at 7-under-par 203 to win the Tar Heel Intercollegiate and lead the Tar Heels to a one-shot victory over Elon in the team competition at UNC’s Finley Golf Club. The victory was Ford’s fifth of the season, tying the school record of seven career victories by set by Dustin Bray.

UNC finished the 54-hole tourney at 1-under 839 in the 14-team field.

Like McIlroy, former Wake star Young allows Masters error to lead to another

Rory McIlroy paid the price twice in Thursday’s opening round of the Masters. On Friday, former Wake Forest star Cameron Young did the same.

You can’t let one mistake lead to another. With McIlroy, it was a chip into the pond at No. 15 that led to a double-bogey and a frustration that seemed to lead to another double at 17, turning a good round into a mediocre 72.

Though Young wasn’t contending for the lead Friday, he was in solid position to make the cut when he reached the 16th green.

Cameron Young at Wake Forest

Needing to make a 12-foot putt to save par and stay above the cut line, Young ran his putt a few feet by the cup. No big deal, it should have been an easy bogey. And he seemed to make a sufficient effort to size up the remaining putt — he didn’t just go up to the ball and make a careless swipe at it.

But the bogey putt lipped out. This time, the frustration really showed on what should have been a routine short putt. A quick stroke failed and the gallery gasped. Finally, he tapped in for a four-putt and a triple-bogey.

Needing one birdie on the final two holes to make the cut, Young couldn’t recover. He finished with bogeys on the last two holes.

With a night to recover, McIlroy did just that. He went home and saw his young daughter Poppy before she went to bed. He met with sports psychologist Bob Rotella before playing Friday and responded with a 66 that put him back on pace to win his first Masters title.

Raleigh-area golfer shoots wild 70 at Masters with only six pars

North Carolina resident Akshay Bhatia made only six pars Thursday in the first round of the Masters — about as many as an 18-handicapper might hope to make on the long Augusta National course and its treacherous greens.

It wasn’t the standard recipe for pulling into contention for a Green Jacket.

Unless, of course, he was on a birdie binge or making an eagle or two. But that wasn’t the case.

Bhatia took a highly unusual path toward the top of the leaderboard. With birdies on the final three holes, the lean left-hander posted a 2-under-par 70 Thursday to join a tie for sixth place, five shots behind leader Justin Rose.

Bhatia made seven birdies and five bogeys — and only one par on the back nine. A few groups behind, reigning U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau posted seven birdies with only four bogeys in a round of 69.

The 23-year-old Bhatia, whose family moved to Wake Forest when he was in elementary school, also made perhaps the round’s best comeback. After hitting his second shot into the pond that fronts the 15th green, but saving bogey, he stopped his approach on the par-3 16th within a foot of the cup for an easy birdie.

Bhatia probably will have to gain a little consistency the rest of the week to maintain his place on the leaderboard. Perhaps as remarkable as shooting 70 with only six pars was his card with no eagles or double-bogeys, somewhat common scores on Augusta’s hazard-filled back nine.

Langer’s character, consistency, resilience deserving of Masters celebration

Sometime late Friday afternoon, one of the golf world’s legendary figures probably will finish his final round of competitive golf in the Masters.

That’s when 67-year-old Bernhard Langer, accompanied by Wake Forest alum Will Zalatoris and 20-year-old amateur Noah Kent, will be greeted with a lengthy applause by the Masters faithful while walking up the 18th fairway at Augusta National.

No, the two-time Masters champion probably won’t receive the same long cascade of cheers Jack Nicklaus received at the 18th green at Augusta National in 2005, the emotional ovation Arnold Palmer received at the U.S. Open in 1994 at Oakmont, or the rousing farewell Tom Watson encountered while walking over the Swilican Bridge at St. Andrews in 2015.

But Langer’s goodbye will be — and should be — celebrated by Augusta fans. Playing in his 41st Masters is a testament to the consistent greatness of the German known more for his perseverance, longevity and graciousness than any fist pump.

Perhaps overlooked due to his stoic consistency, Langer was a major figure in a wave of greats including Seve Ballesteros, Nick Faldo, Sandy Lyle, Ian Woosnam and Jose Maria Olazabal that brought Europe to the forefront of world golf in the 1980s and 1990s.

It was Langer who played the dramatic lead when the U.S. vs. Europe rivalry came to a heated head at the 1991 Ryder Cup at Kiawah Island, aka “The War at the Shore.” Faced with an all-or-nothing, 5 1/2-foot putt to decide the outcome. 

Langer missed the putt and the U.S. regained the cup on what may have been golf’s most pressure-packed putt given the rivalry and animosity between the two sides.

The devastating miss could have derailed Langer’s career. In the group just in front, Mark Calcavecchia crumbled under the pressure, blowing a 4-hole lead on the last four holes, including shanks into water on the par-3 17th, to send the outcome to the final match and Langer’s putt.

With Hale Irwin and Langer battling on the final hole, Calcavecchia made a sad, solitary retreat to the nearby beach in shame. It was another 11 years before he qualified for another Ryder Cup.

As for Langer, he rebounded the next week to win the German Masters. 

In 1993, he won his second Masters at Augusta by four strokes over Chip Beck. A Christian, Langer put the victory in perspective.

“I said then and I still believe the same: The first one was important because I was now a major winner; you’re in a different category as a player and to the public. But the ’93 one was personally and emotionally even more important to me because I won it on Easter Sunday,” told reporters this week.

A few hours after winning the Green Jacket for the second time, after the ceremonies, photos and handshakes were over, Langer made his way over to the media building, where only a dozen or so reporters (I was one) — the guys writing multiple stories — remained working. 

A gracious Langer visited with us for a half an hour or so, having a few beers and sharing a few stories. Off the record, no notebooks or tape recorders.

That was 32 years ago. After that he won 14 more times on the European Tour. He’s added a record 47 victories — ironically, he passed Irwin, who has 45 — on the Champions Tour, including a U.S. Senior Open title at age 65 in 2023.

Who knows how many tournaments, including majors, Langer would have won if his putting had been better during his prime? He struggled horribly with the short stick before going to a long putter in the mid-90s. Langer said he’s conquered “the yips” four times over the years.

Only five years ago, Langer tied for 29th at Augusta. So, maybe his final round will be Sunday afternoon — after making the cut.

Wake men place fifth in nine-team event

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The Wake Forest men’s team finished fifth in the nine-team Calusa Cup on Tuesday in Naples, Florida.

Wake shot 16-over-par 880, 33 shots behind Florida, which edged Louisville by one stroke for the team victory.

Marshall Meisel led Wake with 1-over 217 to tie for 14th place.

Wake Forest alum Zalatoris draws youngest and oldest in Masters pairing

Will Zalatoris will play with the youngest and the oldest players in the field on Thursday and Friday in the first two rounds of the Masters.

The 28-year-old former Wake Forest standout, Masters runner-up in 2021 with top 10 finishes in 2022 and 2024, will play with 20-year-old Noah Kent of the University of Florida and 67-year-old Bernhard Langer, who won the tournament twice before Kent was born, at 8:35 a.m. Thursday and 11:49 a.m. Friday.

The pairings were released Tuesday afternoon.

Kent, a Floridian who played his freshman year at the University of Iowa, earned his berth with a runner-up finish in the 2024 U.S. Amateur.

Langer, Masters champion in 1985 and 1993, is on the record as playing the tournament for the last time, his 41st appearance.

The German had expected last year to be his final start, but he couldn’t play due to a pickleball injury.

College Roundup: HPU finishes second at Maryland; Wake men in sixth

Anais Arafi and Anna Howerton provided top-10 finishes as the High Point University women’s golf team finished second behind Michigan at the Terrapin Invitational on Monday at the University of Maryland Golf Course.

Arafi finished fifth at 1-over-par 217 after shooting a final-round 75. Howerton, a Winston-Salem native, tied for seventh at 218 after firing 76. Julia McLaughlin shot 69 for High Point and pulled into a tie for 11th at 219.

HPU finished the 54-hole tournament at 20-over, seven behind Michigan. The Wildcats slipped past Georgetown by one stroke and host Maryland by two shots. HPU also finished ahead of Notre Dame, Penn State and Nebraska.

The Wake Forest men were in sixth out of nine teams, 24 strokes behind leader Louisville, at the Calusa Cup at Calusa Pines in Naples, Florida. Marshall Meisel, tied for eighth at 1-over 143, leads Wake entering Tuesday’s final round.