ELLIE MAE CLASSIC: Jaeger stays on historic pace

By Jeremy Harness

dailymail.com photo: Stephan Jaeger set another record going a total of minus 17 on Friday at the PGA Web.com Tour’s Ellie Mae Classic in Hayward

HAYWARD–Stephan Jaeger bogeyed the first hole that he played on Friday, which is enough to cause doubt to creep into the average golfer’s mind, as they wonder how the rest of the round is going to go.

That didn’t happen to Jaeger, however. A day removed from the record-setting 58 that he fired in the opening round of the Web.com Tour’s Ellie Mae Classic, he would not have another bogey on his card for the rest of the day and soon built on to his lead.

Seven holes later, the German native began yet another birdie streak that was a familiar theme on Thursday, running off three in a row before recording three more on holes 15 through 17 to go into the clubhouse with a five-stroke lead and an overall score of 17-under par.

In the process, he put his name on the best 36-hole mark in Web.com Tour history with a score of 123, beating out the 124 that was held by Kevin Chappell and Martin Piller.

Among Jaeger’s closest followers on the leaderboard is Rhein Gibson, who followed his opening-round 62 with a four-under 66 and is currently 12-under par, briefly tying Jaeger atop the leaderboard before he went on the first of his two birdie streaks.

Brandon Hagy, who is now projected to sneak into the top-25 on the tour’s money list – which gives players full exemption on the PGA Tour next season – fired a seven-under 63 to get into a tie for second as the weekend rolls around.

An intriguing story involves Austin Cook, who made it through five Monday qualifiers on the PGA Tour last year but could not hold on to his tour card, thus his current status on this tour. He is currently tied for 10th at eight-under, and if this holds up, he will crack the top-25 and put him in great position for that elusive card on the big tour.

As a tale of how unpredictable the game of golf is from week to week, Nicholas Lindheim, who was victorious in last week’s Utah Championship, was among the ones who missed the cut – which was set at three-under – and will not play the final two rounds this weekend.

Lindheim was far from the only notable to miss the cut on Friday. Of the players in the top-25 on the Web.com Tour’s money list, nine of them saw their tournaments end after the second round, including Cal product Max Homa, who bounced back from an opening-round 73 to post a 67 on Friday but was not enough to make the cut.

Homa, however, is in very good shape in the overall standings, as he currently sits in the 12th position on the money list and stands a great chance to gain his card for next year.

 

ELLIE MAE CLASSIC: Jaeger blisters field at record-setting pace

By Jeremy Harness

dailymail photo: Stephan Jaeger hit the first 58 recorded in a US professional tournament at the Ellie Mae Classic in Hayward

HAYWARD–On a day that saw low scores dominate the day, Stephan Jaeger’s round took the cake by a longshot.

The German native, who makes his home in Chattanooga, Tenn. these days, set a major tour record on Thursday by shooting a 58 in the first round of the Ellie Mae Classic, which is being held at TPC San Francisco Bay at Stonebrae, as part of the Web.com Tour.

Starting in the afternoon and on the 10th hole, Jaeger got off to a fast start and never let the foot off the gas pedal. He birdied the 11th hole before running off five birdies in a row from holes 13 through 17.

He then marched to the front nine, where he recorded six more birdies without a single bogey for a score that has never been seen before on either the PGA Tour, the Web.com Tour nor the Champions Tour.

As a result, he takes a commanding four-stroke lead into the second round, leading Josh Teater – who has gone back and forth between the PGA Tour and this tour – as well as Xander Schauffele and Rhein Gibson, each of whom shot 62 in the first round.

If this holds up, it would be a huge leap for Jaeger. He currently sits 102nd on the tour’s money list, and a win would vault him 80 spots to 22nd. That is very important, as the players who finish the season in the top 25 on the money list earn full exemption to the PGA Tour for the following year.

There are several players with Bay Area ties in this tournament as well, but none of them are within earshot of Jaeger at this point. Maverick McNealy, who is entering his senior year at Stanford and happens to be the world’s top amateur, opened his tournament with a three-under 67. His lone blemish came at the 14th hole, as his tee shot found the native area and ended up with a double bogey.

Meanwhile, Max Homa, who played his college golf at Cal, did not fare as well. He shot an opening round of 73 and was also victimized by the 14th hole. He didn’t hit it into the native area, as McNealy did, but he found himself in a greenside bunker and had to take three shots to get out of, resulting in a triple-bogey.

Unlike McNealy, he could not immediately recover, as he bogeyed the par-5 15th.

Homa, however, is in very nice shape overall. He is currently 12th on the money list and does not stand to fall out of the top-25, even is he misses the cut.

 

San Francisco Giants day off report: Giants look to get back on track after slow start to 2nd half

By Jeremy Harness

AP photo: San Francisco Giant pitcher Matt Cain got shell shocked after the Boston Red Sox got around on the ball on him last Wednesday night at Fenway Park

Last weekend showed why absolutely nothing is certain in the game of baseball.

After closing out the first half of the season with the best record in the majors despite hitting the skids a bit going into the All-Star break, the Giants appear to have an easy way to get things moving again paved beautifully for them.

After all, they had the San Diego Padres, to whom they had not lost a single game the entire year, waiting for them as they headed down south for a three-game series, with Madison Bumgarner, Johnny Cueto and Jeff Samardzija waiting to take the ball and get the Giants three quick wins.

Well, not only did they have their winning streak snapped, but they were swept in that weekend series in embarrassing fashion, as the second game ended as closer Santiago Casilla not only blew a one-run lead without recording a single out, but he balked in the winning run in a manner that has not been seen on the major-league level in a very long time.

Partially due to this, the team is reported to be looking to shore up their bullpen ahead of the league’s trade deadline.

The struggles did not end in San Diego, however. The Giants then dropped two more games to the Boston Red Sox, as starters Jake Peavy and Matt Cain, who was making his first start since mid-June, each struggled. Meanwhile, they have seen their considerable lead in the National League West dwindle to four games over the rival Los Angeles Dodgers.

For the Giants, that help cannot come fast enough. They still have a three-game series in New York against the Yankees, with whom the Giants have struggled over the years, before returning home to face the Cincinnati Reds for a three-gamer that starts on Monday, to be followed by a four-game series when the Washington Nationals pay a visit to AT&T Park.

 

Giants look to keep momentum going into 2nd half

By Jeremy Harness

foxsports.com file photo by Darren Hartwell: Former San Diego Pitcher Drew Pomeranz now with the Boston Red Sox

The Giants have gotten off to their second best start in San Francisco franchise history, and now, it’s time for the team to build on the positive momentum that they have generated over the past three-plus months. The Giants best start in their San Francisco franchise history is held by the 1993 team under manager Dusty Baker when they started 60-30. In that unforgettable season they missed the playoffs by one game losing to the Los Angeles Dodgers  during a four game series played the last four games of the regular season.

While the starting pitching appears to be in excellent shape and ready to go for the stretch run, the team will likely look for help in the bullpen – another major strength in the team’s winning three World Series crowns in five years – as the league’s trade deadline nears.

The Giants have battled injuries in that bullpen, which is a major reason why the team may look to bolster that part of its game.

They are set up very well to hit the ground running as the second half of the season gets ready to kick off.

The way things have been going between the two teams in recent years, the Giants are almost guaranteed a good start to the second half of the season. They will travel to San Diego for a three-game series against the Padres that starts Friday night.

The Padres were expected to become sellers at around this year’s trade deadline, and they already started that process by sending away starting pitcher Drew Pomeranz, so they are even more depleted of talent than they were as the Giants were beating up on them early on this season.

The Giants will need to take advantage of this three-game series, because they will be tested by two of the prolific teams in the American League East. They will then head across the country to take on the Red Sox in Boston’s Fenway Park for two games before heading to New York to face the Yankees.

From there, they will return to NL play at AT&T Park, as they take on the Cincinnati Reds followed by the Washington Nationals.

 

Starting pitching propels Giants to stellar first half

By Jeremy Harness

AP photo: San Francisco pitcher Johnny Cueto hopes that giving up two homers in the All Star game including this one to the Kansas City Royals Salvador Perez in the second inning will not shake is confidence going into the second half of the season

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants finished the first half of the season with the best record in the major leagues. And for those who have followed this team, there is no real shock what the main factor is.

The starting rotation, the Giants’ strength for the past seven years, is once again at the forefront of the success.

To point the way to the Giants’ 57-33 mark, there are two starters who already have gotten double-digit wins. Johnny Cueto, whom the Giants picked up as a free agent in the offseason, leads the way with a 13-1 record to go along with a 2.47 earned-run average and was selected as the National League’s starter in the All-Star Game.

Of the five regular starters, he has the fewest amount of walks (24) while striking out 115 batters. He has done an outstanding job of keeping the ball in the park, as he has also surrendered only six home runs, which is the fewest of the rotation.

Madison Bumgarner (10-4) is the other double-digit winner, and he also owned the lowest ERA with a mark of 1.94. He has struck out 146 hitters thus far in 2016, which is by far the highest number of the entire rotation, and his performance Sunday in throwing a complete-game one-hitter against Arizona etched in a lot of minds that he is still arguably the most dominant pitcher in baseball.

He has not limited his dominance to just the pitching mound, however. Bumgarner has showed the league that he swings a big bat as well. Even though he owns just a .160 batting average as the second half gets ready to kick off, he has uncorked a pair of home runs, including one off Dodgers star Clayton Kershaw.

This grabbed enough attention to warrant talks of Bumgarner possibly becoming a participant in this year’s Home Run Derby, to which the Giants ultimately said no.

Jeff Samardzija has also proved to be a stellar free-agent pickup, amassing a 9-5 record at the All-Star break, striking out 90 hitters against 27 walks, to go along with a 3.91 ERA. Meanwhile, Jake Peavy has overcome a bad start to end the first half with a respectable 5-7 mark with an ERA of 5.09 and carries a nice amount of momentum with him.

However, Matt Cain has struggled to get on track this season, as he carries a 1-5 record into the second half after winning his first decision of the year.

 

U.S WOMEN’S OPEN: Lang wins after Nordqvist hit with penalty

By Jeremy Harness

AP photo: Brittany Lang lifts the trophy after winning the U.S. Women’s Open Golf tournament at CordeValle on Sunday, behind Lang, center second runner up Anna Nordqvist and right Hye-Jin Choi third place look on

SAN MARTIN, Calif. – In clawing her way into a playoff after overcoming a large deficit on Sunday, Anna Nordqvist did not make a mistake. However, in the playoff, she ended up making the biggest one of all, one that ultimately cost her the tournament and wiped out all of her efforts.

The infraction, which happened on the second of a three-hole aggregate playoff as Nordqvist’s club was shown to have touched the sand as she prepared to hit a shot out of the fairway bunker – resulting in a two-stroke penalty, since a player is not allowed to ground one’s club in a hazard, which a bunker is considered – opened the door for Brittany Lang to win the 71st playing of the U.S Women’s Open, played at CordeValle Golf Resort.

It was not immediately known to the players, however. Television cameras captured the club touching a grain of sand, but the players were not notified until they were in the fairway of the next hole, having already hit their third shots.

“I couldn’t really believe that it happened,” Nordqvist said. “It wasn’t my intention to ground the club. It’s blowing 35, 40-(mph) out there, and I had a 5-iron off a downhill lie in the bunker. It’s been a long day, a long week, so I probably misjudged it a little bit and touched a little bit of sand.

“I just wish they would have told me earlier. But hey, I’m finishing second in the U.S Open, so I’m proud of myself.”

Lang’s final round had some ups and downs to it – the two bogeys on her Sunday card a clear indicator of that – but she won the title by staying away from the big mistake, particularly the kind that doomed Nordqvist.

She spent two days fighting her way to the top herself, and after she nailed a 25-foot, left-to-right birdie putt at the 15th, she had a one-shot lead.

However, she surrendered that lead at the 17th, as she was faced with a long birdie putt, which she ended up three-putting for a bogey to fall back into a tie.

She parred the 18th hole and subsequently played the three playoff holed at even-par to claim the trophy, the victory being sealed as both players were told of Nodrqvist’s infraction and resulting penalty on the previous hole.

“This (win) is huge for my career,” Lang said. “This is a huge momentum builder, a step in the right direction. (But) You never want to win on a penalty, especially to Anna, because she’s a friend of mine,” Lang said. “It’s unfortunate, but it’s a part of the game.”

This was a deflating defeat for Nordqvist, not only for the way that that it was ultimately decided but also due to what she had battled back from. She began the final round trailing by six shots but shot a bogey-free 67 to get into a playoff.

She played the front nine at one-under but then really kicked it into gear on the back side when no one else seemed to be able to generate very much momentum at all.

It started with a birdie at the 12th, before the big, tall Swede jumped into the tie for the lead with a monstrous eagle at the par-5 15th and came within inches of the title after narrowly missing a birdie putt at the 18th.

Sung Hyun Park had a clear shot at the title herself, but a penalty stroke on the final hole diminished that. Trailing by only a single shot at the par-5 18th, Park decided to go for the green on her second shot rather than laying up for a closer wedge shot and paid dearly for it. Her fairway-wood shot splashed the lake protecting the left-front part of the green, resulting in a one-shot penalty and ultimately a crippling bogey.

A wayward second shot also proved to be the undoing of Lydia Ko, the mild-mannered 54-hole leader who appeared to be in control early on.

The 19-year-old led by a single shot going into the final round and extended that lead with by rolling in a 20-footer at the sixth, but she quickly ran into trouble that knocked her off the top of the leaderboard. Two holes after the birdie putt, she bogeyed the par-3 eighth and then made a huge mistake at the par-5 ninth that caused her to lose the lead outright.

After her tee shot landed in the thick rough, her second shot landed right in the barranca – a lateral hazard – and elected to take a drop from behind the hazard. Ko ended taking a double-bogey on the hole, and when Sung Hyun Park birdied the hole, she found herself trailing by one.

“That kind of took me off (my game) a little bit,” Ko said. “But I tried to have a positive mindset. There were still nine holes to go, and you just never know what it will happen.”

She then took another bogey at the 12th and could not get up and down from the deep front bunker at the 14th to drop another shot, falling behind by three and putting any comeback hopes in serious jeopardy.

Ko birdied the 15th to narrow her deficit to two and give herself at least a glimmer of hope, but she could not gain any more ground. Needing to hole out from about 100 yards out at the 18th to tie, her third shot skipped past the hole and came to rest about 15 feet away.

“Unfortunately, I am not the one holding the trophy, but I feel proud of the way I played,” Ko said. “It’s been a really awesome experience.”

U.S WOMEN’S OPEN: Ko continues steady climb, takes over lead

By Jeremy Harness

AP photo: Lydia Ko reacts after making a birdie on the 18th green during the third round of the USGA at CordeValle US Womens Open Golf

SAN MARTIN, Calif. – Lydia Ko has a real knack for making up ground in crucial parts of a tournament and coming away with a win, particularly in majors, and she’s on her way to doing it again this weekend.

Ko, who just turned 19 in April, trailed by nine shots after Thursday’s opening round of the U.S Women’s Open at CordeValle Golf Resort but has gained ground since then, as she narrowed her deficit to only three on Friday with a 66.

While those ahead of her on the leaderboard went south on Saturday, Ko continued her ascent to the top with a two-under 70. She traded a bogey for a birdie on the front side, but she gained two shots on the final nine holes, with birdies at the 13th and 18th holes to take the lead, one shot ahead of Korea’s Eun Hee Ji.

“The first round was frustrating,” said Ko, who has already won a major this year, the ANA Inspiration, which was a couple of weeks before her birthday. “(But) just because somebody shoots eight-under par the first day doesn’t necessarily mean that the tournament is going to end up (with a winner going) 32-under par,” “There’s still a lot of golf to be played.

“All I can do is play my best, and if someone plays better than me, that’s fine,” she continued. “I just have to focus on my game and not worry about what everyone else is doing, so that way I don’t get carried away with that.”

Ji took a similar route as Ko on Saturday, as she also shot 70 to stay within a stroke of the lead. She bogeyed the par-5 third hole but quickly rebounded with a birdie at the par-4 seventh. Frpm there, she picked up a shot at the 13th and another one at the 17th.

The best round of the day, however, belonged to Texas native Brittany Lang, who shot a four-under 68 and finds herself only two shots off the lead heading into the final round. She got off to a very nice start, recording three birdies on the front side – taking advantage of the decidedly-more friendly early-morning conditions, as she teed off at 9am PST – before bogeying the par-4 13th.

It didn’t take her very long to recover, however. She got the shot right back with a birdie on the very next hole and gained another one at the par-5 15th.

“I did everything pretty well,” Lang said. “I played pretty steady. I didn’t really do anything stupid. I didn’t put myself in any bad spots. I let myself be able to make pars and just have a comfortable day.

“I (also) knew going out at 9:00, it was a perfect time to play because it wasn’t too cold, and the greens were going to be softer, so I was excited.”

Sung Hyun Park went into the third round at eight-under and got off to a fairly-nice start and even picked up another shot at the eighth to boost her lead at nine-under, but a damaging double-bogey at the ensuing hole seemed to derail any momentum she had.

She steadied the ship a bit, however, parring the next four holes, but she then took two bogeys against one birdie the rest of the way to finish with a 74 and a tie with Ji for second.

While Ko steadily climbed her way to the top of the leaderboard, Mirim Lee, Thursday’s leader after shooting an opening-round 64, has gone the other way. She entered Saturday behind only two strokes, but she seemed to slowly lose steam as the round progressed.

She was particularly victimized on the front nine, with four bogeys against one birdie. Lee was able to pull it back together on the back nine with only one bogey but could not regain any ground, and she walked off the course trailing Ko by five shots.

U.S WOMEN’S OPEN: Lee surrenders lead while Bay Area natives make it to weekend

By Jeremy Harnes

AP photo: USGA golfer Sung Hyun Park hits from the 18th tee during the second round on Friday at CordeValle Park is the current leader of the tournament

SAN MARTIN–It has been a well-documented fact that CordeValle Golf Resort plays completely different in the morning – calmer conditions and softer greens with a much higher potential for scoring – than it does in the afternoon, when the greens harden up to the point where it is very tough to stop the ball on them, even with a wedge shot.

Mirim Lee, who used the morning conditions to grab the opening-round lead, found this out on Friday, as she teed it up in the afternoon.

The Korean held things together on the front nine, but things came a bit unglued on the back side, and she left the course on Friday having given up her lead after shooting a two-over 74, a 10-stroke difference from the day before.

“It was really tough today,” Lee said. “The greens were a little slow but a little firm, too. I kept trying to hit the fairway and the green, but I couldn’t.”

In the meantime, fellow Korean Sung Hyun Park catapulted herself into the lead with a six-under 66, and the two players will play in the final group of the day Saturday, scheduled for 1:25 pm PST.

Pleasanton native Paula Creamer, who won this event in (2014), made the cut exactly on the number on Friday. With a pair of two-over scores of 74 in the opening two rounds of this tournament, Creamer heads into this weekend’s proceedings with an overall score of four-over, which proved to be the cut line.

Also barely making the cut was Brooke Henderson, who won the Cambria Portland Classic just last weekend. After shooting a four-over 76 on Thursday, the Canadian rebounded quite nicely on Friday with a one-under 71 to punch her ticket to the weekend.

Christina Kim, a native of San Jose, which is less than a half-hour away from CordeValle, also made the cut, although she backed her way in. She struggled to a three-over 75 on Friday after firing a two-under 70 in the opening round.

NOTES: One of the notable players to miss the cut was Se Ri Pak, who is considered a legend as well as a pioneer in her native South Korea, and is credited for paving the way for players such as Lee, Park as well as So Yeon Ryu.

Pak appeared to be on pace to make the cut after posting a one-over 73 on Thursday and holding it together through the front nine on Friday. However, things got away from her quickly on the back nine, and she finished Friday with an 80.

“Over 19 years, I have such a great time,” Pak said. “I have such great success, beginning with the U.S Open. The USGA makes it so special for me, (as) this is my retire(ment) year.”

 

U.S WOMEN’S OPEN: Lee shoots out to early lead

By Jeremy Harness

AP photo: USGA’s Mirim Lee drives into the ball at the ninth tee in the first round Lee shot a eight under par 64 at the U.S. Women’s Open Golf Tournament at CordeValle on Thursday

SAN MARTIN–The U.S Women’s Open is supposed to serve as the ultimate test to the world’s best female golfers. For most, that has already proven to be true.

Mirim Lee, on the other hand, seemed to just breeze right through that test.

The Korean grabbed a three-shot lead in the opening round of this tournament at CordeValle Golf Resort with an eye-popping 64.

In doing so, Lee shot the second-lowest score in the history of this tournament, with the only mark lower occurred when Helen Alfredsson shot a 63 in the opening round of the 1994 event.

Lee certainly had her game going, but she also benefited from having played in the morning, when the conditions on and around the course were calm while the greens were soft and receptive.

“I think everything was good,” said Lee, whose best finish this year is a tie for fourth at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship one month ago. “Like driver is good, and then iron is good.”

“The course is perfect now.”

As the afternoon rolled around, all of that changed, and the LPGA’s premier players found that out the hard way on Thursday.

The world’s number-one player, Lydia Ko played alongside the second-ranked Brooke Henderson and the fourth-ranked Lexi Thompson in the afternoon, and the trio could not come close to matching Lee’s level.

Ko finished the opening round with a one-over 73 while Thompson shot a 74, and Henderson closed out Thursday’s proceedings with a four-over 76. It was a considerable step back for Henderson, who is fresh off of her victory at the Cambria Portland Classic, which she won by four strokes.

Meanwhile, San Jose native Christina Kim is continuing her strong play. She shot a two-under 70 on Thursday and is currently tied for 11th.

“I’ve been swinging really, really well, and I’ve been putting really, really well,” Kim said. “Plus, I turned 32 this year, and my dad is like ‘You played pretty good when you were 16, so why don’t you try to pretend like you’re only half your age when you’re on the golf course.’

Giants keep hot streak going

By Jeremy Harness

USA Today photo: San Francisco Giants Joe Panik scores in the fourth inning and receives congratulations in the dugout in Pittsburgh’s PNC Park on Thursday

The Giants used a four-run third inning on Thursday to make their way past the Pittsburgh Pirates, 5-3, at PNC Park.

In doing so, the Giants won for the 12th time in 14 games and are tied with the most wins in the majors with the Chicago Cubs and the Texas Rangers with 47 victories. In addition, the Giants played Thursday without right fielder Hunter Pence as well as third baseman Matt Duffy in the lineup.

The team was also missing Brandon Belt, Gregor Blanco, Brandon Crawford and Angel Pagan. However, that did not prove to be much of a problem at all.

The Pirates did take a 1-0 lead in the first inning, but two innings later, the Giants exploded for four runs, much of it courtesy of Joe Panik’s three-run triple off Pittsburgh starter Jonathon Niese.

Pittsburgh had an answer in the bottom half of that inning, as the Pirates scored a pair of runs to cut the Giants’ lead to a single run, following Gregory Polanco’s run-scoring sac fly.

Mac Williamson, who assumed Pence’s regular position in right field on Thursday, made sure that the Giants would not relinquish this lead. In the top of the sixth, he launched a 446-foot home run that easily cleared the wall in left-center to give the Giants a two-run cushion.

Williamson had three hits and drove in a pair of runs, while Ramiro Pena, who played shortstop in place of Crawford, added a pair of hits.

While unspectacular, starter Albert Suarez (2-1, 3.69 ERA) was steady and did just enough to get the victory. He threw five innings and surrendered three runs on four hits, walking two and striking out six.