Lottie Woad tied for lead at Scottish Open
Digest more
In the years that the ISPS HANDA Women’s Scottish Open has been co-sanctioned by the LPGA and Ladies European Tours, there has never been a repeat winner, with each champion of this tournament relying on a vastly different set of skills to pull into victory lane.
The Scottish Open has become a significant event on the golf schedule ever since it began serving as a partner tournament between the PGA Tour and the DP World Tour. That has allowed the best players from both tours to come together for a chance to play links golf in preparation for The Open Championship a week later.
Let's start in Minnesota, where Jhonattan Vegas shows up to defend his 3M Open title carrying the weight of potential history. Vegas's win last year was pure theater, moving him from No. 147 to No. 66 in FedEx Cup points after his victory.
Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings No. 1 Nelly Korda is off to a strong start in her tournament debut at the ISPS HANDA Women’s Scottish Open.
Scottie Scheffler hasn't had the tournament he would have liked so far at the Scottish Open, but he still feels he has a chance to win, and he made that known.
Explore more
Leona Maguire has been chopping and changing caddies of late but saw an immediate impact in having veteran bagman Phil “Wobbly” Morbey in the ISPS Handa Scottish Open, where an opening round 67, five-under-par, saw the Solheim Cup star trail leader Charlotte Laffar of England by one stroke at Dundonald Links.
This will be Nelly’s first appearance at Dundonald Links so watching her navigate her way around it will be quite fun given her mental prowess in the game. Korda has yet to win on the season, finishing runner up at Erin Hills is her best finish so far,
Dailymotion on MSN2d
Why Scottie's Putting at Scottish Open Was a Sign of Open TriumphWhy Scottie's Putting at Scottish Open Was a Sign of Open Triumph