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Padraig Harrington: 'Get me a 24 pack of Guinness. Let's fill this baby up...'

Padraig Harrington is quite good at golf, isn't he?: Yeah, he's not half bad...

Where do we start?: Well, if we're being completely honest with ourselves, he didn't look like he was in with a chance after the first few days. But to finish with two rounds of 66 was sublime, so you can't say he didn't deserve it...

He didn't deserve it. There, I just said it: Grow up...

Sorry. So did he win it, or was it handed to him on a plate?: This was 100% Harrington winning it, make no mistake about it. He made a trio of amazing clutch putts on the final three holes to finish par, birdie, par. Honestly, his putting was absolutely breathtaking...

Sounds like pretty plain sailing?: Not quite. He put his drive on the 18th into a fairway bunker on the left, before chopping that into the rough. Luckily, he got a good lie and nailed a seven iron into the heart of the green...



Parker McLachlin: 'Yeah, I'm totally comfortable with hugging another man...'

He may have carded a pretty unimpressive two-over 74 on the final day, but it was more than enough to give Parker McLachlin a seven stroke victory at the Legends Reno-Tahoe Open. Our Bet Detective said he was going to pick McLachlin to win, but then again, he says a lot of things...

This was McLachlin's first PGA Tour victory, the 29-year-old Hawaiian-born finishing 18-under par, seven strokes ahead of Brian Davis and John Rollins. The best of our picks was Ryan Palmer, who gave us a tidy each-way return in tied 4th place. Kevin Streelman finished tied 33rd, with Ryan Moore tied for 58th.

Speaking of people from Hawaai, Michelle Wie didn't make the cut after a second round 80. We all knew that would be the case if truth be told...



Vijay Singh: This bloke uses a belly putter, by the way. Cheat...

It must have been a bit of a relief for Vijay Singh to get a PGA Tour victory under his belt at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. The Fijian held his nerve to finish ten under par - one stroke ahead of Stuart Appleby and Lee Westwood in second place - to jump back onto the winner's circle for the first time in 34 Tour events.

Singh's victory (this was his 32nd) saw him become the winningest international player in the PGA Tour's history, but if truth be told, Phil Mickelson should have won it. Our favourite left-handed golfer started the day in pole position, but three bogeys in the last four holes saw him drop into a tie for fourth with Retief Goosen.

Darren Clarke, Paul Casey and Miguel-Angel Jimenez all finished inside the top ten, but Padraig Harrington was a bit of a letdown, finishing tied 20th. Apparently he was a bit tired after the Open. Yeah, right...

The best of our picks was Trevor Immelman (T36), with Stewart Cink (T43) and Soren Hansen (T73) both finishing further down the pecking order. Back to the drawing board...



Ji-Yai Shin: 'I did ask you not to do this, remember?'

Apparently this Ji-Yai Shin girl had to overcome a bout of nerves and a lack of sleep on Saturday night, but judging by her sensational final-round 66 to win the Women's British Open, we reckon it was all a pack of lies. The 20-year-old South Korean finished on 18 under par to finish three strokes ahead of Taiwan's Ya-Ni Tseng.



Michelle Wie: 'Make sure you get my good side...'

Cutting right to the chase, Michelle ‘sponsor’s exemption’ Wie could make a PGA Tour cut yet after shooting an opening round one-over-par 73 to put her right in the mix at the Legends Reno-Tahoe Open.

Back on the leaderboard and eight birdies put American Jeff Overton in contention for a first PGA Tour title. The former Walker Cup amateur opened up a two-stroke lead with a seven-under 65 from Britain’s Brian Davis and the chasing pack.

The day’s highlight, apart from Wie’s attire, saw 1987 Masters Champion, Larry Mize, ace on the 176-yard, par three 16th. Legends live on!


 

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