OUR FANHOUSE TOOLBAR INTEGRATES THE LATEST SPORTS NEWS INTO YOUR WEB BROWSER AND INSTALLS IN SECONDS.
YOU CAN DOWNLOAD THE TOOLBAR HERE.

FanHouse Jonathan Byrd

Latest Jonathan Byrd Stories

Kuchar and Piercy Lead Turning Stone


Getty Images

VERONA, N.Y. (AP) -- Scott Piercy wants to be the first rookie to win on the PGA Tour this year, and he's confident he can if he continues to do the things that helped him take a share of the third-round lead in the Turning Stone Resort Championship.

"I feel like my game's where it needs to be to win," said Piercy, who shot a 6-under 66 on Saturday to share the top spot with Matt Kuchar.

What Slump? Tiger Wins Memorial

As Tiger Woods' second shot on the 18th hole came to rest inches from the hole, wrapping up his second win of the season with back-to-back birdies to close, my phone started to vibrate.

"That any good?" came from a family member. "He is amazing," rung through from a buddy in Denver. "Just wow," from a friend in Scottsdale. That, folks, is why Tiger Woods is Tiger Woods.

Four shots back before he teed off on Sunday, Woods put together his most polished round since his return to the game, shooting a 7-under 65, his best final round score since the BMW Championship in 2007.

Geoff Ogilvy Scorches Memorial on Day 3

It doesn't take a lot in golf to fall from your perch as the best player on tour. David Duval, who is playing in this week's Memorial, knows the feeling. And now, Geoff Ogilvy has been experiencing a bit of it the past two months.

Ogilvy won the Mercedes Championship in January and took down the Accenture Match Play in early March, making him the hottest golfer in the world, along with a game that never seemed to waver. But his last few tournaments have been uneventful. A sixth-place finish at the Shell Houston Open is the only thing worth talking about, and even that isn't exactly up to Ogilvy's standards. Saturday, at Jack Nicklaus' tournament, Ogilvy went off tied for 57th, but after nine birdies on Muirfield Village, he has played himself back into contention.

Byrd, Furyk Share 36-Hole Lead at Memorial, Tiger Six Back

The Players Championship is often referred to as the fifth major, but Jack's tournament, the Memorial, makes a strong case for the title, even if it's a media creation.

Heading to the weekend, only 24 players are under par, and the 4-over cut line was four strokes tougher than The Players last month. Jonathan Byrd is one of just two players to fire back-to-back rounds in the 60s, and he's currently 7-under, tied for first place. (Mike Weir, T3, is the other.)

Tiger's Thursday Nothing Special

Tiger Woods has played in The Players Championship 12 times, and has never broken 70 in any of his first rounds. On a calm Thursday that gave up some very red numbers, Woods continued his trend of taking a mild approach, carding a 1-under 71 on an up-and-down day.

Woods' round was highlighted with an approach shot on the par-5 16th hole that ended up three feet away for a kick-in eagle. Tiger followed that up with a solid 9-iron on the 17th hole's island green to just outside 10 feet, but a nasty horseshoe left Woods with just another par.
More Coverage: TPC Leaderboard

FanHouse U.S. Open Media Guide, Page 2

We continued with part two of your FanHouse Media Guide.

  • Charlie Beljan -- DNP -- He qualified for the U.S. Open, so he is probably happy just to be there. The 23-year-old has been one of the most consistent golfers on the Gateway Tour, currently eighth on the Player of the Year list.

  • Yohann Benson -- DNP -- Maybe the most random profile on the Gateway Tour website. His interests - Montreal Canadiens, New York Yankees and Jack Daniels. The USGA just put out a collective sigh that Benson isn't paired with John Daly for the first two rounds. Also, he's single ladies.
  • Brian Bergstol -- DNP -- Hey, a 23-year-old assistant golf pro is in the field? Somebody notify Jim Nantz, he loves this stuff.
  • Jason Bohn -- DNP -- Bohn won the 2005 B.C. Open and once made a hole-in-one worth a million bucks. I'm still on the fence on which one is better, a million bucks or winning a free ball from every member in the hole-in-one club at my home course. Tough choice.
  • Jeffrey Bors -- DNP -- It appears Bors went all Adam Morrison on us after qualifying for Torrey Pines. "It's...I don't know...it's...hard to think about...it's the ultimate," cracked Bors, wiping his hand across his suddenly teary-eyed face. "Anyone who loves the game and loves competing wants to play in the Open." To his credit, I'd probably look like a group of guys after "Brian's Song" if I qualified.
  • D.J. Brigman -- t-30 -- Brigman is currently 25th on the Nationwide Tour money list, the last possible spot for exemption into the PGA Tour at year's end. A solid year so far, look for Brigman to be one of the few qualifiers to make the cut in San Diego.
  • Bart Bryant -- t-32 -- Hey, would you lookie there! Younger brother and older brother, together at the U.S. Open after Bart qualified in sectionals. If the USGA really wanted a power pairing, they'd go with the Bryant brothers.
  • Brad Bryant -- t-13 -- Big Brother Brad hasn't played in a major on the PGA tour since 1996, so you might consider him a touch rusty with those young bucks. No matter what happens this week, he'll still have the nickname Dr. Dirt because of his 5 o'clock shadow, so there's that.
  • Jonathan Byrd (above) -- t-15 -- Not to be confused with yummy Jonathan Byrds, the golfer namesake has won three times on tour including last year's John Deere Classic. Two top tens and five top 25s so far this season are pretty mediocre for a guy like Byrd.

Featured Writers

Featured Voices