Burns grabs PGA Tour lead in California with sizzling 61

Sam Burns hits from the 18th tee at the Nicklaus Tournament Course at PGA West during the second round of the American Express golf tournament Friday in La Quinta, Calif. (AP)
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Updated 20 January 2024
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Burns grabs PGA Tour lead in California with sizzling 61

  • He parred 18 to cap his career-best round, heading the field on 17-under-par 127 on another low-scoring day in the California desert east of Los Angeles
  • Dunlap, the reigning US Amateur champion, is trying to become just the eighth amateur to win on the PGA Tour since 1945, and the first since Phil Mickelson won in Arizona in 1991

LOS ANGELES: Sam Burns notched two eagles on the way to an 11-under-par 61 on Friday to take a one-stroke lead over Michael Kim in the PGA Tour American Express tournament in La Quinta, California,

The 27-year-old American said he didn’t realize he was within sight of the 13th sub-60 round in PGA Tour history until he was on the 17th green, where his birdie putt from about 25 feet slid by.

He parred 18 to cap his career-best round, heading the field on 17-under-par 127 on another low-scoring day in the California desert east of Los Angeles.

Burns kickstarted his round with a 15-foot eagle at the par-five fourth hole on the Nicklaus Tournament Course, one of three in use over the first three rounds of the event.

He added birdies at the fifth, sixth and seventh, then eagled the par-5 11th where he hit a “perfect seven-iron” that left him three feet for eagle.

“Overall just a really solid day,” said Burns, who added birdies at 13, 14, 15 and 16 to grab the solo lead. “I hit a lot of quality shots and was able to make some putts.”

Burns said he wasn’t thinking about a 59.

“Based off the scores, obviously everybody’s shooting some good numbers, so I think (I was) just trying to keep pace and trying to hit as many quality shots and get as many looks as possible,” he said.

Korean-born American Kim had 10 birdies and a bogey in his nine-under-par 63 for 128 on the Nicklaus Tournament course, where South Korean Lee Kyoung-hoon had nine birdies in his eight-under 64.

Lee was tied for third on 15-under 129 with amateur Nick Dunlap, a University of Alabama sophomore who shot an impressive seven-under 65 on the Stadium Course, the toughest of the three that will be used for Sunday’s final round.

Dunlap got off to a fast start with six birdies on the front nine. His seventh came at the 18th, where he rolled in a six-footer for his share of third place.

Dunlap, the reigning US Amateur champion, is trying to become just the eighth amateur to win on the PGA Tour since 1945, and the first since Phil Mickelson won in Arizona in 1991.

Dunlap said his strong start to the week came down to “trusting myself,” in his fourth tour start.

“I’ve been playing some good golf recently and just tried to stay in that same mindset,” he said. “Obviously, it’s going to be a kind of a shoot-out, it seems like, so pedal to the metal and try to make some putts.”

World number six Patrick Cantlay headed a group on 130 that also included 2021 champion Kim Si-woo of South Korea, South African Christiaan Bezuidenhout, American Eric Cole, Sweden’s Alex Noren and Canadian Adam Hadwin — who carded a 59 at La Quinta Country Club in 2017.


Rampant Sabalenka sweeps past Jovic into Australian Open semifinals

Updated 27 January 2026
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Rampant Sabalenka sweeps past Jovic into Australian Open semifinals

MELBOURNE: Relentless top seed Aryna Sabalenka muscled past American teenager Iva Jovic and into the Australian Open semifinals Tuesday to accelerate her bid for a third Melbourne title.
The Belarusian powered home 6-3, 6-0 in blazing heat to set up a clash with either third seed Coco Gauff or 12th seed Elina Svitolina.
It booked the 27-year-old a 14th career Grand Slam semifinal and fourth in a row at the season-opening major.
Sabalenka has won twice in Melbourne, in 2023 and 2024, and seemed destined for another crown last year but was upset in the final by Madison Keys.
Keys’ title defense is over, beaten in the fourth round by Jessica Pegula.
“These teenagers have been testing me in the last couple of rounds,” said Sabalenka, who is on a 10-match win streak after victory at the lead-up Brisbane International.
“It was a tough match. Don’t look at the score, it wasn’t easy at all. She played incredible tennis. Pushed me to to one step better level. And I’m super happy with the win.”
The match was played under an open roof on Rod Laver Arena with the tournament Heat Stress Scale yet to reach the level where it could be closed.
Temperatures are forecast to hit a blistering 45C with a peak of 38C reached during the match.
Defeat brought an end to a breakthrough tournament for 18-year-old Jovic, the youngest player in the women’s top 100 and seeded 29.
She stunned seventh seed and two-time Slam finalist Jasmine Paolini and blitzed past experienced Yulia Putintseva for the loss of just one game to announce herself to the world.
But Sabalenka was a bridge too far.
The world number one safely held serve to lay down a marker, blasting an ace to set up game point and an unreturnable serve to win it.
Jovic made some early errors and sent the ball long on break point to surrender her serve and fall 2-0 behind.
Sabalenka held to pile on the pressure before Jovic fended off a break point on her next serve to get on the scoreboard.
But despite some long rallies as she got into the match and three break points as Sabalenka served for the set, the top seed’s brute force proved too much.
Sabalenka then broke her immediately to assert control of set two and Jovic was spent, with another break for 3-0 then a double fault to slump 5-0 down, signalling the end.