Stinger GC lead LIV Golf Hong Kong, Burmester and Ancer tied at top of individual standings

Dean Burmester of Stinger GC shot a 7-under 63 and is tied for the lead following round one of LIV Golf Hong Kong. (LIV Golf)
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Updated 09 March 2024
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Stinger GC lead LIV Golf Hong Kong, Burmester and Ancer tied at top of individual standings

  • Top two each shot a 63 round with Bryson DeChambeau one stroke behind

HONG KONG: Disappointed in not winning last week’s team title in Jeddah after starting the final round with a seven-shot lead, Stinger GC entered LIV Golf Hong Kong determined to make amends.

So far so good through one round — although a persistent and familiar nemesis is lurking again.

Led by Dean Burmester’s 7-under 63, the Stingers grabbed the first-round lead at historic Hong Kong Golf Club with a team score of 16 under.

That is one shot better than Bryson DeChambeau’s Crushers GC, the team that rallied past the Stingers last Sunday in a scintillating record-tying final-round 20-under performance.

“It was obviously a tough pill to swallow,” Burmester said. “I saw Bryson in the locker room, and I used some language. But all in good spirits. I was like, damn, you guys are tough to beat ...

“We had a good week last week and the Crushers did something crazy on Sunday, but I see they’re right behind us again. Hopefully we can do something to them this week.”

Burmester and Fireballs GC’s Abraham Ancer share the individual lead, one stroke ahead of the six-man chasing pack that includes Burmester’s captain Louis Oosthuizen, Crushers’ Charles Howell III, Fireballs GC’s Eugenio Chacarra, 4Aces GC’s Harold Varner III, Ripper GC’s Matt Jones and Cleeks GC Captain Martin Kaymer, whose 64 is his lowest score in a LIV Golf tournament. Another stroke back is DeChambeau and Smash GC Captain Brooks Koepka.

The 54-player field, the most highly decorated to compete at Hong Kong Golf Club, provided the appreciative fans with plenty of impressive scoring on a jam-packed leaderboard. At one point, 12 players were tied for the lead at 5 under before Burmester and Ancer separated themselves with late birdies. A total of 44 players shot par or better.

“It’s crazy, right? Crazy,” said Howell, one of seven players to produce a bogey-free round. “Never thought that, how low the scores are with this golf course. It’s a testament to the strength of field and how good these guys really are.”

“I didn’t think there was going to be that many low numbers, but I don’t know, I guess it’s just playing perfect,” added Ancer, who was also bogey-free. “The greens are really good. There’s just a lot of guys that are playing really good at this time.”

Burmester almost did not play at all. He fell ill earlier in this week, and was nauseous on Tuesday, preventing him from practicing. Oosthuizen was also sick, but both managed to rebound.

Burmester said that it reminded him of the stomach bug he suffered last December at the South African Open, when he was throwing up on the course and nearly withdrew. He finished that week by winning the tournament.

“Seems to be every time I get ill, I seem to play OK,” Burmester said, “so that’s great news.”

Below are the standings and counting scores for Friday’s opening round of the team competition at LIV Golf Hong Kong. The three best scores from each team count in the first two rounds while all four scores count in the final round. The team with the lowest cumulative score after three rounds wins the team title.

1.STINGER GC -16 (Burmester 63, Oosthuizen 64, Grace 67)

2. CRUSHERS GC -15 (Howell III 64, DeChambeau 65, Casey 66)

T3. FIREBALLS GC -12 (Ancer 63, Chacarra 64, Garcia 71)

T3. CLEEKS GC -12 (Kaymer 64, Bland 66, Meronk 68)

5. RIPPER GC -11 (Jones 64, Smith 67. Leishman 68)

6. 4ACES GC -10 (Varner III 64, Reed 67, Perez 69)

7. TORQUE GC -9 (Munoz 66, Niemann 67, Ortiz 68)

T8. SMASH GC -7 (Koepka 65, Gooch 69, McDowell 69)

T8. MAJESTICKS GC -7 (Stenson 66, Poulter 66, Horsfield 71)

T10. IRON HEADS GC -6 (Na 67, Vincent 67, Lee 70)

T10. LEGION XIII -6 (Rahm 67, Hatton 68, Vincent 69)

12. HYFLYERS GC -5 (Tringale 66, Ogletree 69, Steele 70)

13. RANGEGOATS GC -4 (Wolff 67, Watson 68, Pieters 71)


McIlroy has set sights on overtaking one of European golf’s greatest players

Updated 11 November 2025
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McIlroy has set sights on overtaking one of European golf’s greatest players

  • A seventh Harry Vardon Trophy would take the Northern Irishman past Seve Ballesteros and leave him one behind Colin Montgomerie
  • Rory McIlroy: I feel like my game rounded into some really good form at the weekend, and hopefully I can continue that from Thursday on

DUBAI: Rory McIlroy has his sights set on overtaking one of European golf’s greatest players and closing the gap on another as he looks to win the Harry Vardon Trophy for a seventh time this weekend.

The reigning Masters Champion heads into the season-ending DP World Tour Championship with a 767-point lead over nearest challenger Marco Penge in the Race to Dubai standings and in pole position to win the season-long race for a fourth year in a row.

If he achieves his aim on Sunday, the Northern Irishman would become a seven-time Race to Dubai champion, moving past Seve Ballesteros on six (under the previous name of Order of Merit) and closing to within one win of Colin Montgomerie’s record of eight.

With 2,000 points awarded to the winner of the final Rolex Series event of the season at Jumeirah Golf Estates this week, McIlroy knows victory is not a foregone conclusion but he wants to continue moving up a list that contains some illustrious names.

He said: “To move from six to seven titles, to go one past Seve, would be amazing. To get one closer to Monty (Montgomerie) would be amazing.

“But I think when I say I’m not chasing anything, I think if I focus my energy on certain tournaments and try to play well at certain tournaments, then the Race to Dubai almost just sort of takes care of itself.

“Hopefully these season-long awards are something that just come along because you’ve won some big tournaments along the way.

“So yeah, I guess you could say I’m still chasing that, but I think that’s just more a by-product of playing the good golf that I know that I can.”

McIlroy had led Penge by 441 points ahead of last week’s Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship but extended his lead after making an eagle and eight birdies in a flawless 62 on Sunday to finish in a tie for third.

He is hoping to keep up the momentum in Dubai at a tournament he has won three times, including last year.

“Obviously it was a great day on Sunday,” said McIlroy. “It looked like I was probably going to have a similar cushion over Marco to what I had last week but I was able to turn it on on the back nine and make a few birdies and give myself a chance to win the tournament, but also a little bit more of a lead going in here.

“So I thought last week was overall pretty good. I certainly played really well on the weekend. Found myself in a familiar position going into this week, going out last on Thursday, and you know, it will be good to tee it up again alongside Marco. I’m excited for a great week.

“I feel like my game rounded into some really good form at the weekend, and hopefully I can continue that from Thursday on.”

The World No. 2 was speaking on the day that the DP World Tour announced the inauguration of the Rory McIlroy Award, a new annual trophy named in honor of Europe’s first winner of the Career Grand Slam.

The award will be presented to the individual member of the DP World Tour who performs the best across all four Major Championships in a season.

McIlroy becomes the fifth person to have a DP World Tour award named after them, and said: “It’s an amazing honor to have my name up there along with Harry Vardon, Sir Henry Cotton, Seve Ballesteros and John Jacobs, that’s very special.”