Aaron Rai shot another bogey-free round of 8-under 63 to share the lead with CT Pan going into the weekend at the John Deere Classic. Rai was 65-63 for two rounds and Pan was the same and the duo was 14-under
Tom Kim put himself on the brink of etching his name into PGA TOUR history books once again after a 5-under 65 in the third round. Kim, who turned 22 on Friday, rebounded from an early bogey, his first all week at TPC River Highlands, with six birdies to finish the weather-disrupted day on 1
Akshay Bhatia was bogey-free with four birdies and an eagle, while Kim, also bogey-free, had eight birdies. Another Indian American Sahith Theegala was T-33
A two-time PGA Tour winner, the Indian-American Akshay Bhatia's parents are Indian, but he was born and brought up in the US. He is 1-under for 36 holes with 68-71
Scottie Scheffler, continued his dominance of the PGA Tour, as he moved four shots clear of the field at the Memorial with one round to go. Scheffler (71) was at 10-under 206 and four ahead of Collin Morikawa (68), Adam Hadwin (72) and Sepp Straka (68)
Chasing a third PGA TOUR victory, Sungjae Im rolled in monster putts of 44 feet and 25 feet for two of his seven birdies at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas as he ended the second round in tied fourth place and four back of leader, Davis Riley
Xander Schauffele, fresh off his record start of 62, had to settle for seven pars in his last seven holes for a 68. At 12-under 130, he was one shot ahead of Collin Morikawa (66-65) at 11-under and two ahead of Indian-American Sahith Theegala (65-67) at 10-under. Morikawa may have had a tie
It was at this very course that Rory McIlroy won the last of his four Majors. And he returns to the 106th PGA Championships at Valhalla having won his last two starts, including a fourth Wells Fargo win in the hope of ending a Major drought
Rory McIlroy overturned a two-shot deficit as he played his final 11 holes in six-under to win the Wells Fargo Championships by a whopping five shots despite a closing double bogey.
Xander Schauffele, a seven-time PGA TOUR winner, maintained his position at the top of the leaderboard for a third straight day but his round of 70 saw his overnight four-shot advantage cut to one by World No. 2 and three-time Wells Fargo winner Rory McIlroy, who carded a 67 to go bogey-free
Olympic champion Xander Schauffele (65-67), who is seeking an eighth PGA TOUR title, leads by four strokes over world No. 2 Rory McIlroy and Jason Day following a near-faultless 67 for 11-under
Sahith Theegala and Will Zalatoris missed the halfway cut at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans while Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry held on to a share of the lead with three other pairs in the PGA TOUR's only team event after two rounds