The low scoring continued on the second day of Webex Players Series Murray River, as Thailand teenager Cholcheva Wongras and Queensland’s Jake McLeod continued their love affairs with the Old Course at Cobram Barooga to share the lead at 14-under.
By firing a second-straight 7-under 64, Wongras was able to hang on to her lofty leaderboard position, while McLeod’s 8-under was a two-shot improvement on his day one round, the former Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit winner relishing the hot conditions.
The two leaders are quite the pair. Wongras, a 17-year-old who is just establishing herself very early in her career, and 30-year-old McLeod who is working hard to get back to his best and has been prominent in all three Tour events so far in 2025.
South Australian veteran Jason Norris is just one back at 13-under after an 8-under 63 of his own today. After nine consecutive pars to begin his Murray River campaign yesterday, Norris has played his last 27-holes in 13-under, including going out in 6-under today.
At 52, Norris is 35 years older than his teenage challenger Wongras, meaning the top three players on the leaderboard span over three generations.
Anthony Quayle, Jye Pickin and Bray Watt are all a further two shots back at 11-under, Quayle in prime position to get after the win he desires over the weekend.
After a top-five finish in Perth and grabbing a share of 11th after being an early leader last week at Rosebud, McLeod’s consistent play has continued on the Murray.
“Played nicely today,” said McLeod. “We had really good conditions … there’s no wind and it’s nice and warm, so just how I like to play golf.”
McLeod’s back nine was electric today, starting with three straight birdies from 10 through 12, before making two more in a row to finish his day.
“If you get a good tee shot away on both of them, they’re big scoring chances,” he said of the closing two holes.
“I hit a decent drive up 17, but hit my wedge to about 18 feet and holed a nice putt there.
“Then on the last I hit a 9-iron to about four feet. That was a nice way to finish.”
Since his breakout year in 2018 which saw him top the Order of Merit, McLeod has struggled to return to the winner’s circle despite a few close calls.
“It’s nice to be in contention again on the weekend for the third tournament in a row now,” he said.
“I’ve learned a fair bit over the last couple of tournaments as well, so hopefully I can capitalise on that and do a better job.”
While Wongras, who turned pro at just 15, managed to match her first round 64, today she did it with no bogeys on the card, but said the day wasn’t completely stress-free.
“I think I made two or three big saves,” she said. “I’m quite happy that I didn’t drop any shots today though.
“The course was just like yesterday, everything was so good and the greens were super smooth.
“The people here are so nice, the environment, the tournament here is just super nice. I’m so happy to be here.”
Wongras won twice on her home Thai LPGA Tour in 2024, and also had a solid week at the ISPS HANDA Australian Open finishing tied-24th.
Having also secured playing rights on the TLPGA in Taiwan for the upcoming season by way of winning the qualifying tournament, Wongras will split her time in a number of countries, but said winning on the WPGA Tour of Australasia is up there on her goals.
“I’m quite happy about my round, so tomorrow just stick to the game plan and try not to think too far ahead,” she said.
Two of the biggest movers on Friday were Malaysia’s Ashley Lau, whose bogey-free 63 lifted the Vic Open champion to T10, and Queenslander Blake Proverbs, who after a 1-over 72 yesterday, bounced back with a round-of-the-day 9-under 62, moving him from a tie from 91st to T14.
The cut was made at 4-under, with 58 players making it through to the weekend.
Michael Hendry, Ryan Peake and Cholcheva Wongras have got their Webex Players Series Murray River campaigns off to a perfect start, all posting 7-under around the Old Course at Cobram Barooga to share the lead after day one.
Out early, Hendry and Peake both got off to incredibly hot starts in the calm morning conditions, and the 64s they eventually signed for could have remarkably both been lower.
On the other side of the draw, Wongras’ 64 in the afternoon was a masterful display of precision, the Thai 17-year-old making nine birdies on her opening round.
There was no shortage of low scoring today, with 31 players 4-under or better and the end of play. Four players are tied fourth at 6-under, with Brad Kennedy, Jake McLeod, Todd Sinnott and Anthony Quayle all carding 65.
While an even larger cluster are tied eighth at 5-under, including WPGA Tour of Australasia trio Justice Bosio, Jess Whitting and Belinda Ji.
Wongras managed to start her day with four consecutive birdies on the back nine at Cobram, and rolled in two more alongside just the one bogey to make the turn in 5-under.
“My putting was just working today,” said Wongras. “It was nice, the wind was pretty calm and the golf course was really nice.”
Wongras managed a further three birdies on her second nine, including two back-to-back late in the round to take some momentum into Friday.
Having played most of her golf last year back home in Thailand, Wongras usually makes the most of her limited visits to Australia and finished in a tie for nineteenth on the Murray last year.
Starting on opposite sides of the course, both Peake (28) and Hendry (30) took apart each half of Cobram’s Old Course to start their days.
Carding an eagle, a bogey and six birdies on his opening nine, Peake packed the fireworks for his trip to the Murray, as it looked as if the club record may be in danger.
“Oh yeah, I was thinking about it” Peake said of looking at an ultra-low score.
“Putted really well on the front nine, took advantage of all my opportunities.
“I just saw the lines perfectly and rolled them all in, but I think you can’t expect to play like that for all 18-holes.”
An even-par back nine with two birdies and two bogeys paled in comparison to the front, although Peake wasn’t complaining with his name atop the leaderboard.
“Towards the back nine the wind started to pick up a little bit, so I got a few wedge numbers wrong. Didn’t give myself the best opportunities,” he said.
“I don’t think the putts roll in quite as easy in the afternoon as they do early in the morning and that’s kind of what I found on the back nine, but no, very, very satisfied with that start.
“I think early in the morning it’s always been known that that’s when you’ve got to shoot your score, so very happy to have done it.”
Similarly, Hendry opened his Murray River account with a 6-under 30 on the back nine at Cobram, the Kiwi admitting the fast start came as a bit of a surprise to even him.
“Yeah, the way I’ve been putting, yes, I am a bit surprised,” Hendry said with a smile. “My putter has been a little bit uncooperative, but I actually put a new one in today and been working with a friend of mine back home on customising it and it really worked nicely today, so hopefully it stays nice and hot.”
Again, in a similar fashion to Peake, it was a tale of two nines for Hendry, however his only two blemishes came in his final three holes, leaving a bitter sting to what was otherwise a flawless round of golf.
“It’s obviously pretty early in the year and I haven’t played a lot of golf, so been working pretty hard from the beginning of last week really to try and sort of chip the rust off and work on what me and my coach are working on,” he said.
“I definitely had it there for a while today, which is great, and the great thing is the bad shots came from not quite doing what I wanted to do, so it proves to me that what we’re working on is the right thing.”
Finishing seventh last year on the Murray, Hendry has fond memories and says the course here is a great match for his accurate game.
“It’s quite narrow in places and essentially that’s my game,” he said. “I hit it pretty straight, hit a lot of greens and hopefully if I can putt well, I will have a good round of golf pretty much like I did today.
“It’s just a matter of making sure the putter’s cooperating, and most of the time if that happens on a course like this, I’m probably going to do okay.”
Cameron Davis has made a solid start to his PGA TOUR season with two top-20s already to his name, and as he prepares to contest the now Signature Event AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-am, the Sydneysider is only worried about himself … at least when it comes to his golf.
A winner on the American circuit last year, Davis’ year could have started even better when he was tied for 13th at The Sentry in Hawaii having incurred a two-shot penalty for hitting the wrong ball, before he missed the cut the following week at the Sony Open and sharing 18th at The American Express.
Labelling the incident where he and Will Zalatoris were planning similarly marked and model golf balls “a perfect storm of unfortunate things happening all at the same time”, Davis hasn’t dwelled on what occurred in Maui. Showcasing the former ISPS HANDA Australian Open winner’s mindset that has helped him become a two-time PGA TOUR champion.
“I’ve had experiences early in my career where I’ve set a goal out of wanting to play well in an event or feeling like I need to place a certain position or keep my card,” Davis told Australian media on Thursday afternoon.
“Generally those ones lead to the closer you get to it, the more pressure you feel because you don’t want to let yourself down. There are people that those goals fire them up and the closer they get to it, the more pumped up they get, which is a great way to be.
“But for me, I feel like there’s definitely been a history of not wanting to let myself down rather than wanting to get after it in the way that fires you up. I feel like for me it’s just being able put myself in a place where I can play my best golf and do play my best golf.”
Playing his best golf has often put Davis right alongside the best players in the world, like at The Masters last year when the now 29-year-old had moments in contention and ultimately finished T-12.
Speaking to Augusta being part of current focus, Davis is one of the Australians who will set his schedule around Signature Events, including this week where he will tee off alongside Thomas Detry on Thursday local time.
“Well, these signature events, I feel like it’s not really a goal. They kind of just create a schedule for yourself so you know what tournaments you’re going to be playing in if you’ve got them, which is great,” he said.
“I played well enough last year, the bonuses that you know what your schedule looks like the next year. I know all of them are set up tough and they’re going to be really good challenges, so you need to play really well, but they don’t really turn into my goals.
“I feel like for myself, I’ve figured out over time that the goals that I work best with are not goals that are comparing myself to other people with.
“I find it difficult if you play really good golf and your goal is to win a tournament and you might come second because someone played better. I feel like that would feel like a failure. But for me, if I feel like I’ve done a good job of the things that I can control, I feel like my goals are more process related, mental process related, working on my golf swing, just systematic processes.
Those processes have continued to improve under coach Ralph Bauer, whose role has evolved from Davis’ putting coach to looking after his whole game.
The work the pair doing being offset by time away from the game, with Davis returning to the West Coast swing having put the clubs away for a number of days at home in Seattle before heading for the iconic Pebble Beach.
“It was a lot of golf before Maui, so it was actually a little nice to take a week off and take four or five days of just golf clubs away again, restart, get some good food in me and then start back up again.
“It’s great to be back and especially playing here at this week, Pebble beach. Nice. I’m looking forward to getting back at it again tomorrow.
“I mean it’s so much fun hitting so many shots out this place. I mean, obviously growing up, watching it on TV, watching all the best players pretty much to play the game have been out here hitting shots that I’m going to have a chance to be playing in a tournament again tomorrow.”
As Min Woo Lee makes his PGA Tour debut for 2025 on the glorious Monterey Peninsula this week his famous sister Minjee steps out trialling a piece of equipment that could make or break her future.
Min Woo Lee is teeing it up alongside three other Australians in the $US20 million AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in California with high hopes.
Both Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill courses are in play for the ‘signature’ event.
His two runner-up finishes in his first full season and $US2.6 million in earnings were easily enough to retain his card in America but the Royal Fremantle product will not be satisfied yet.
At 26 years of age and ranked 53rd in the world, Lee will see this as a big year for him.
He is already in the field for the Masters at Augusta National in April, but has not yet qualified for the Open Championship at Royal Portrush.
Meanwhile Minjee Lee will use her new, broomstick-style putter for the first time as the LPGA Tour resumes for 2025 at the Tournament of Champions in Florida.
The former world No. 2 and dual major champion had her worst season for some time by her own high standards in 2024, and growing frustration at her patchy short putting has led to a significant change over the summer. Her world ranking has fallen to No. 19 having twice reached No. 2 (in 2019 and 2022).
She has been working hard at home in Perth with coach Ritchie Smith but this week at Lake Nona will be the first time we get to see the new equipment in play under tournament conditions.
Hannah Green, who overtook Lee as Australia’s top-ranked player last year, is also in the field in Florida where Kiwi Lydia Ko is the defending champion.
Tournament season is now in full swing with 10 Australasians competing in the Asian Tour’s International Series in India this week.
PHOTO: Min Woo Lee is set for a big year in 2025. Image: Getty
Tee times
PGA TOUR
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro Am
Pebble Beach Golf Links and Spyglass Hill, California
4.01am * Cam Davis
4.53am * Adam Scott
5.19am Jason Day
5.32am Min Woo Lee
Past champion: Wyndham Clark
Past Aussie winners: Brett Ogle 1993, Bruce Crampton 1965
Prize money: $US20m
TV times: Live 4am-11am Friday-Saturday; Live 3am-11am Sunday, 2am-10.30am Monday on Fox Sports 503 and Kayo.
LPGA Tour
Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions
Lake Nona Golf & Country Club, Florida
12.43 am Hannah Green
1.16am Lydia Ko (NZ)
2.55am Minjee Lee
Past champion: Nelly Korda
Past Aussie winners: Lydia Ko (NZ) 2024,
Prize money: $US2m
TV times: Live 3.30am-6.30am Friday, Saturday ; Live 6am-9am Saturday ; Live 5am-8am Monday on Fox Sports 505 and Kayo.
DP World Tour
Bahrain Championship
Royal GC, Kingdom of Bahrain
3.10pm * Daniel Hillier (NZ)
3.45pm Jason Scrivener
4.10pm Kazuma Kobori (NZ)
7.10pm Elvis Smylie
8.30pm David Micheluzzi
Past champion: Dylan Frattelli
Past Aussie winners: nil
Prize money: €2.5m
TV times: Live 7.30pm-12.30am Thursday, Friday; Live 8.30pm-12.30pm Saturday, Sunday on Fox Sports 503 and Kayo.
Asian Tour
International Series India
DLF Golf and Country Club, Gurugram, India
12.35pm Jack Buchanan
12.45pm Jack Thompson
12.45pm * Wade Ormsby
1.05 * Travis Smyth
1.15pm Maverick Antcliff
1.25 * Kevin Yuan
1.25 * Nick Voke (NZ)
1.35pm Jed Morgan
6.05pm Aaron Wilkin
7.25pm * Scott Hend
Past champion: Inaugural event
Past Aussie winners: nil
Prize money: $US2m
TV times: Live 7pm-11pm Thursday, Friday; Live 5.30pm-9.30pm Saturday, Sunday on Fox Sports 507 and Kayo.
Korn Ferry Tour
Panama Championship, Club de golf, Panama
9.30am * Brett Drewitt
8.40am * Rhein Gibson
4.10am Harry Hillier (NZ)
Past champion: Isaiah Salinda
Aussie winners: Mathew Goggin 2011, 2015
Prize money: $US1m
HotelPlanner Tour
MyGolfLife Open hosted by Pecanwood Estate, South Africa
3.40pm * Danny List (NZ)
5.10pm Sam Jones (NZ)
5.30pm * Haydn Barron
9.10pm Hayden Hopewell
Past champion: inaugural event
Aussie winners: nil
Prize money: $US1m
Having cut his time on the Japan Golf Tour short late last year, Anthony Quayle had a clear goal in mind on his return to the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia … finish in the top-three on the Order of Merit and secure a DP World Tour card.
Ahead of this week’s Webex Players Series Murray River, Quayle is currently in eighth position and is well on his way, the man from Nhulunbuy remarkably getting there without recording a win.
With five top-five finishes since November, including a triplet of thirds highlighted by the BMW Australian PGA Championship, Quayle has certainly been one of the most consistent players on Tour, but also knows how important that elusive win will be in achieving his goal.
“I’m pretty proud of, I guess the level that I’m maintaining each week, but just one floor is, I haven’t got one of them over the line yet,” said Quayle at Cobram Barooga Golf Club today.
“Given what’s at stake, the goal from here on is to probably get at least one of them over the line, maybe a couple and see where that gets me.
“Given how far behind I am with Elvis (Smylie), I really need to probably win a couple of these coming in and see if I can drag one of those spots.”
After wins at both the Bowra & O’Dea Nexus Advisernet WA Open, and at the BMW Australian PGA Championship, Smylie sits proudly atop the Order of Merit at 1247 points, with Quayle at 461.
While Smylie is well clear, Quayle definitely has the second and third positions in his sights, with Cameron Smith (735 points) and Lucas Herbert (717 points) with zero and one chances respectively to add to their tallies.
One of the most loved golfers on the Tour, being back around his mates week-to-week has indeed had a positive impact on Quayle’s play, the Northern Territory born product even having his brother Spencer caddie for him at Webex Players Series Perth a few weeks back.
“I love hanging out with people. I love the social aspect to golf,” said Quayle. “I feel like sometimes when you’re travelling by yourself overseas, you’re a little bit isolated and unable to tap into that part of the job.
“It’s hard to be able to get that sort of experience on the road. Whereas back here I feel like I’m just hanging out with my mates playing Saturday morning golf kind of every week. It’s awesome.”
This was precisely the advice he received from a very well-known name in Queensland golf, and a big reason he decided to come home from Japan.
“I had a pretty good conversation with Phil Scott at the end of last year,” he said of his fellow Sanctuary Cove Golf and Country Club member.
“I was struggling at the time, I was missing a lot of cuts in Japan and I still had tournaments to play, but it was clashing with all the big events at the end of the year in Australia.
“He was the one that brought it to my attention how important environment is.”
The move has allowed Quayle to be a “better version of himself”, and whether the win he is chasing comes this week at Cobram Barooga or further down the line, he’s confident it will come.
“The one glaring opportunity is the New Zealand Open,” he said. “I think a good performance there is going to go a long way and earning one of those cards and being able to get some more points.
“Continuing to perform well in every event is important though, and this week is just about as good a country golf club as I’ve ever seen. I think the quality is unbelievable.
“The fairways are like carpet. I think it’s going to be an awesome test.”
After a “tools down” summer, Brett Coletta is looking forward to trying to defend a Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia title for the first time at the Vic Open next week.
The Victorian shot back-to-back 65s at the weekend on the Beach Course at 13th Beach Golf Links to capture the 2024 title – by two shots over Jordan Zunic – his second success as a professional.
This year, he heads the entries in a men’s field that includes six Tour winners from this season plus the likes of Matt Griffin, Michael Hendry, Anthony Quayle, Harrison Crowe and Zunic.
“It’s always nice to be able to defend,” Coletta said.
“I’ve only done it once – at Hunter Valley – and I wasn’t successful, but this has been on the radar. The Vic Open is always an enjoyable week.”
The 27-year-old played his first tournament for 2025 at Webex Players Series Victoria at Rosebud Country Club last week, finishing in equal 20th after rounds of 69-65-68-70.
Before then, he hadn’t teed it up competitively since a T29 performance at the Saudi International on the Asian Tour the week after the ISPS HANDA Australian Open.
“Honestly, for me it was just tools down,” Coletta said of his Christmas-New Year break,
“There were a couple of little things we need to iron out of my swing with my coach, Brandon (Rave).
“But to be honest, it was in a pretty good spot when I came back from Saudi. We did some really good work there and I’m really trying to get some good momentum moving forward into the busier part of the year, which is kind of towards the end of the year.”
The highest-ranked player in the men’s field is set to be Japan’s Ren Yonezawa, the world No.286 and two-time Japan Golf Tour receiving one of the tournament invites alongside countryman Shiso Go.
The tournament pro-am will be held on the Beach and Creek courses on Wednesday morning (7.45am tee off), with the Vic Open starting on Thursday morning.
Entry to the course is free and parking is available on site.
The Webex Players Series rolls on this week, with players heading north from Rosebud to the Murray River and the Old Course at Cobram Barooga Golf Club.
Having grown up just down the road in Shepparton, the event will once again be played in honour of the late Jarrod Lyle.
Last year saw Kazuma Kobori take out his first of three victories on the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia on his way to winning the Order of Merit.
However, the Murray River event has been a happy hunting ground for WPGA Tour players, with Hannah Green hoisting the trophy in 2022, and Sarah Jane Smith making it two-from-two for the women in 2023.
The Order of Merit standings on both Tours are tightening up at the top, this week a great chance to accrue some points ahead of next week’s Vic Open.
LAST YEAR’S CHAMPION: Kazuma Kobori
PRIZEMONEY: $250,000
LIVE SCORES: www.pga.org.au; www.wpga.org.au
TV COVERAGE: Webex Players Series Murray River is live on Fox Sports, available on Foxtel and Kayo.
*All times AEDT.
Round 3: Saturday 3pm-6pm (Fox Sports 503/Kayo)
Final Round: Sunday 1pm-6pm (Fox Sports 503/Kayo)
HEADLINERS
Ashley Lau – 2024 Vic Open women’s champion
Brad Kennedy – Two-time NZ Open winner, 2021 Webex Players Series Vic winner
Kelsey Bennett – 2024 The Athena champion
Phoenix Campbell – 2023 and 2024 Qld PGA champion
Abbie Teasdale – 2025 Melbourne International winner
Jak Carter – Three-time runner-up on Tour this season
Jeongmin Cho – Five-time LPGA of Korea Tour winner
Michael Hendry – 2023 Vic Open champion
Jordan Doull – 2025 Webex Players Series Perth winner
Anthony Quayle – Former Queensland Open and Queensland PGA winner
Jason Scrivener logged his best result of the new DP World Tour season finishing fourth in the Ras Al Khaimah Championship in the United Arab Emirates over the weekend.
Jason Scrivener logged his best result of the new DP World Tour season finishing fourth in the Ras Al Khaimah Championship in the United Arab Emirates over the weekend.
The 35-year-old Scrivener finished just outside the top 20 in the Dubai Desert Classic the week before, and as a a result has jumped to 20th on the Race to Dubai rankings.
Moving his family – wife Simone and two children – back to Australia and an illness impacted his 2024 season, but the Western Australian says he feels invigorated for the short breaks that he had from the game.
It was his best result since he was runner-up at the Australian PGA Championship in 2022. In his 11th consecutive season in Europe, Scrivener is still chasing his first win, but he picked up the equivalent of $125,000 for his efforts.
There are four Australasians in the top 20 on the DP World Tour – Kiwi Daniel Hillier (2nd), Elvis Smylie (6), David Micheluzzi (15) and Scrivener (20). The top 10 at season’s automatically earn dual membership of the PGA Tour.
The other highlight of a quiet weekend for Australians was Kevin Yuan’s fourth place on the Asian Tour at the Phillipine Open.
PHOTO: Jason Scrivener is on the up in the Middle East. Image: Getty
Results
PGA TOUR
Farmers Insurance Open
Torrey Pines Golf Course (South Cse), San Diego, California
1 – Harris English 68-73-66-73 – 280 $US1,674,000
T32 Aaron Baddeley 67-77-70-75 – 289 $52,080
T32 Jason Day 74-69-70-76 – 289 $52,080
DP World Tour
Ras Al Khaimah Championship
Al Hamra GC, Ras Al Khaimah, UAE
1 – Alejandro Del Ray 68-66-66-66 – 266 €406,373
4 Jason Scrivener 72-70-65-67 – 274 €119,521
T27 Ryan Fox (NZ) 72-71-70-68 – 281 €20,557
T36 David Micheluzzi 71-68-70-73 – 282 €16,015
MC Kazuma Kobori (NZ) 75-73 – 148
MC Elvis Smylie 75-75 – 150
MC Daniel Hillier (NZ) 78-73 – 151
Asian Tour
Smart Infinity Philippine Open
The Manila Southwoods G&CC (Masters Cse), Philippines
1 – Julien Sale 69-68-67-65 – 269 $US90,000
4 Kevin Yuan 70-66-68-68-272 – $25,000
T16 Nick Voke (NZ) 68-71-69-68 – 276 $5778
T16 Travis Smyth 70-66-73-67 – 276 $5778
T24 Maverick Antcliff 73-69-66-69 – 277 $4550
T35 Aaron Wilkin 66-69-73-71 – 279 $3400
T47 Jed Morgan 68-73-70-71 – 282 $2350
T47 Lawry Flynn 71-68-71-72 – 282 $2350
T59 Dezel Ieremia (NZ) 71-71-66-76 – 284 $1600
65 Todd Sinnott 73-69-72-74 – 288 $1400
MC Jack Thompson 74-73 – 147
MC Brett Rankin 77-77 – 154
HotelPlanner Tour
SDC Open
Zebula Golf Estate & Spa, Limpopo, South Africa
1 Daniel Van Honder 72-65-68-67 – 272 €56,832
T30 Sam Jones (NZ) 70-69-68-75 – 282 €3227
MC Hayden Hopewell 82-73 – 155
They’ve been boyhood rivals and teamed up against their old man, now Pickin brothers Bryce and Jye are sharing the professional stage.
Two years Bryce’s junior, Jye (pictured, right) turned professional in May of last year after an amateur career highlighted by victory at the 2023 South Australian Amateur and countless Golf NSW representative teams.
The Newcastle native made an immediate impression on the professional game by taking out one of the most coveted events on the adidas PGA Pro-Am Series just months later, shooting a course record 62 in Round 2 to win the PSC Insurance Brokers Wagga Wagga Pro-Am.
Jye is the lone Pickin in the field for this week’s Webex Players Series Murray River tournament at Cobram Barooga Golf Club, the 24-year-old hoping to further advance his position on the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit.
Bryce’s entry into professional golf has come via a different path.
The left-hander was also an outstanding amateur who played pennants alongside Jye for Avondale Golf Club in Sydney and won the boys division of the 2018 Faldo Series Australia Championship. Ladies European Tour player, Kelsey Bennett, won the girls division.
Yet a move into professional golf would come later. He flirted with a move into full-time work before taking up a position in the golf shop at Newcastle Golf Club.
For someone Jye says is a golf tragic, it was the perfect mix of employment and passion.
It led directly to Bryce starting the PGA of Australia’s Membership Pathway Program last year under Andrew Bowles at Newcastle Golf Club.
Bryce’s performances in the MPP tournaments in 2024, where he won three times, earned him an invite to make his Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia debut at the PNG Open last August where he and Jye played a Tour event together for the first time.
Bryce received another invite to play Webex Players Series Perth where he not only made the cut, but he and Jye were paired together for Round 3 at Royal Fremantle Golf Club.
“Oh, this was the dream. Absolutely,” said 26-year-old Bryce of playing on Tour.
“It feels a little bit surreal. It’s awesome.
“When I started the Membership Pathway Program, I started to play OK. Got a little bit of Tour status and then the opportunities came.”
Jye got the better of the brotherly battle that day in Perth to the tune of 70-75 yet the collective experience outweighed any thought of one-upmanship.
“It was pretty surreal. It was awesome,” said Bryce. “We played so many Saturdays together; it’s pretty different here.”
“I feel like it relaxed the nerves a whole lot for sure, seeing him walking onto the first tee,” added Jye, who went on to finish tied for 15th.
“Obviously a Saturday of a Tour event is pretty cool. And then to play with your brother is awesome again.
“To have that sibling rivalry is something that we’ve had since we were 10 years old. To have it at this level was priceless.
“To come to a tour event and for him to be sleeping in the room next to me and doing everything together, it’s awesome. It has that home feel to it as well, which is even better for players that travel so much.
“To have your brother alongside you is awesome.”
While the rivalry will never leave completely – they were joint winners with Robbie Minns of the Wyong PGA Open Match last June – the pair did team up as kids to get one up on the old man.
“We had a bet between us of our combined handicaps against our Dad’s handicap,” Jye recalled.
“The first time we beat him, he played in the morning at Charlestown and we both played in the afternoon.”
“We were having a swim in the pool at around six o’clock when the scores went into GolfLink and we pipped him,” said Bryce.
“He was like 8.1 or 8.2 and we were 4.1 and 3.9.”
Adds Jye: “Deep down I think he was happy to hand over the dozen balls.”
Lucas Herbert is set to return to Queenstown for the New Zealand Open presented by Sky Sport in what will be his fourth start on the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia this season.
The event, which takes place at Millbrook Resort between February 27 and March 2, promises to deliver world-class competition, with Herbert among the top players gunning for a share of the NZ$2 million prize pool.
Herbert, part of the 2024 LIV Golf team championship winning Ripper GC, owns five professional wins, including the Bermuda Championship on the PGA TOUR, three victories on the DP World Tour and most recently the Ford NSW Open on his local Tour.
A runner-up in 2020 when finishing two shots back of fellow Aussie Brad Kennedy, Herbert is excited to be making his way back to world renowned region to contest a national Open.
“I’m absolutely stoked to be returning to Queenstown for the New Zealand Open,” Herbert said.
“It’s one of the most beautiful places I’ve played, and since I last played at Millbrook Resort all I keep hearing is how the tournament is growing and getting better and better.
“The courses are challenging, the crowds are great, and the competition is always top-notch. I’m really looking forward to being a part of such a fantastic event and seeing if I can go one better.”
Herbert’s return to the New Zealand Open adds to a field already filled with top-tier professionals who will contest the pro-am format event that is co-sanctioned by the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia and Asian Tours and in partnership with the Japan Golf Tour.
“We’re thrilled to have Lucas heading back to Queenstown next month,” Tournament Director Michael Glading said.
“He is a very exciting player to watch, having come really close a few years ago and we know fans are going to be thrilled to see him in action. With Lucas joining an already competitive field, this year’s New Zealand Open is shaping up to be one of the strongest fields we have ever had.”
The 104th New Zealand Open tees off at Millbrook Resort in Queenstown from February 27 to March 2.