April Event
Saturday 25 April 2026 in Connemara Golf Links
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And thatās a wrap on an action-packed finish! The gallery saw real grit, clutch shots, and standout performances right to the endānow itās time for the crowd to crown the Golfer of the Day!
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What a finish from our top performers todayāDanny Finn, Liam Rockall, Ciaran Considine, and Eoghan Considine! Now itās time for the crowd to choose who you think was the Golfer of the Day.
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Well played out there, folksāwhat a finish! Now itās time for our post-round poll to crown the audienceās āGolfer of the Day.ā Cast your vote for the player you felt delivered the standout performance today!
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What a finishācongratulations to all our contenders for putting on a brilliant show today. Now itās time for the crowd to decide: who was the *Golfer of the Day*?
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And there it isāDanny Finn just comes up in the lead at the finish, -6 after 18, with Liam Rockall right on his shoulder at -5 after 18. Ciaran Considine holds his form to card -4 after 18, and Eoghan Considineās closing work nudges him to -3 after 18. Itās a compact top end, the sort of scoreboard where every swing on the way home matters, and Finnās ability to keep things calm when it tightened has proved decisive.
Down the card, Dave Flanagan finishes with the solid cushion of -2 after 18, while Ciaran Greene is E after 18, Evan OāKeeffe +3 after 18, and Alan Dempsey also +3 after 18. Brendan Considine rounds it out at +3 after 18, with Ryan Kelly trailing at +5 after 18. That top-five really tells the tale: it wasnāt fireworks at every turn, it was consistency, and Finn gets the prize for being there at the end.
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Rivalry update: Mike Rockall just closed out Hole 18 with a birdie, and that kind of finish typically sends a clear message in head-to-head matchupsāespecially when the round trend is declining and pressure is rising.
Rockall sits at 11th with 30 total points, using a late surge to keep his momentum relevant in the rivalry race. If his rival is aiming to pull away, that birdie at the death says Rockall isnāt backing offāheās forcing the issue right to the final putt.
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Phil Staunton just ripped a birdie on the 18th to close out his round strongāfinishing 14th on 28 points, and you can feel the momentum shift with his round trend improving.
And thatās exactly the kind of swing you want in a rivalry: when Philās timing clicks late, the matchups start to look differentābecause heās the one who can turn pressure into birdies, especially when his opponent thinks the story is already written.
Next move: if Phil keeps this late-round form rolling, this rivalry has a real chance of tightening into a head-to-head grind, hole by hole.
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Evan O'Keeffe just closed out Hole 18 with a birdie, and heās doing it at a crucial momentāsitting 9th with 33 points and a round trend thatās clearly improving.
This is the kind of swing that sharpens a rivalry: when OāKeeffe finishes strong, it raises the pressure on the player heās chasing, because it signals the momentum is trending his wayānot just for a hole or two, but for the finish.
Bottom line: the birdie on 18 gives OāKeeffe real competitive edge in this matchupāexpect him to carry this form into the next stretch.
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Alright, what a swing coming down the stretchāafter two holes, itās been steady stuff across the group. Oisin OāMalley was fighting it out, playing bogey at 17 before calming the nerves with par at 18, holding at +12. Ciaran Greene looked like he found the right rhythmāanother bogey on 17, but he answered brilliantly with a birdie on 18, keeping him right on even par. Meanwhile, Alan Dempsey and Tony McHale both played it solid: Alanās par at 17 and birdie at 18 leaves him at +3, and Tonyās two pars see him sit at +6. All in all, Greeneās finish has been the headline, but the rest have done enough to keep their boards tidy.
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Rivalry update: Alan Dempsey just fired a birdie on Hole 18 to close strongāhis round trend is improvingāand he finds himself 7th with 33 total points.
In this matchup, Dempseyās momentum is the story: when the rivalry tightens late, heās the one accelerating, forcing his opponent to play catch-up rather than setting the pace. With that finishing birdie, heās making it clear the head-to-head battle isnāt just competitiveāitās moving in his favor.
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Rivalry update: Ciaran Greene just capped his round on Hole 18 with a birdie, and that punchy finish keeps the momentum firmly in his favor.
From a scoreboard standpoint, heās sitting in 6th with 36 points, and the round trend is decliningāmeaning his play has tightened up at exactly the right time.
In this matchup, this is the kind of late-race swing that tends to tilt the rivalry: while his opponent is likely left reacting to the birdie finish, Greene is closing the gap on pressure holes with calm, disciplined scoring.
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Danny Finn closes out his round with a bogey on 18, and he does it from the frontāheās 1st on the leaderboard as the card settles at 42 points.
Itās been a declining round trend overall, but you wouldnāt swap this position for anythingāFinn stays composed, finishes under pressure, and still has the lead as he signs it off.
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Dan Rapaport here, and Iāll tell youāthereās some chatter around Stevie Geraghty at 19th with 23 points. Word in the ropes is Stevieās been tinkering with a āmore aggressiveā pre-shot routine thatās got the caddie team buzzing: fewer rehearsals, quicker commitment, andāthis is the juicy partāthereās talk heās leaning on a fresh feel for his mid-iron strikes to save strokes when the course gets mean. Nothing official, of course, but you know how it goes: if the practice cartās circling the same yardage a little too often, people start writing their own headlines.
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STE-VIE GERAGHTY š¤ Hole 18 with a double bogey just to finish +13⦠thatās not a comeback, thatās a full-on retreat.
Still sitting 19th with 23 pointsāat this rate youāll need a search party to find the fairway again. ššļø -
Rivalry update: Stevie Geraghty just slipped on the final stretchādouble bogey on Hole 18āand that shake-up has him sitting at 19th with 23 points as the round continues to trend downward.
In this head-to-head battle, that kind of late swing is usually where rivals separate: one player pressures the closing holes, the other pays the price. Geraghtyās finish makes the rivalry feel tense going into the next runāmomentum is with the player who stayed clean when it mattered most.
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Padraig Burke out here playing like his putterās on vacation šļøāāļøā¦ +8 through 18 and that bogey on 18 is the grand finale? Give the ball a chance, mate. At this rate youāll finish next decade. š
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Alright, golf fansāhereās the whisper from the inside at Padraig Burke: sitting 14th with 27 points, heās reportedly been field-testing a more aggressive look off the tee lately, and not in the āguess and hopeā wayāmore like heās got someone in his ear pushing him toward tighter landing spots and cleaner second shots. The buzz is that his patience has been the real unlock: when the putter gets moody, heās leaning on a slightly smoother tempo to keep the ball coming out of his irons consistently, and the staff are loving how quickly heās adapting mid-round. If he keeps that vibeāfirm but calmāhe could climb fast⦠especially if the greens start rolling the way he expects.
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Rivalry update: Eoghan Considine just stamped it down with a birdie on the 18th, and the momentum in this matchup is swinging his way. Heās now sitting 4th on 39 total points, with his round trend still decliningāthatās exactly the kind of late-round push that tends to rattle a rival.
In a rivalry battle, itās not just about being closeāitās about making key holes feel smaller. That birdie on the closing hole says Considine is willing to trade control for pressure, and right now, heās putting the other player under the microscope.
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Oh Mike Rockall⦠still out here paying green fees for the concept of comfortably lying on the wrong side of the planet. Bogey on 17? Yeah, thatās totally the ārising tideā strategy. +7 through 17 and youāre fallingātradition! š
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Danny Finn still leads, but itās a different feel now: heās -7 after 17, and Liam Rockall has closed it up with a strong finishing push to be -5 after 18. Ciaran Considine has also climbed into the mix at -4 after 18āthe kind of late improvement that tells you heāll be content with the process even if the trophy ends up elsewhere. Behind them, Dave Flanagan holds at -2 after 18, while Eoghan Considine moves in from -2 after 17, so the bottom part of the leaderboardās tightened and itās no longer a two- or three-horse race.
Further down, the scoreboard reflects that the final stretch offered chances and consequences: Ciaran Greene is now +1 after 17, Brendan Considine finishes at +3 after 18, and Alan Dempsey sits at +4 after 17. Evan OāKeeffe remains at +4 after 16, while Ryan Kelly wraps it up at +5 after 18. For me, the headline is Finnās composure under the clockābecause Rockall and Considine have done enough to make the last holes count for everything.