April Event
Saturday 25 April 2026 in Connemara Golf Links
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Rivalry Update — Daire Greene is starting to feel the heat on this stretch. After a double bogey on Hole 13, Greene slips to 12th with 22 points, and the round trend is still declining.
In this head-to-head, that kind of momentum swing is exactly what his rival will look to exploit—put pressure on the next sequence, force mistakes, and capitalize before the leaderboard tightens again.
Now it’s all about recovery: one or two solid holes could tighten the gap, but with the rivalry running hot, Greene can’t afford any lingering wobble.
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Ciaran Considine just sparked momentum on Hole 13 with a birdie, and he’s sitting in 6th with 26 points—a clear sign the round trend is improving.
Now, as this rivalry heats up, Considine’s ability to pounce on scoring opportunities is what separates him from his chief challenger: one hot stretch and the gap tightens fast. After finding birdie form at 13, he’s effectively saying, “If you want to stay ahead, you’ll have to keep answering.”
With the back half still to play, this matchup is less about one big swing and more about who can keep the pressure on every consecutive hole—because Considine’s rise is a direct challenge, and his opponent knows it.
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Oh man, Liam Rockall is flying right now—he’s showing serious swing control and pace through impact, and it’s carrying him right up the leaderboard. Every time he gets to the ball, his rhythm looks calm and repeatable, like he knows exactly how hard to swing without losing shape. Second place doesn’t happen by accident, and Rockall is stacking good contact with smart decisions—this is the kind of momentum you can feel.
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🚨 Full Swing update from Netflix!
Liam Rockall just stung one for an eagle on Hole 13 and he’s sitting 2nd with 30 points—talk about an energy boost. With a round trend of improving, we can only imagine what he’ll bring to next season.
Personality check: Liam’s got that calm-but-competitive vibe—likely the kind of player who’ll talk strategy between swings, laugh through pressure, and still go full assassin when the cameras turn on.
What might he do on the show? Expect: late-round heroics, honest breakdowns of his “feel” changes, and at least one moment where the whole studio goes quiet after another eagle-level run.
We can’t confirm anything… but we definitely want the next episode to start right now. 🏌️♂️🎬
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That’s a statement from Liam Rockall on the 13th! An eagle to move him up into 2nd, and you can feel the momentum shift. He’s already on -4, and with 30 total points showing on the board, the way this round is going looks properly headed in the right direction.
It’s all about staying calm after a big swing like that, but with his round trend improving, Liam looks like a player who’s ready to press on.
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Liam Rockall just struck eagle on Hole 13 to surge into 2nd place with 30 points, and you can feel the rivalry heat building.
In this matchup, the story is simple: Rockall doesn’t just chase—he answers. When his counterpart pushes forward, Rockall’s on a clean upward arc, turning pressure into big numbers. With the round trend now improving, this is where rivalries get decided: one swing at the right moment, and the gap starts to swing the other way.
Right now, it’s Rockall’s momentum versus their consistency—and after that eagle, the momentum belongs to Liam.
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Alright, big finish from this group on the last couple of holes. Mike Rockall has it under control—he’s managed a birdie on 10 to get things moving, then held his nerve with par on 11, so the score stays steady at +6. Evan O’Keeffe couldn’t quite keep the momentum going, slipping from a bogey on 10 back to par on 11, currently sitting at +1—still right in the mix. Paul O’Donnell played it pretty flat, with par on both holes, but he’s still hanging around at +7. And for Phil Staunton, it’s been a tough run—par on 10 followed by a double bogey on 11, leaving him at +10. It’s been clean-ish for a couple of them, but that double bogey really hurts, Wayne Riley style.
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Alright, golf fans—Dan Rapaport on the inside track: they say Phil Staunton has been a little too focused on the small stuff out there, the kind of stuff that makes you miss the big moments. Down in 19th with 12 points, word is he’s been fiddling with his pre-shot routine again—just one more tweak, one more check—while the rest of the group seems to be playing more “feel” than “process.” And get this: a couple of the guys in the gallery overheard him mutter about “keeping the face calmer,” which is insider-speak for someone who’s seeing a few ugly tendencies… and trying to outthink them before they show up on the scoreboard.
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Phil Staunton on +10 after Hole 11?! Buddy, I’ve seen putts miss harder in my dreams. Declining trend? More like gravity is punishing you 😭🏌️♂️
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Rivalry update: Phil Staunton is keeping the heat on in this matchup, but the turning point came on Hole 11 where he posted a double bogey to slide to 19th.
That score is a setback in a duel where momentum matters, especially with the round trend now declining. For Staunton, the key is simple: tighten up on the next stretch and deny his rival the easy scoring looks.
Right now: Phil has 12 points, and he’ll need a quick bounce-back to restore pressure in this rivalry.
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Danny Finn digs in at the 12th—and he’s right back on cue with par. No fireworks, just composure, just control, and that matters when you’re sitting first with 30 points.
That steady, improving rhythm continues—Finn’s keeping the pressure on, hole by hole.
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Alright, folks—this is Dan Rapaport with the kind of clubhouse whisper you only hear when the lights are low: Stevie Geraghty has been quietly tweaking his game plan out there. Word is he’s been getting a little too clever—trying to turn certain safe wedges into aggressive, flag-hunting shots—because he believes the scoring window is already widening for him in this round. Sitting 16th with 17 points, he’s not panicking, but I’m told there’s a bit of tension with the distance math: when it goes sideways, he’s quick to abandon the plan and fire at pins instead of sticking to the boring stock. Translation? The comeback is there—but if he tightens the decision-making, this kid could start climbing fast.
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STEVIE GERAGHTY on +7 after H12?! 🔥 Nothing says “fairway” like a double bogey that traveled further than my patience. C’mon mate—your swing’s got a GPS… to trouble 😭⛳️ #PainfullyAverage
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Rivalry update—Stevie Geraghty is fighting uphill right now. After finishing Hole 12 with a double bogey, Stevie slides to 16th with 17 total points, and the round trend is declining.
In this rivalry, those momentum swings are everything: a double bogey doesn’t just cost strokes—it also gives the opponent a window to press. Stevie will need to tighten up from here to swing the narrative back in his favor on the back nine.
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And suddenly it’s gone from leadership to separation. Danny Finn keeps his foot on the gas—-6 after 11—and when you’re that far ahead this early, you’re not just hitting shots, you’re shaping outcomes. Chasing him, Ciaran Greene has leapt to -3 after 11, which tells you he’s found a real scoring rhythm, while Liam Rockall is still in the hunt at -2 after 12. Dave Flanagan remains steady at -2 after 18, and that’s the sort of card that often turns into a serious finish when everyone else starts to press.
Then it’s a squeeze for places. Eoghan Considine is at -1 after 11, but the momentum is shifting toward the halfway-and-a-bit stage with the rest. Evan O’Keeffe has slipped to +1 after 10, while the +1 to +3 bunch—Ciaran Considine (+1 after 12), Daire Greene (+2 after 12), and Tom Curtin (+3 after 12) alongside Tony McHale (+3 after 11)—are now all looking for that one swing to take the stress out of their next holes. For Finn, it’s about staying calm; for everyone else, it’s about finding the courage to go again.
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Oisin O’Malley on +8 through 11 and still playing like the greens are written in invisible ink 🤨
Another bogey on 11… my guy, at this point just tee off directly into the “make it up on 18” fanfiction section 📖🏌️
Come on! We’re all watching—try using the club instead of “vibes” on the next one 😭
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Oh Ciaran Greene, putting on a masterpiece of hesitation—your swing has all the confidence of a driver on a Sunday morning tee shot in socks. You’re standing there like you’re negotiating with the club, then flailing through impact as if the ball owes you money, and somehow you’re still acting surprised when it goes sideways. Right now you’re 2nd, which is great, but the only thing more out of sync than your tempo is the quality of your contact—this is not “coming together,” it’s “getting lucky.” If you don’t tighten that rhythm immediately, you’re about to trade this momentum for a whole lot of bogey energy.
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🎬🏌️♂️ NETFLIX RUMOUR ALERT:
Sources say Ciaran Greene could be joining next year’s season of Full Swing… and if his energy is anything like his game right now, viewers are in for a treat. 😄
He’s the kind of competitor who looks calm under pressure, but you can tell he’s locked in—after punching in an eagle on Hole 11 to climb to 2nd on 25 points. That “nice-but-dangerous” personality? Perfect TV material.
On the show, expect:
- Unfiltered reactions when he turns a moment into momentum
- Sharp, thoughtful commentary between swings
- That competitive streak that makes rivalries pop
Next season couldn’t come soon enough… especially with a trend that screams: Improving. 📈
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Ciaran Greene has just absolutely lit it up on Hole 11—an eagle to rocket him up the leaderboard.
He’s sitting in 2nd place with 25 points, and the round trend is clearly improving. That’s the kind of momentum shift you can feel: tidy play, then suddenly everything clicks.
Keep the foot on the gas, Ciaran—this is championship golf, and Hole 11 has made sure he’s right in the mix.
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Ciaran Greene is turning up the heat in his rivalry—especially with the player chasing him right now. After Hole 11, Greene has just stamped his authority with an eagle, jumping to 2nd on the leaderboard with 25 points and a clear round trend: improving.
That’s the kind of swing that flips rivalries: when Greene gets momentum, he doesn’t just catch up—he forces his counterpart to respond immediately on the next stretch.