June Event
Saturday 6 June 2026 in Portumna
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Padraig Burke
7 RNDS1st BEST🧨 Oisin O'Malley
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1st
Pos
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E
Score
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36
Pts
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18
Thru
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108
Gross
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36
P.Hcap
| Hole | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | Out |
| Par | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 36 |
| Idx | 7 | 17 | 1 | 5 | 9 | 11 | 3 | 15 | 13 | |
| A.Par | 6 | 5 | 6 | 6 | 5 | 7 | 6 | 7 | 6 | |
| Score | 5 | 4 | 7 | 8 | 3 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 6 | 54 |
| Pts | 3 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 18 |
| Trend | 🔥 | 🌟 | 🔥 | 🥶 | ❄️ | ❄️ | ❄️ |
| Hole | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | Out |
| Par | 3 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 36 |
| Idx | 6 | 12 | 18 | 10 | 4 | 16 | 8 | 2 | 14 | |
| A.Par | 5 | 6 | 7 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 7 | 5 | |
| Score | 5 | 6 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 4 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 54 |
| Pts | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 18 |
| Trend | 🔥 | ❄️ | 🥶 | 🔥 | 🌟 |
Featured Stories
Featured stories from this player in this competition.
Battles
The rivalries and battles this player was engaged in during this round.
| Participants | Interest |
|---|---|
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Padraig Burke vs Oisin O'Malley
10 - 17
3 changes
|
144
🔥
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Padraig Burke vs Oisin O'Malley
3 - 7
3 changes
|
131
🔥
|
|
Eoghan Considine vs Padraig Burke
8 - 12
3 changes
|
129
🔥
|
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Ciaran Considine vs Padraig Burke
4 - 7
2 changes
|
107
🔥
|
Scoring Profile
How this player has gotten their points over the course of this round.
Par Profile
How this player scores on par 3s, par 4s and par 5s, relative to the field, and across all recorded rounds.
3 Hole Profile
How this player scores in 3 hole chunks across a round, relative to the field, and across all recorded rounds.
Feed Updates
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Alrighto, two more holes in the books and it’s been a pretty contrasting run for the crew. Padraig Burke really sparked it with that eagle on the par-5, and after being caught early with the scratch on four, he’s held his own at even-ish overall moving forward. Alan Dempsey has been the class act—back-to-back birdies at holes four and five, and that’s pushed him firmly along the front line. Meanwhile Paul O’Donnell has taken a bit of a hit, going bogey to double-bogey, so he’ll be looking to steady the ship quickly. And Tony McHale, well, it’s been bogey-bogey across those two holes—no panic, but he’s definitely got work to do if he wants to get back into the groove.
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Padraig Burke out here swinging like the club is optional—early extension, zero rhythm, and that finish looks like he’s apologizing to the ground. The tempo’s all over the place: one minute he’s throwing at it, the next he’s stabbing, and somehow the ball never quite commits. If his game were a car, it’s running, but the check-engine light has been on since the first tee. He’s in 1st right now, but that’s less “mastery” and more “the course hasn’t caught on yet.”
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🚨 FULL SWING UPDATE
That eagle on Hole 5 just moved Padraig Burke into 1st with 11 points — and Netflix insiders say he could be lacing up for next season of Full Swing. 👀
Personality check: you can already feel the calm, competitive vibe—the type who stays locked in after big swings, cracks a smile when it counts, and then turns it up for the cameras.
On the show? Expect big moments, quick wit, and at least one “how did that go in?!” shot that has the crew sprinting back to the clubhouse like it’s a trailer drop. 🎬⛳
#FullSwing #NetflixSports
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Padraig Burke has just struck again on Hole 5—an eagle to take him to the front and keep the pressure very much on.
He moves to 1st with 11 points, and the round trend is declining—that’s the sort of momentum you can feel when the ball starts cooperating.
What a statement. Let’s see if Padraig can turn that surge into something even bigger as the back nine comes calling.
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Rivalry update: Padraig Burke has turned this matchup into a statement—finishing Hole 5 with an eagle to seize 1st place and move his total to 11 points. With the round trend now declining, Burke is not just chasing—he’s putting pressure on his rival at just the right time.
Right now, the rivalry feels like a test of nerves: if Burke keeps the momentum, his opponent will have to start taking risks they may not want to.
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Alright folks, Dan Rapaport here—golf isn’t just played on the course, it’s negotiated in the hallways, and I’m hearing Padraig Burke has been quietly tweaking his setup like a man trying to crack a code. He’s sitting 7th on 7 points, but insiders say the real story is his putting—working through a couple of “don’t-overthink-it” reads with his coach, while also swapping between a firmer and softer feel depending on the greens’ pace. If that touch holds, he could climb fast; if it doesn’t, you’ll see him get a little uncharacteristically vocal with his caddie mid-round—mark my words.
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Padraig Burke out here finding sandpaper instead of fairways 😭 Hole 4 is a scratch and you’re still trying to “trend down” like it’s a skincare routine. C’mon man—birdie or at least quit bullying the rules 😤⛳️ #GolfLivesMatter
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Rivalry Update: Padraig Burke is turning this battle into a grind on the front four—his scramble mindset is showing as he saw a “scratch” on Hole 4.
Right now he sits 7th with 7 total points, and the round trend is declining. In a rivalry, that’s the telling moment: the question isn’t whether he can make a statement early—it’s whether he can dig in after the setback and swing momentum back toward him on the next stretch.
Keep an eye on the next holes: if Burke can stabilize after that scratch, this rivalry could tighten fast.
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Alright, in the last couple of holes and the scoreboard’s starting to take shape! Padraig Burke started with a birdie at the second but wasn’t immune to the ups and downs—he dropped a bogey at the third, so he’s sitting steady at -1 overall. Paul O’Donnell had the real swing of the match: after a bogey on hole 2, he came straight back with an eagle on hole 3—that’s the kind of shot that changes momentum, and he’s now still safe at -2. Meanwhile Tony McHale and Alan Dempsey have both kept things pretty square—two pars for Tony leaves him at +2, and two even pars for Alan means he’s hanging right on even.
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Padraig Burke digs in on Hole 3 and comes through with a bogey, but he’s doing it with the kind of momentum you like to see—first in the field and sitting on 7 points.
That -1 on the day keeps the pressure on, and with the round trend improving, you can feel the bounce growing as he steadies himself and looks to turn this back into something bold over the next stretch.
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Hole 2: Padraig Burke comes charging out of the gate with a birdie to move to 1st position.
After finding momentum early, that’s the sort of shot-making—and calm finishing—that’ll have the rest of the field looking over their shoulder. He’s on 6 points total now, and the round is improving.
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Rivalry Update: Padraig Burke is building momentum against his longtime rivals—he’s been sharpening his game early.
Just after Hole 2, Burke carded a birdie and sits 1st with 6 points, showing an improving round trend.
That kind of start puts real pressure on the head-to-head matchups: when Burke strings together scoring chances, his rivals have to chase instead of dictate.
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Alright, let’s take stock of where this group’s at after two holes, and it’s a pretty lively start. Padraig Burke has drawn first blood with a birdie on the first—he’s standing strong at -1. Paul O’Donnell is right there beside him after mirroring that birdie, also down at -1 overall. Alan Dempsey, meanwhile, played it steady with par on the first and is all square at E. And then we’ve got Tony McHale, who’s copped a double bogey on hole one—he’s up at +2 and will be keen to bounce back over the next stretch.
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Padraig Burke has started with a birdie on Hole 1—what a way to kick things off. He’s marching into the early lead, currently 1st, with 3 points on the board and the look of a round that’s getting better as it goes.
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Padraig Burke has taken the early edge—birdie on Hole 1 to move into 1st with 3 points, and the round trend is clearly improving.
In this rivalry, that kind of start matters: Burke’s putting the pressure on immediately, forcing his opponent to play catch-up right out of the gate. If he keeps this momentum, the head-to-head battle often turns from tactical to ruthless—because one early cushion can shrink the other player’s margin for error fast.