Donald Trump’s granddaughter Kai in last after 83 in shaky LPGA debut

A picture


Kai Trump, the US president’s granddaughter and the eldest child of Donald Trump Jr, opened her LPGA career with a 13-over-par 83 on Thursday at The Annika, a debut round that left her at the bottom of the leaderboard and underscored the chasm between elite junior golf and a field stacked with the sport’s top professionals.The 18-year-old amateur, playing on a much-discussed sponsor’s exemption, began her round on the back nine alongside former major champion Hinako Shibuno and Germany’s Olivia Cowan.She received warm applause when her name was announced on the par-4 10th tee and again after she drove it safely into the fairway, one of the few calm moments in a jittery start.Trump confessed afterward she was more nervous than when she spoke at the Republican National Convention last year and it showed.She bogeyed her opening four holes, a run of tentative strokes that left her scrambling before she had taken a fifth swing from a fairway.

A steady par at the par-5 14th finally stopped the slide, and she mixed two more bogeys with a pair of pars, including a sharp up-and-down at the par-3 16th that drew one of the biggest roars of the early afternoon.She reached the turn in 41.Her mother, Vanessa, and University of Miami assistant coach Jim Garren walked inside the ropes throughout – one day after Miami formally announced her commitment to join the Hurricanes for the 2026–27 season.What Golf Channel commentators described as the day’s largest gallery trailed along, a mix of supporters, skeptics and onlookers aware that her exemption had dominated American golf discourse for weeks.The LPGA’s television window expired after Trump’s first hole, an awkward scheduling outcome given the buzz surrounding her debut, but it did nothing to slow the crowds.

Fans pressed up against the ropes on nearly every fairway.The back nine offered more turbulence.Trump dropped a shot immediately after the turn, then ran into real trouble with two double-bogeys over her next four holes.On the par-4 eighth – her 17th – a topped iron produced an audible gasp, only for her to answer with her crispest swing of the day, knocking the following shot to four feet despite Trump looking straight into the sun.Two more bogeys at the finish left her at 83, the highest score of the day.

“The whole time I was nervous without a doubt,” Trump said,“But I thought I did pretty good for a first time, being the youngest player in the field,Now I kind of know how it goes,”Her presence has split opinion across the US golf establishment,Some analysts argued that the combination of Donald Trump’s granddaughter in the field and WNBA star Caitlin Clark in the pro-am made this one of the tour’s most talked-about weeks in recent memory.

Others questioned whether a player ranked No 461 in the American Junior Golf Association should occupy a late-season spot in a field where professionals are fighting for season-ending accolades and – for some – their jobs next year.Tournament host Annika Sorenstam defended the decision, urging critics to “give this girl a chance.” Pelican Golf Club owner Dan Doyle Jr, whose club controlled the exemption, said Trump’s presence had already driven a noticeable surge in attention, particularly across social media, where she has more than nine million followers.“She’s lovely to speak with,” Doyle said.“And this has created a buzz on top of the other great players we have here.

”Sign up to Soccer with Jonathan WilsonJonathan Wilson brings expert analysis on the biggest stories from European soccerafter newsletter promotionTrump has repeatedly framed the week as a learning experience.She has been candid about weaknesses in her short game and putting, even as Pelican officials praised her length and ball-striking during practice rounds.Her support network includes her grandfather, whose advice was to “have fun, don’t get nervous”, and Tiger Woods, the 15-times major champion who is dating her mother, Vanessa.Woods told her to “go with the flow”, guidance she referenced again Thursday as she recounted regrouping after mistakes.South Korea’s Ryu Hae-ran led after a six-under 64, one shot ahead of Australia’s Grace Kim.

Jennifer Kupcho sat two strokes back, while Charley Hull was among a group one shot further behind – a reminder of just how sharp the standard is at an event that routinely draws one of the LPGA’s strongest fields,
recentSee all
A picture

Pound falls and UK borrowing costs rise as Reeves ditches plans for income tax hike – business live

10-year and 20-year gilt yields are on the rise again, as investors try to determine how confident they are about the Labour government’s ability to raise enough funds to offer some fiscal certainty and stability long-term.The 20-year gilt yield is at 5.233%, up 0.125 percentage points.That is the highest level since mid-October

A picture

UK borrowing costs up after markets spooked by Reeves’s income tax U-turn

Britain’s borrowing costs have jumped while the pound has dropped after the chancellor’s extraordinary last-minute decision to ditch tax-raising plans in the upcoming budget.Interest rates on government bonds rose by more than 10 basis points in early trading, putting them on track for their worst day since 2 July, when investors responded to a tearful appearance by Rachel Reeves in the House of Commons chamber. The pound, meanwhile, dropped 0.5% against the dollar.The markets reacted after government sources confirmed Reeves had dropped plans to raise income taxes to help close a multibillion-pound shortfall in her budget

A picture

AI slop tops Billboard and Spotify charts as synthetic music spreads

Three songs generated by artificial intelligence topped music charts this week, reaching the highest spots on Spotify and Billboard charts.Walk My Walk and Livin’ on Borrowed Time by the outfit Breaking Rust topped Spotify’s “Viral 50” songs in the US, which documents the “most viral tracks right now” on a daily basis, according to the streaming service. A Dutch song, We Say No, No, No to an Asylum Center, an anti-migrant anthem by JW “Broken Veteran” that protests against the creation of new asylum centers, took the top position in Spotify’s global version of the viral chart around the same time. Breaking Rust also appeared in the top five on the global chart.“You can kick rocks if you don’t like how I talk,” reads a lyric from Walk My Walk, a seeming double entendre challenging those opposed to AI-generated music

A picture

UK firms can win a significant chunk of the AI chip market | John Browne

The UK is in a uniquely promising position, far too little understood, to play a lucrative role in the coming era of artificial intelligence – but only if it also grabs the opportunity to start making millions of computer chips.AI requires vast numbers of chips and we could supply up to 5% of world demand if we get our national act together.Our legacy in chip design is world-class, starting with the first general-purpose electronic computer, the first electronic memory and the first parallel computer. Today we have Cambridge-based Arm, a quiet titan designing more than 90% of the chips powering phones and tablets globally.​With such a pedigree, it is not idle daydreaming for British companies to win a significant chunk of the AI chip market; 5% is a conservative, achievable ambition

A picture

England’s Joe Root and Harry Brook splutter on ‘flat wicket’ in Ashes warmup

Joe Root’s attempt to lay to rest the ghost of Australian failures past started with the addition of a fresh one, as his fourth Test series tour of the country started in brief and inglorious style. The world’s No 1 batter, the subject of much pre-series chatter because of his poor average in previous Ashes trips, was the most notable failure as many of his teammates inflated their confidence along with their scores across another day of breezy cricket and indeed weather against the Lions at Lilac Hill, which the senior side ended, having been bowled out moments before the scheduled close, with 426, a lead of 51.Zak Crawley described it as “a flat wicket for sure” and with the atmosphere provided by the few dozen spectators similar, but intense heat expected from the stands and pitch when the real action starts next Friday, it is not clear to what extent anyone is markedly more prepared now than they were a couple of days ago.“Cricket’s cricket, it’s time in the middle,” Crawley said. “We’re doing everything we can with what we’ve got and we feel like we’re going to be ready

A picture

Numbers crunched: how the votes were cast in the Guardian’s men’s Ashes top 100

More than 800 men have played in an Ashes Test. England picked most of them in the summer of 1989. But the process of selecting the Guardian’s Ashes Top 100 required something more scientific than that infamous shemozzle.Let’s start with the small print. We asked 51 judges to select their top 50 men’s Ashes cricketers, from which we calculated a top 100: 50 points for No 1, 49 for No 2 and so on