United States Takes the Lead Over Great Britain & Ireland in the Walker Cup
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – U.S. Amateur champion Mason Howell shined on both par-3s along the ocean at Cypress Point to close out his match, and Jace Summy won twice on Saturday. The Americans rallied in singles to build a 6 1/2-5 1/2 lead over Great Britain & Ireland after the first day of the Walker Cup. Howell, 18, a high school senior in Georgia, earned his spot on the U.S. team by winning the U.S. Amateur last month at the Olympic Club. He stayed on the sidelines during the morning foursomes session, when GB&I built a 3-1 lead, and felt the nerves in the afternoon singles, but only briefly. Howell was 1 up on Luke Poulter, the young Floridian and son of Ryder Cup stalwart Ian Poulter, when he birdied the short par-3 15th along the ocean, and then holed a 45-foot birdie putt on the iconic 16th, which requires a tee shot over the ocean, to close out the match.“I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t super nervous on the first tee,” Howell said. “But no, what a day. What a beautiful day here. It’s been incredible.”
Mason Howell

Americans have won the last four times (it was in St. Andrews in 2023) and have dominated the series since it began in 1924. GB&I’s last away win was at Ocean Forest on the coast of Georgia in 2001. Niall Shiels Donegan, the Scot who grew up in San Francisco, had another section of cheerleaders when he defeated Jacob Modleski for the second time: he also defeated Modleski in 19 holes in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Amateur. Shiels Donegan glanced at a leaderboard at the start of the back nine and saw it was filled with American beatdowns. Koivun defeated Weaver, 4 and 3. Stewart Hagestad and Stout closed out their matches on the 13th hole. Shiels Donegan and Graham did their part by earning points and keeping GB&I close. “I saw the table to the left of 11 as I was walking and saw that we weren’t performing as well as possible in singles,” said Shiels Donegan. “I think for me in that situation I felt a little bit more like I have to do my job, let’s really focus on doing my job, getting any points for the team and seeing what we can do the rest of the week.” The final session on Sunday has four foursomes matches in the morning, followed by the 10 players competing in singles.“We knew we had to have a good session and they delivered,” said United States captain Nathan Smith about his teams who won five of the eight singles matches and tied another.
Nathan Smith