
US Open tee time awaits Docherty less than a month after horrific car accident
OAKMONT, Pa. — What Alistair Docherty thought was smoke was really the powder bursting out of the freshly deployed airbag.
There was no mistaking the blood and glass covering everything in the wrecked white minivan.
Docherty was driving May 20 when he got T-boned in an intersection, two days before the Korn Ferry's Visit Knoxville Open. On June 2, the 31-year-old, who missed his PGA Tour card by two spots at the end of last season, qualified for the U.S. Open.
At 6:45 a.m. Thursday, Docherty will tee off at Oakmont. It's no stretch to say he's happy to be here, but Docherty wants more than just a good memory to close out this wild three weeks.
'It's not a miracle,' Docherty said after wrapping up a practice round that hardly looked possible less than a month ago, as he was tangled in the blood and glass. 'I'm very thankful. But it's definitely where I believe I'm supposed to be. Everything works out for a reason. I'm just trying to take advantage.'
The pictures tell the story best.
One is of the passenger's side of the minivan, sitting in the grass near the intersection, crumpled almost beyond recognition after getting slammed by an SUV that ran a red light.
Another is Docherty lying in a hospital bed, lips pierced, eyes barely open, wearing a hospital gown draped over part of his neck collar.
'My car spun around a few times. I felt glass and everything come at me,' Docherty said. 'I opened my eyes and thought I saw smoke. I jumped out of the car as quickly as possible. It ended up being the stuff coming out of the airbag. I walked around a little dazed, and I was covered in blood and glass.'
At the hospital, doctors and nurses were able to clean the glass off his body — no major damage there. The scans came back clean — nothing broken, either.
Docherty said his shoulder and legs took the brunt of the crash. Constant work with the physical therapist allowed him to set his sites on June 2 at Duke University Golf Club. He shot 72-64 in the 36-hole qualifier to earn one of seven spots available there.
The third part of that photo essay is him holding his invitation to play in the U.S. Open this week.
Docherty knows he's lucky to be here but he's aiming for more — knowing a strong performance in this, his first major, could result in his second life-changing moment in a month.
'This is a great test to see where my game is at right now,' he said. 'If you show up thinking 'I don't have a chance here,' then you're done. so, I believe I have a chance to play my best here and see where it puts me.'
golf: /hub/golf

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
2 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Sports play through another dangerously hot day in parts of the US
CHICAGO (AP) — The shade — under the roof and the upper deck, in every dugout and tunnel — was a popular place at Wrigley Field on Sunday. HT Image The sunny seats, not so much. Several major league teams played through a second straight day of muggy conditions as dangerously hot temperatures dominated parts of the United States during a rare June heat wave. The PGA Tour was in a sweltering Connecticut for the Travelers Championship, and the LPGA played the KPMG Women's PGA Championship in the heat of Texas. The gametime temperature was 92 degrees for the series finale between the Mariners and Cubs in Chicago. Kids played in the fountains outside Wrigley before going into the ballpark, and the Cubs encouraged fans to take precautions in a message on the videoboard in left field. 'We don't have any secrets,' Cubs manager Craig Counsell said of playing in the heat. 'You know, we'll do the best we can. ... I think it's the catcher you worry about the most, and the pitcher. They get some time in the shade. They get some downtime between innings. People like the umpires, some of the people working, some of the fans, that's kind of who you worry about even more, actually.' Seattle reliever Trent Thornton and umpire Chad Whitson both left Saturday's game with heat-related issues. Whitson was at third base on Sunday, and Mariners manager Dan Wilson said Thornton was doing well. '(Thornton) was doing much better after the game yesterday and got some fluids in him and a cold bath and was doing much better almost immediately,' Wilson said. 'And then, you know, feels really good today again. So thankful for that and glad to see he's doing well today.' Reds manager Terry Francona said Elly De La Cruz was fine a day after the shortstop threw up during their extra-inning loss at St. Louis. Wilson, 56, a former big league catcher, said there isn't much he can do as manager to help his players with the heat. 'We're all pretty used to playing in hot days,' he said. 'Especially in the minor leagues, you play in a lot of hot places. But, you know, this is a little different. This has been pretty exceptional.' At the LPGA tournament in Frisco, Texas, the forecast called for temperatures in the mid-90s — pretty typical for the area this time of year. The windy conditions were more of an issue for the players. There were several cooling areas around the course for fans, along with spots with free bottled water. ___ AP Sports Writer Stephen Hawkins in Texas and AP freelance reporter Jeff Latzke in Missouri contributed. ___ AP sports:


Hindustan Times
20 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Tommy Fleetwood up 3 at Travelers, eyes first PGA Tour win
England's Tommy Fleetwood has put together a nice career, but none of his victories have come on the PGA Tour. HT Image He's in position to change that this weekend, but he won't even be the sentimental favorite for the final day of the Travelers Championship. Fleetwood shot 7-under-par 63 in Saturday's third round to break away from a high-profile group near the top of the leaderboard at Cromwell, Conn. Fleetwood, who for the second time in three rounds didn't record a bogey, will carry a three-shot advantage into Sunday's final round at TPC River Highlands. He's at 16-under 194. "I would love to win on the PGA Tour," Fleetwood said. "I think it's like an element of your career that everybody wants, and I of course want it." Russell Henley shot 61 and Keegan Bradley posted 63 to sit at 13 under. Australia's Jason Day is at 11 under after a third-round 67. It's Bradley, the U.S. captain for the Ryder Cup and a native of New England, who'll have the attention of the galleries for the final round. "Tomorrow's the year anniversary of getting the call for the Ryder Cup, so pretty crazy that we're a year out," Bradley said after Saturday's round. "But special day tomorrow, could be even better." On top of that, he considers the Travelers Championship his home tournament. "It took me a while to figure out how to play here in my home event and pressing and trying so hard," Bradley said. "Now it's just about my 15th time and much more ready for the challenge." The third round began with Fleetwood, Justin Thomas and World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler tied for first place. Scheffler's triple-bogey on the first hole and a double-bogey on the eighth hole put him off pace. Thomas had severe troubles later. Fleetwood's highlights included a 66-foot birdie putt on the par-3 fifth hole and a 30-foot eagle putt on the par-5 13th. It was his second eagle in as many days at No. 13, which he has played at 5 under for the tournament. "It's hard to pick just one thing and it's funny how weeks can sort of ," he said. Henley's bogey-free round a day after three bogeys in the second round included 5 under on the front side. He had birdies on both par-5 holes. "This place is kind of tricky to me and I've just tried to be really disciplined and trying to hit it to the fat side of the hole all week," Henley said. Bradley notched birdies on four of the first seven holes and stayed in contention. He'll look to repeat that type of trend. "Going to have to go out and shoot a low score," Bradley said. "But you can do it around here. Just hit the ball in the fairway, take care of the par-5s and you can do it." Scheffler, playing on his 29th birthday, plummeted to 7 under and in a tie for eighth place with a 72, aided by a birdie on the last hole. Thomas had a similar, albeit belated, decline on his way to 73, coming undone by a quadruple-bogey 9 on the 13th hole. That meltdown began with a tee shot out of bounds and included three additional shots in the rough before arriving at the green. Harris English , Wyndham Clark and Brian Harman are tied for fifth place at 8 under. Other than Henley, the day's best scores were turned in by Canada's Taylor Pendrith and Australia's Adam Scott with 62s. Pendrith moved to a tie for 13th at 6 under, while Scott is tied for 25th at 4 under. Pendrith recovered from Friday's 74. "I got off to a nice start, made some nice putts early in the round, and was kind of able to hold on to that momentum," he said. Scott, a longtime pro golfer, tied his lowest score in a PGA Tour round. "I would rather leave today with the confidence shooting 62 than kind of mailing it in and maybe shooting 70 or 72 and not really getting anything out of it," Scott said. "I'm out here for a reason, so I'll try and get the most out of it if I can." Field Level Media This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.


Hindustan Times
a day ago
- Hindustan Times
Fleetwood seizes control after Scheffler blowup and leads Travelers by 3
CROMWELL, Conn. — Tommy Fleetwood avoided the blunders by Scottie Scheffler and Justin Thomas, never missing a fairway Saturday and seizing on the good scoring conditions for a 7-under 63 for a three-shot lead going into the final round of the Travelers Championship. HT Image At stake for Fleetwood is a chance to add a PGA Tour title to a resume that includes seven European titles, three Ryder Cup appearances and a regular fixture among the top 25 for the last two years. The immediate challengers at steamy TPC River Highlands are New England's favorite son and Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley and Russell Henley, who had a 61 one day after calling a penalty on himself when he wasn't entirely sure it was one. Missing are Scheffler and Thomas, both tied for the 36-hole lead with Fleetwood. Scheffler had a 29th birthday to forget. Thousands of spectators around the first tee serenaded him. He responded with a triple bogey, the first time he has done that to start a round in his PGA Tour career. The world's No. 1 player never quite recovered, posting a 72, the fifth time in 55 rounds this year he was over par. Scheffler was nine shots behind. Thomas, already a winner at Hilton Head this year, was still in range of Fleetwood when he hit his tee shot onto the railroad tracks left of the par-5 13th, the club slipping out his hand. And then it got worse. He twice watched chips up a slope to a green that ran away from him come up short and roll back down the hill. He missed a 6-foot putt and took a quadruple-bogey 9. Thomas shot 73 and was 10 behind. Without the wind — only extreme heat — the course average was right about 68. The final group of Scheffler and Thomas combined to go 5-over par. Fleetwood was in such control of his game that he didn't realize until after the round that he didn't miss a fairway, key to setting up birdie chances. He also made eagle on the 13th hole for the second day, giving him three eagles for the week. They don't hand out crystal for that at the Travelers, only red umbrellas. But it allowed Fleetwood to get some separation for Henley and Bradley going into Sunday. Fleetwood, a 34-year-old from England, was at 16-under 194. 'I'm on top of a lot of stat lines for people that haven't won on the PGA Tour, so to always be a No. 1 at something is always nice,' he said with a laugh. 'Yeah, of course I would love to win on the PGA Tour. I think it's like an element of your career that everybody wants, and I of course want it. I haven't, this year especially, I don't feel like I've given myself ... I've given myself a back-end chance a couple of times this year, but I've not been in contention. So this is like my first real chance, so I'm really excited about that and looking forward to it." Jason Day ran off three straight birdies on the back nine to salvage a 67 and was five shots back. No one else was closer than eight shots of Fleetwood. Scheffler hasn't finished out of the top 10 since March and remarkably he ended the day with a birdie for a tie eighth. The start was a shocker. He drove left into the 5-inch rough and hit wedge into a front bunker with a decent lie. But he caught all ball and sent it over the green, leaving him a tough pitch up the slope and over a mound toward the hole. The first pitch came up short and rolled back down into the rough. He hit a flop to 15 feet and two-putted for triple bogey, his first on the tour since the BMW Championship last August. Bradley, whose name has not vanished from Ryder Cup consideration as a player, won the Travelers two years ago and cleared a major hurdle trying to perform before New England fans, now chanting, 'U-S-A! U-S-A!' at him at every turn. He likes his position of chasing. He still knows he needs to play well. 'Oh, man, you're going to have to shoot something at least in the mid 60s, probably where I am, probably lower,' Bradley said. "But it's doable out here. When you play a course where you've got to make birdies it brings a different challenge. You can't have a stretch of 1-over par for seven holes or you lose a million shots. 'So in some aspects it's difficult just like a hard course would be.' golf: /hub/golf This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.