Max Homa and Michael Kim spent Thursday at Royal Birkdale trying to keep their Open Championship hopes alive, and both Cal products now head into Friday with plenty of work left if they want to stick around for the weekend.
The target is simple enough: get inside the top 70 and make the cut at The 154th Open Championship. After one round on the par-70 layout in Southport, England, Homa is closer to that line than Kim, but neither man is in comfortable shape.
Homa opened with a 1-over 71 and sat in a tie for 68th when two-thirds of the 156-player field was still on the course. The 35-year-old, making his fifth Open appearance, has one notable result at this championship already on his résumé - a tie for 10th in 2023. On Thursday, he picked up birdies at Nos. 5 and 17, but bogeys at 6, 8 and 15 kept him from building momentum.
Kim has a much steeper hill to climb after a 3-over 73 left him in 111th place at the time of publication. The 33-year-old is trying to avoid a second straight missed cut at this event. His best finish in The Open came in 2018, when he tied for 35th.
His round had some damage early and in the middle. Kim bogeyed Nos. 4 and 6, then took a double-bogey on the 12th and another bogey at 15 to reach the closing stretch at five over. He did steady things late, birdieing 16 and 17 before closing with a par.
Elsewhere, fellow Golden Bear Collin Morikawa was still on the course later in the day and stood at even par through four holes. Morikawa won the British title and the Claret Jug in 2021.
At the top of the board, England’s Daniel Brown and South Korea’s Sungjae Im shared the clubhouse lead after both carded 4-under 66s. Seven more players were one shot back, while world No. 1 and defending champion Scottie Scheffler was tied for 10th after a 2-under 68 that included four birdies in his first six holes.
In Other News...
Cals ACC Path Just Got More Complicated After New Rule Shift
The ACCs championship race just got a little less forgiving, and that matters for Cal as it tries to navigate its new conference reality. Commissioner Jim Phillips outlined a revised tiebreaking system for the ACC title game that puts head-to-head results first and then leans on an analytics-based overall body of work if teams are still tied, a setup that could make the path to Charlotte feel even tighter when the standings bunch up.
Phillips also used the platform to push a bigger-picture agenda, saying he supports expanding the College Football Playoff to 24 teams and noting that ACC coaches and athletic directors were unanimous in that view. He also touched on tampering concerns and the need for accountability, while backing the Save College Sports Act for its goals around athlete protections and transparency, a reminder that the league is trying to manage both the postseason picture and the broader chaos around the sport at the same time. [Read more 🡒]
Two Former Cal Guards Just Hit A Crucial NBA Crossroads
Chris Bell and John Camden closed out their NBA Summer League runs with the kind of final audition that at least keeps the door cracked. Both former Cal guards scored 12 points in their last games, and both did it in expanded minutes with top players sitting out, giving each one more runway to show he could belong on an NBA floor. Bell got 17 minutes for New Orleans, while Camden logged 19 for Washington, and for a pair of ex-Bears still trying to turn summer opportunities into something more permanent, every possession carried a little extra weight.
Bells path looks a bit clearer heading into the next stage, as his Exhibit 10 deal with the Pelicans will send him to preseason camp and give him another chance to stay in the mix. Camdens situation is murkier after his stint with the Wizards, where he is unlikely to be brought into camp, leaving him to wait and see whether this latest run was enough to open another door. [Read more 🡒]
Former Cal Star Matt Bradley Is Back In A Bigger Role
Matt Bradleys path back to Berkeley keeps circling through the same program, and now it comes with a bigger assignment. California mens basketball has hired the former Golden Bear as director of player development for the 2026-27 season, a move announced by coach Mark Madsen that gives one of Cals most familiar recent faces a more direct role in shaping the rosters growth.
Bradley already spent time around the program as a graduate assistant after his playing career, and his route back has included work with K-12 youth and a stint overseas in Germany. For Cal, it is another sign of Madsen leaning on people who know the place well, while Bradley gets a chance to turn a varied basketball journey into a long-term coaching foothold. [Read more 🡒]
