- 'Social Network' star Eisenberg slams Zuckerberg as 'obsessed with power'
- How to stop Barkley? Chiefs know they face ultimate test
- Baghdad's first skatepark offers boarders rare respite
- Convicted murderer executed in Alabama using nitrogen gas
- Trump, Swift join Super Bowl party as Chiefs chase 'three-peat'
- Barkley picks global lineup for NBA All-Star tournament
- Big Tech's AI spending rattles markets
- Ohtani's ex-interpreter sentenced to nearly five years in betting-linked theft
- Madsen, Kupcho share lead at LPGA Founders Cup
- Rashford doesn't see football 'way I see it', says Amorim
- Kenya deploys additional 144 police to Haiti
- Liverpool 'too good' for sorry Spurs, says Postecoglou
- Trump trade nominee says universal tariffs worth considering
- Trump sanctions ICC for 'illegitimate' Israel, US probes
- Torres treble powers Barca past Valencia into Copa del Rey semis
- Judge pauses Musk plan for mass cull of US govt workers
- Liverpool thrash Spurs to reach League Cup final
- Fiorentina honour Bove by sweeping aside Inter Milan
- Rubio renews US hard line with Venezuela plane seizure
- Amazon profits double, but cautious outlook disappoints
- Trump trade nominee floats universal tariffs
- Fighting global warming in nations' self-interest: UN climate chief
- British 'Netflix' conman gets six-year prison term in France
- It's all business for Eagles quarterback Hurts at Super Bowl
- Cavs add Hunter, Nurkic to Hornets at NBA trade deadline
- Alcaraz cruises, Tsitsipas scrapes through in Rotterdam
- Judge pauses Musk plan for mass US govt cull
- Monahan, Scott implore Trump to help finalize PGA-LIV deal
- Swindling Brit stands trial for injuring French police in getaway
- Cavs add Hunter, Nurkic to Hornets as NBA trade deadline nears
- Scientists claim to have cracked how to cook the perfect egg
- PSG's crushing domination leaves no hope for domestic rivals
- Mexican troop deployment met with skepticism on US border
- DR Congo conflict advances as UN calls for peace
- England captain Itoje says 'non-negotiable' physicality key to France clash
- NFL Bears owner McCaskey, oldest in US sport, dead at 102
- Kendrick Lamar promises 'storytelling' at Super Bowl show
- England to play Afghanistan in Champions Trophy despite boycott calls
- Ecuador presidential candidates sprint to campaign finish
- OpenAI says to host some customers' data in Europe
- Spain's Fernandez won't return as Canada basketball coach
- We will not be bullied, says S.Africa president after US barbs
- 'Intolerable' US claim sparks new row over Panama Canal
- Williams to Lakers, Raptors land two as NBA trade deadline nears
- Tsitsipas battles past valiant Griekspoor in Rotterdam
- L'Oreal bullish after net profits rise
- Deadline looms for US federal worker resignations under Musk plan
- Movie night to batting blitz: Iyer turns India hero
- Papadakis, Hubbell breaking new ground as same-sex ice dancers
- January smashes heat record, surprising scientists
Madsen, Kupcho share lead at LPGA Founders Cup
Denmark's Nanna Koerstz Madsen and American Jennifer Kupcho each fired a six-under par 65 to share the lead after Thursday's first round of the LPGA Founders Cup.
Kupcho birdied three of the last six holes while Madsen birdied two of her last three at Bradenton Country Club in Florida.
"I was very pleased with the round," Madsen said. "I think my iron game was the better part. I did make some good putts here and there.
"I think biggest key for me is to be good mentally out there, just stay happy, not let the bad shots get too much to your head."
The 30-year-old Dane won her only LPGA title at the 2022 LPGA Thailand event, beating China's Lin Xiyu with an eagle on the second playoff hole. Madsen also won the 2016 Tipsport Masters on the Ladies European Tour.
Kupcho, a 27-year-old American, seeks her fourth LPGA crown but her first since 2022, when she won a major at the Chevron Championship, the Meijer LPGA Classic and the Great Lakes Bay Invitational pairs event with Lizette Salas.
"It was pretty solid," Kupcho said of her first 18 holes.
"I hit the ball pretty well. I think when I needed to not hit an iron shot as well it worked out, and when I needed to smash one, the ball went as far as it needed to go. It just was a day of everything was going right."
Madsen, a back-nine starter, reeled off five birdies in a row from the 16th hole. She sandwiched bogeys at the third and fifth holes around a birdie and closed with birdies at the par-3 seventh and par-5 eighth and a par at the par-3 ninth.
"There's a lot of the space off the tee and I needed that," Madsen said. "It was overall really solid golf."
Kupcho birdied the second but took her lone bogey at the third hole. She answered with birdies at the par-5 sixth and par-3 ninth then birdied the par-3 11th, 13, the par-3 15th and par-4 16th before closing with back-to-back pars.
"My ball flights were all real good," she said. "I switched golf balls in the offseason, so just to see the consistency of the golf ball was really nice, especially in wind."
Americans Angel Yin and Lauren Coughlin and South Korea's Im Jin-hee were one stroke back on 66.
Top-ranked Nelly Korda, who won last year here on her hometown course, shot 68 to share 12th.
W.Stewart--AT