There's a golfer hailing from America's South and with a passion for hunting who is running away with the British Open thanks to precise driving and a red-hot putter.
Sound familiar?
Ally Ewing is putting up a good impression of Brian Harman as she goes for a first major title this week at Walton Heath.
The No. 39-ranked Ewing rolled in six birdies in her first 11 holes and shot 6-under 66 Friday to establish a five-stroke lead after the second round of the Women's British Open, the final major of the year.
Ewing is delivering a golfing clinic southwest of London three weeks after Harman did the same four hours north of England at Royal Liverpool in the men's event to win his first major championship.
The similarities don't end there.
Ewing is from Mississippi, and Harman is from Georgia.
And then there's the hunting — the favoured pursuit of Harman and something which proved to be a fascination for the British media, who labelled him "Brian the Butcher."
Yes, Ewing confirmed, she also likes to hunt.
"For the most part, my family, my husband and I, we do mostly deer hunting, so venison," she said. "That's most of what we do."
The field will look to hunt down Ewing over the weekend, but it will need her to slow up.
At one stage Friday, she held a seven-shot lead and she felt like she was in a trance when making four straight birdies from No. 6.
"I didn't really even know until I signed my scorecard that I had four birdies in a row," Ewing said, "so I would probably say that stretch from like No. 6 to No. 11 is kind of a little bit of a blur."
The biggest names in women's golf can't keep up.
Brooke Henderson, of Smith Falls, Ont., will miss the cut after she shot 72 to sit at 3 over through two rounds. Fellow Canadian
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UPS
Brooke Henderson
Royal Liverpool
Ally Ewing