logo
Four eagles crowd leaderboard at Meijer LPGA Classic; Lexi Thompson in mix

Four eagles crowd leaderboard at Meijer LPGA Classic; Lexi Thompson in mix

Yahoo21 hours ago

BELMONT - The Meijer LPGA Classic has built a reputation with the players for having lots of birdie chances - how about four eagles from contenders?
Most of the fairways are long and there are five par-5 holes on the course at Blythefield Country Club, and strong players are able to rack up some birdies.
Advertisement
But four of the top 10 golfers on the leaderboard did even better, as Mi Hyang Lee and Grace Kim both shot eagles on the par-5 No. 10 hole to surge ahead of the field. Meanwhile, American Andrea Lee eagled 18 to remain just three shots back and Ruixin Liu eagled No. 14 to finish 5-under.
Mi Hyang Lee had the lead at 8-under-par 64. Kim was just one shot behind at 7-under.
Lee eagled No. 10, one hole after four consecutive birdies to soar into the lead.
More: Daughter of Michigan State coach makes LPGA debut at Meijer as Monday-qualifier
More: Lexi Thompson addresses non-retirement, begins three-week stretch of LPGA events at Meijer
Advertisement
"No. 10 (I had a) good drive and then I didn't expect I could hit the green there for my second shot, but it was a great line and good hit the 3-wood and then I made the green, so it was almost 24 feet, right to left, for the eagle putt," Lee said. "Then I didn't expect to make it, but just trying to make more distance control the putting but it was working."
Lee was pleased with her day overall, especially the four birdies in a row.
"So my shot was great. I missed only two fairways. I think that's a lot of help for hit the green a lot, too," Lee said. "And my iron distance control was really good today, so I made more birdie chances."
Grace Kim looks down the fairway after driving the ball during the LPGA Classic on June 12.
The one-shot difference was a bogey
Advertisement
"I had two back-to-back chip-ins, one for eagle and one for birdie. That was a good start to the back nine. Yeah, just kind of saved pars early and then loosened up as we went on. That was quite nice," Kim said. "Had one little bogey. I would say a setback, but that didn't really set me back anyway because I knew the next hole was a par-5."
Andrea Lee had her best hole at 18.
"And then 18 obviously a gettable par-5. Hit a good drive and then hit a really good 3-wood. Striped it up the center of the green and it bounced to the right. Feel like it maybe took a peek at the hole. Ended up three feet and made eagle there," she said. "So that was a nice finish to my front nine."
Former champs Lexi Thompson, Brooke Henderson in mix
Several former Meijer champions were in the field and had mixed results in the first round.
Advertisement
Lexi Thompson finished the first round at 4-under, a strong finish.
Starting on the back nine, she birdied the 14th and 18th. After the turn, she birdied the 4th, 5th and 8th hole and had one bogey at No. 7.
"I mean, just take the positives from today. You know, I hit some iffy shots but also hit some really great ones, and felt like I stroked it well," Thompson said. "So just really build off that and take that into tomorrow."
It was far from her best round at Blythefield, but a very solid start that will keep her in the mix, as she always is at the Meijer LPGA Classic.
And she always has the biggest crowd.
Advertisement
"It's always what I hope for, what we all hope for really, just to see the support out here in Grand Rapids and women's golf. It's just amazing how the community really gets behind this event," Thompson said. "I think the girls really just enjoy coming here."
Two-time champion Brooke Henderson shot a 3-under par 69.
Not every former champion started strong.
Leona Maguire, who also has enjoyed stellar success at this event, including a win, finished even with four birdies, three bogeys and one double bogey on 17. Mirim Lee struggled and finished 4-over.
Contact sports editor Dan D'Addona at Dan.D'Addona@hollandsentinel.com. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter @DanDAddona or Facebook @HollandSentinelSports.
This article originally appeared on The Holland Sentinel: Four eagles crowd leaderboard at Meijer LPGA Classic

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lexi Thompson, one shot off lead, is finding success once again at Meijer LPGA Classic
Lexi Thompson, one shot off lead, is finding success once again at Meijer LPGA Classic

USA Today

time36 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Lexi Thompson, one shot off lead, is finding success once again at Meijer LPGA Classic

Lexi Thompson, one shot off lead, is finding success once again at Meijer LPGA Classic BELMONT, Mich. - As Lexi Thompson's approach on 18 found the green, Thompson did something she hadn't for most of her round - she smiled. It was a moment of triumph, and relief, for Thompson, who birdied 18 and had three birdies in her final four holes to pull within one shot of the lead heading into the weekend at the Meijer LPGA Classic for Simply Give at Blythefield Country Club. Thompson, who birdied the first hole on Friday, had one bogey and 12 pars in the next 13 holes before finishing strong. She had a 3 under Friday and is at 7 under heading into the weekend, one shot off the lead shared by four golfers. "I started off well, then kind of fizzled a little bit. I just tried to stay positive. I wanted to get seven birdie looks in the last seven holes, and unfortunately, they were longer looks than I wanted, but ended up with a few birdies coming in," Thompson said. "My first birdie coming in on 15, I ended up making a put off the collar that I wasn't really expecting, down the hill right to left. I was just trying to par, but I really just wanted to stay confident over the last couple of holes coming in. "There were a few par saves that were important to keep me in it. Just staying patient out there because it got really windy. You have to know birdie holes are out there." Thompson won this event in 2015 and has been in contention nearly every year at Blythefield. She finished second last year at 16-under. In the 10 Meijer LPGA Classics she has played in, she has finished second three times, in the top five a total of five times and in the top 10 six times. She finished 20th once (despite shooting 15 under), 41st (her first time at Blythefield) once and missed the cut once. No one has had that kind of extended success at Blythefield, despite two wins for Brooke Henderson and a spectacular three-year stretch for Leona Maguire. Thompson has been in contention eight of 10 times she has played the course. And after two rounds this year, she is in contention again for the 11th time. "It is an amazing tournament in general. We always look forward to coming back here. The golf course is always in great shape. The way the community gets behind the tournament and gives back, that is what we really like about it. It is not just a golf tournament," Thompson said. Morning an advantage again at Meijer LPGA Classic The first round saw an 8 under, 7 under and several bunched in the 6-5-4-under range, bunching the leaderboard. Four players in the top 10 registered eagles in the opening round. It wasn't eagles, but birdies that were difficult to come by in the second round in the afternoon especially. Those birdies that generally come a little easier at Blythefield Country Club. A few players who teed off early in the morning had a string of birdies, but it was not the same in the afternoon. Carlota Ciganda had seven birdies in the second round in one of the early groups, but also had a couple of bogeys and finished 6-under for the round and 8-under for the tournament. Celine Boutier had a similar round with seven birdies and three bogies to finish 4-under for the day and 8-under for the tournament. Hye-Jin Choi was 4 under for the second day in a row to tie Ciganda and Boutier at 8 under. One afternoon player had a share of the lead as Karis Davidson shot a 2 under, with a birdie on 18, to share the lead at 8 under. Nanna Koerst Madsen was one shot behind after an up-and-down round that saw her double-bogey the first hole, but then nail eight birdies to finish 6-under for the day and 7-under heading into the weekend.

Richardson Hitchins vs. George Kambosos: Pressure is on to walk the walk after talking the talk
Richardson Hitchins vs. George Kambosos: Pressure is on to walk the walk after talking the talk

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Richardson Hitchins vs. George Kambosos: Pressure is on to walk the walk after talking the talk

George Kambosos Jr. (left) and Richardson Hitchins face off for the IBF super lightweight title on Saturday. Matchroom Boxing knew what it was doing when it matched IBF super lightweight champion Richardson Hitchins with George Kambosos Jr., the former unified lightweight ruler. The fight always had the potential to create absurdist theater and pugilistic magic. So far, the fighters have delivered on the former and get the chance to live up to the latter. On Saturday, they headline a world title fight at The Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Hitchins's IBF championship is on the line. Advertisement Throughout the promotion, Hitchins and Kambosos always seemed close to throttling one another. They almost came to blows Thursday when Jim Kambosos, George's father, appeared to strike Hitchins's trainer Lenny Wilson with a microphone. The coach responded by grabbing a chair as if to throw it, but security stopped the pandemonium before it descended further. 'When you compare Richardson Hitchins to Devin Haney, Teofimo Lopez and Vasiliy Lomachenko — he's not them guys,' Kambosos told Uncrowned ahead of Saturday's fight on DAZN. 'He hasn't fought anyone to be one of them guys, or established himself to be one of them guys.' Hitchins doesn't mind Kambosos dismissing him. He's 'supposed to,' the American said. Regardless, Hitchins still doesn't like him. Advertisement Hitchins (19-0, 7 KOs) may be undefeated and the defending champion in this bout, but it is Kambosos (22-3, 10 KOs) who has fought the superior competition. The Aussie's split decision win over Teofimo Lopez in 2021 earned him the unified lightweight title. It also catapulted him to boxing stardom. But he lost the belts in his very next bout against Devin Haney, and has never been able to reclaim them since. He lost to Haney a second time, rebounded with a win over Maxi Hughes, but then lost to Lomachenko last year. In his most recent fight, in March, he beat Jake Wyllie. The way Hitchins talks, Kambosos won't just be suffering a fourth career defeat this weekend. He'll be suffering injury too, as the champ is keen to rearrange his opponent's face when they finally quit talking and start punching instead. Advertisement Saturday, Hitchins told Uncrowned, 'is going to get real bad' for Kambosos. 'George is a bum,' he said. 'In boxing, he can't f*** with me. Kambosos will see my boxing IQ. And it will be horrendous how he'll look after the fight.' Kambosos isn't convinced. '[Hitchins is] a good fighter, but we see holes in him,' he said. 'He does some basic things well, but there are holes to open him up and put him in an uncomfortable position. You compare Hitchins to Haney, Teofimo or Lomachenko and he's not 1/10th of those guys. 'That really burns him inside,' Kambosos said. Hitchins, though, is yet to be burned. He's undefeated in 19 bouts, and has come of age at Matchroom as he's beaten Jose Zepeda, Gustavo Lemos and Liam Paro since signing with Eddie Hearn and the U.K.-based promotional outfit. The victory over Paro earned him the IBF title at 140 pounds. It's a belt he'll be taking into the ring Saturday to put on the line against Kambosos. And it's a belt he intends to leave the ring with, too. Advertisement 'I'm ready to take over the sport of boxing,' said Hitchins, keen to reach the heights of his Matchroom USA stablemates Shakur Stevenson and Jaron "Boots" Ennis. 'The sport needs someone like me with the skills and technical boxing, charisma, and swagger. When you have skills like me you can afford to talk s***,' he said. This is actually Hitchins 'being humble,' he said, as he 'could be more cocky, and flamboyant, but I'm taking it easy right now." 'I expect to have fun and f*** him up, straight up, that's it," Hitchins said. "He's a C-class fighter. I'm an A-plus fighter. I'll teach him something about the sport of boxing with the Queensberry rules, if he wants to learn. Advertisement 'He's going to school on Saturday night, and George Kambosos should be grateful that he's getting into the ring with greatness.' Considering Hitchins is yet to take on a fighter like Lopez, Haney or Lomachenko, he could face criticisms that he's not shared the ring with an A-plus fighter. The type of fighter he says he is. But his answer to that is simple. 'To be a world champion in just 19 fights, undefeated, obviously when I talk, I'm backing it up,' he said. 'I'm boxing top opposition. And I'm not just talking and not showing up, because I show up every time. I can afford to talk my s*** because I put in the work,' he added. Advertisement 'I know how many miles I'm running, how many rounds I'm sparring, and the way I make a guy look in the ring. When a guy boxes me, they ask themselves if they really want to do this. That's what I do to people. 'I'm born for this s***.'

Shane Lowry has ugly microphone meltdown during disastrous US Open first round
Shane Lowry has ugly microphone meltdown during disastrous US Open first round

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Shane Lowry has ugly microphone meltdown during disastrous US Open first round

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Shane Lowry tossed a microphone in frustration, Image 2 shows Shane Lowry had a disastrous showing on Day 1 of the 2025 U.S. Open, Image 3 shows Shane Lowry finished his opening round of the U.S. Open at 9-over Not even a microphone was spared during Shane Lowry's first-round meltdown at the U.S. Open on Thursday. The Irishman, chasing his first major victory since 2019 at The Open, got off to a rough start at Oakmont Country Club, sitting at 2-over par through seven holes when he reached the drivable par-4 17th hole. Advertisement That's when his frustrations hit a boiling point. Lowry tried to chip his ball out of the thick rough but his ball barely moved and a microphone paid the price. Shane Lowry had a disastrous showing on Day 1 of the 2025 U.S. Open. AP Things only spiraled from there. Lowry, who finished at 4-over 39 through the first nine holes, added three bogeys and two double bogeys on his final nine holes. His highlight of the day was an eagle on the par-4 third hole where he holed out from 160 yards out. Lowry was considered one of the favorites in the event after he held the 54-hole lead in 2016, the last time the US Open was held at Oakmont. Shane Lowry tossed a microphone in frustration. X The incident transpired on the 17th hole at Oakmont Country Club. Getty Images American J.J. Spaun, who imploded against Lowry's pal, Rory McIlroy, in a playoff at the Players Championship in March, held a solo lead after shooting a 4-under 66 to close out his first round. Advertisement Leading up to this year's U.S. Open, Lowry was among the chorus of players who vocalized how strenuous playing Oakmont can be. Shane Lowry finished his opening round of the U.S. Open at 9-over. Getty Images 'It is exhausting,'' Lowry said earlier this week. 'I'm not going to do much else today. Just a lot of rest.' McIlroy, fresh off completing golf's Grand Slam after his Masters win in April, said, 'It felt impossible.' The Northern Irishman, who won the U.S. Open in 2011 at the Congressional Country Club, finished with a 4-over 74. Bryson DeChambeau, the reigning U.S. Open champion, also struggled Thursday and wrapped his opening round at 3-over 73.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store