Highlights: PGA Professional Championship, Round 1
Rookie Ingrid Lindblad, who had an exceptional amateur career, reflects after shooting a career-best round at the JM Eagle LA Championship at El Caballero Country Club, sharing she knows she belongs on the LPGA Tour.
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San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Lee5 takes Portland Classic lead. Inkster falls shot short in bid to make cut at age 65
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Jeongeun Lee5 shot a 6-under 67 on Friday to take the lead in The Standard Portland Classic, while 65-year-old Juli Inkster fell short in her bid to become the oldest player to make a cut in LPGA Tour history. Lee5, the 36-year-old South Korean player, had a 12-under 132 total at Columbia Edgewater. Winless on the LPGA Tour, she birdied the final five holes on her front nine in the morning round. 'When we are playing well, we expect it to continue,' Lee5 said. 'So, I want to really concentrate and focus going into the weekend. The past two rounds I had great energy, good shots, and good putts.' Inkster, the Hall of Famer who won the 1999 event, followed her opening 69 with a 74 to miss the cut by a stroke. JoAnne Carner was 64 when she made the cut in the 2004 Chick Fil-A Charity Championship. 'Wasn't very inspiring,' Inkster said. 'I didn't drive the ball as well as I did yesterday. Kind of a grind out there today.' She played to prepare for the U.S. Senior Women's Open next week. Grace Kim of Australia and Gurleen Kaur of the United States were a stroke back on the tree-lined course. Kim had a 65, and Kaur shot 68. Akie Iwai had her second straight 67 to join Pajaree Anannarukarn (67) and Ashleigh Buhai (68) at 10 under. Amateur Kiara Romero had a 69 to get to 8 under. The University of Oregon star won the 2023 U.S. Girls' Junior and 2025 Big Ten title. 'It feels really good just to see my game match up against some of these pros, just getting more comfortable playing in front of crowds and stuff,' Romero said. 'My first time playing in front of a big crowd I kind of got a little bit shaken up and was nervous out there.' Two-time champion Brooke Henderson, a stroke back after an opening 65, had a 73 to fall to 6 under. The Canadian star is winless since January 2023 and has dropped to 52nd in the world. First-round leader Adela Cernousek followed her opening 64 with a 75 to drop to 5 under. Angel Yin, the top-ranked player in the field at No. 7, was 2 under after a 70. No. 9 Haeran Ryu also was 6 under, shooting 72. The tournament is the longest continuous event on the LPGA Tour except for the majors, dating to 1972. ___


NBC Sports
11 hours ago
- NBC Sports
Brooke Henderson back in contention in Portland Classic; Juli Inkster, 65, shoots 69
Relive the biggest moments and top shots from the opening round at the 2025 The Standard Portland Classic at Columbia Edgewater Macan Course in Portland, Oregon. PORTLAND, Ore. — Two-time champion Brooke Henderson birdied all four par-5 holes for a 7-under 65 on Thursday in The Standard Portland Classic, leaving the slumping Canadian a stroke behind first-round leader Adela Cernousek. Henderson won the first of her 13 LPGA Tour titles in 2015 by eight strokes at Columbia Edgewater at age 17, and successfully defended the following year. Now 27, she's winless since January 2023 and has dipped to 52nd in the world. 'I love coming back to this place,' Henderson said. 'I do have a lot of the great memories. A lot of good things happened to me here.' She opened her morning round with four straight birdies, two on par 5s. On her second nine, she birdied the par-5 fifth and seventh and the par-4 ninth. 'It's really important to hit a bunch of fairways this week,' Henderson said. 'You want to be hitting it really straight. I think I only missed two fairways today, so that was good. Hopefully, hit them all tomorrow.' Next week, Henderson will be back home in Canada for the CPKC Women's Open in Mississauga, Ontario. She won the national championship in 2018. Cernousek shot a 65 in the final group of the day off the 10th tee. The 22-year-old Frenchwoman played her final nine holes in 7-under 29 - highlighted by an eagle on No. 7. 'I was hitting the ball very well,' Cernousek said. Sung Hyun Park was a stroke back with Henderson, Jeongeun Lee5, Gurleen Kaur and Miranda Wang. Park had eight birdies and a bogey in her afternoon round on the tree-lined course. The 31-year-old South Korean player won the last of her seven tour titles in 2019. 'As of late, my ball-striking and putting are starting to feel quite comfortable and that's exactly what happened today,' Park said. 'I was able to make confident swings and also feel great about the strokes I made on the greens.' Haeran Ryu two strokes back at 66 with Perrine Delacour, Arpichaya Yubol, Ashleigh Buhai and Linn Grant. Ryu, at No. 9 in the world, and No. 7 Angel Yin — who shot a 72 — are the only players from the top 10 in the world ranking in the field. Amateur Kiara Romero had a 67. The University of Oregon star won the 2023 U.S. Girls' Junior and 2025 Big Ten title. 'Everything was rolling pretty smoothly,' Romero said. 'I was a little bit nervous on the first tee, but still played pretty good.' Juli Inkster, the 65-year-old Hall of Famer who won the 1999 event, birdied three of the par 5s in a 69. 'I actually thought I putted really well today,' Inkster said. 'Hit a lot of good irons and I drove the ball well. I was happy with that.' She played alongside 2017 champion Stacy Lewis and 2019 winner Hannah Green, who each shot 73. Defending champion Moriya Jutanugarn also had a 73. The tournament is the longest continuous event on the LPGA Tour except for the majors, dating to 1972.


NBC Sports
04-08-2025
- NBC Sports
Why it's 'never been harder' to win on LPGA Tour
Beth Ann Nichols and Grant Boone join Golf Today to discuss the rise of Japanese players on the LPGA Tour, if parity has helped or hurt the season, Charley Hull's emergence, and more following the AIG Women's Open.