logo
South Korean duo survive playoff for first titles in US

South Korean duo survive playoff for first titles in US

The Advertiser2 days ago
Somi Lee has poured in an eight-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to team with fellow South Korean Jin Hee Im to win the Dow Championship, denying Lexi Thompson her first LPGA title in six years.
Thompson's partner, Megan Khang, had a chance to extend the playoff on Sunday, but she missed a five-foot birdie putt that was on the low side of the hole from the start.
Thompson made an eight-foot birdie putt on the par-3 18th hole, with Khang still facing a six-foot birdie attempt, as the American duo closed with a 10-under 60 in the fourballs format. They were the first to post at 20-under 260.
Lee made a 10-foot birdie putt to tie for the lead on the 17th. Im and Lee missed birdie chances on the 18th in regulation for the win.
The playoff switched to foursomes. Thompson hit the tee shot on the 18th to just five feet right of the cup. Im went nearer the pin but eight feet long, setting up Lee for the winning putt.
"Bummer to miss the last one in the playoff to force another hole, but very happy how we played," Khang said.
Thompson has not won since the ShopRite LPGA Classic in 2019 and decided last summer to no longer play a full schedule. The Dow Championship was her eighth tournament this year.
Im and Lee are in their second year on the LPGA Tour and this was their first title in America, though both were prolific winners on the Korea LPGA. Im has won six times on the KLPGA, while Lee has five KLPGA titles.
"I can't believe it," Lee said after making her winning putt.
Lindy Duncan and Miranda Wang had a 59 in the better-ball format and tied for third, two shots out of the playoff. They were joined by Manon De Roey and Pauline Roussin-Bouchard, who teamed up for a 64.
Albane Valenzuela and Sarah Schmelzel, who had the 54-hole lead, closed with a 66 and failed to make birdie over the final seven holes. They finished fifth, three shots behind.
The Dow Championship is the only official team event on the LPGA schedule.
Somi Lee has poured in an eight-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to team with fellow South Korean Jin Hee Im to win the Dow Championship, denying Lexi Thompson her first LPGA title in six years.
Thompson's partner, Megan Khang, had a chance to extend the playoff on Sunday, but she missed a five-foot birdie putt that was on the low side of the hole from the start.
Thompson made an eight-foot birdie putt on the par-3 18th hole, with Khang still facing a six-foot birdie attempt, as the American duo closed with a 10-under 60 in the fourballs format. They were the first to post at 20-under 260.
Lee made a 10-foot birdie putt to tie for the lead on the 17th. Im and Lee missed birdie chances on the 18th in regulation for the win.
The playoff switched to foursomes. Thompson hit the tee shot on the 18th to just five feet right of the cup. Im went nearer the pin but eight feet long, setting up Lee for the winning putt.
"Bummer to miss the last one in the playoff to force another hole, but very happy how we played," Khang said.
Thompson has not won since the ShopRite LPGA Classic in 2019 and decided last summer to no longer play a full schedule. The Dow Championship was her eighth tournament this year.
Im and Lee are in their second year on the LPGA Tour and this was their first title in America, though both were prolific winners on the Korea LPGA. Im has won six times on the KLPGA, while Lee has five KLPGA titles.
"I can't believe it," Lee said after making her winning putt.
Lindy Duncan and Miranda Wang had a 59 in the better-ball format and tied for third, two shots out of the playoff. They were joined by Manon De Roey and Pauline Roussin-Bouchard, who teamed up for a 64.
Albane Valenzuela and Sarah Schmelzel, who had the 54-hole lead, closed with a 66 and failed to make birdie over the final seven holes. They finished fifth, three shots behind.
The Dow Championship is the only official team event on the LPGA schedule.
Somi Lee has poured in an eight-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to team with fellow South Korean Jin Hee Im to win the Dow Championship, denying Lexi Thompson her first LPGA title in six years.
Thompson's partner, Megan Khang, had a chance to extend the playoff on Sunday, but she missed a five-foot birdie putt that was on the low side of the hole from the start.
Thompson made an eight-foot birdie putt on the par-3 18th hole, with Khang still facing a six-foot birdie attempt, as the American duo closed with a 10-under 60 in the fourballs format. They were the first to post at 20-under 260.
Lee made a 10-foot birdie putt to tie for the lead on the 17th. Im and Lee missed birdie chances on the 18th in regulation for the win.
The playoff switched to foursomes. Thompson hit the tee shot on the 18th to just five feet right of the cup. Im went nearer the pin but eight feet long, setting up Lee for the winning putt.
"Bummer to miss the last one in the playoff to force another hole, but very happy how we played," Khang said.
Thompson has not won since the ShopRite LPGA Classic in 2019 and decided last summer to no longer play a full schedule. The Dow Championship was her eighth tournament this year.
Im and Lee are in their second year on the LPGA Tour and this was their first title in America, though both were prolific winners on the Korea LPGA. Im has won six times on the KLPGA, while Lee has five KLPGA titles.
"I can't believe it," Lee said after making her winning putt.
Lindy Duncan and Miranda Wang had a 59 in the better-ball format and tied for third, two shots out of the playoff. They were joined by Manon De Roey and Pauline Roussin-Bouchard, who teamed up for a 64.
Albane Valenzuela and Sarah Schmelzel, who had the 54-hole lead, closed with a 66 and failed to make birdie over the final seven holes. They finished fifth, three shots behind.
The Dow Championship is the only official team event on the LPGA schedule.
Somi Lee has poured in an eight-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to team with fellow South Korean Jin Hee Im to win the Dow Championship, denying Lexi Thompson her first LPGA title in six years.
Thompson's partner, Megan Khang, had a chance to extend the playoff on Sunday, but she missed a five-foot birdie putt that was on the low side of the hole from the start.
Thompson made an eight-foot birdie putt on the par-3 18th hole, with Khang still facing a six-foot birdie attempt, as the American duo closed with a 10-under 60 in the fourballs format. They were the first to post at 20-under 260.
Lee made a 10-foot birdie putt to tie for the lead on the 17th. Im and Lee missed birdie chances on the 18th in regulation for the win.
The playoff switched to foursomes. Thompson hit the tee shot on the 18th to just five feet right of the cup. Im went nearer the pin but eight feet long, setting up Lee for the winning putt.
"Bummer to miss the last one in the playoff to force another hole, but very happy how we played," Khang said.
Thompson has not won since the ShopRite LPGA Classic in 2019 and decided last summer to no longer play a full schedule. The Dow Championship was her eighth tournament this year.
Im and Lee are in their second year on the LPGA Tour and this was their first title in America, though both were prolific winners on the Korea LPGA. Im has won six times on the KLPGA, while Lee has five KLPGA titles.
"I can't believe it," Lee said after making her winning putt.
Lindy Duncan and Miranda Wang had a 59 in the better-ball format and tied for third, two shots out of the playoff. They were joined by Manon De Roey and Pauline Roussin-Bouchard, who teamed up for a 64.
Albane Valenzuela and Sarah Schmelzel, who had the 54-hole lead, closed with a 66 and failed to make birdie over the final seven holes. They finished fifth, three shots behind.
The Dow Championship is the only official team event on the LPGA schedule.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Terrified world No.33 Yulia Putintseva halts play at Wimbledon over ‘crazy' fan: ‘Take him out'
Terrified world No.33 Yulia Putintseva halts play at Wimbledon over ‘crazy' fan: ‘Take him out'

7NEWS

timean hour ago

  • 7NEWS

Terrified world No.33 Yulia Putintseva halts play at Wimbledon over ‘crazy' fan: ‘Take him out'

World No.33 Yulia Putintseva asked the umpire to eject a spectator from her first-round match at Wimbledon over safety concerns, calling the attendee 'dangerous' and 'crazy'. Putintseva went on to lose 6-0 6-0 to American Amanda Anisimova in just 43 minutes and was visibly emotional while sitting down ahead of the final game. Trailing 0-3 in the first set on court 15, Putintseva reported the fan to the umpire at the change of ends. 'Can you take him out? I'm not going to continue playing until he leaves,' she was heard telling the umpire on the BBC broadcast. 'These people are dangerous, they're crazy.' After being asked by the umpire which fan it was, Putintseva gestured to the stand behind where she was serving and said it was a spectator wearing green. The umpire then said he would phone security before getting down from his chair to speak to two members of security staff who were courtside. 'Maybe he has a knife and he will attack after, I don't know,' Putintseva, who didn't speak to the media after the match, said. In a statement, the organisers said: 'Following a complaint about the behaviour of a spectator at the match on court 15, the chair umpire informed security and the matter was dealt with.' The incident comes after a man was ejected from the Dubai Tennis Championships after displaying 'fixated behavior' towards British player Emma Raducanu in February. The man followed Raducanu to at least four competitions earlier this year, and on noticing him in Dubai, the British star previously said she 'couldn't see the ball through tears' due to her distress. British media reported that the man had tried to obtain tickets to Wimbledon, but was flagged and blocked by the All England Club's security system. Raducanu praised Wimbledon for doing an 'amazing job' at preventing the man accused of stalking her from buying tickets to the tournament. 'Wimbledon and everyone did an amazing job. I got a notification, the police contacted me and told me everything was OK,' Raducanu told the BBC. 'I know that I am not the first athlete to go through this, and I probably won't be the last — not just as an athlete, but females in general.'

Two days of carnage: Big names fall in record numbers at Wimbledon
Two days of carnage: Big names fall in record numbers at Wimbledon

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Two days of carnage: Big names fall in record numbers at Wimbledon

It's been two days of carnage on the famous grass courts at Wimbledon, as the stars crashed out of the first round in record numbers at the All England club. Eight top-10 seeds exited in the first round, which was the highest at a grand slam in the professional era, while 23 seeds — 13 men, 10 women — have failed to reach the second round, equalling the highest total at any grand slam tournament since they began assigning 32 seeds in each singles bracket in 2001. As the shocks kept coming, here's who stumbled and fell in a first round that delivered plenty of surprising results – and opened up the draw significantly for those remaining in the prestigious grasscourt event in London. For the latest on the Australian contingent, click here. Coco Gauff (No.2) Gauff was the day's most surprising casualty, overpowered by fired-up Ukrainian Dayana Yastremska 7-6 (7-3), 6-1. The American was chasing a French Open-Wimbledon double after her Paris triumph but looked out of sorts on Court One's slick surface, slipping several times early in the match. She had nine double faults and made 29 unforced errors, shaking her head in disbelief. 'I think it was a great match today, I was really on fire,' said the world No. 42 Yastremska, whose best previous grand slam performance was reaching the semi-finals at the 2024 Australian Open.

Two days of carnage: Big names fall in record numbers at Wimbledon
Two days of carnage: Big names fall in record numbers at Wimbledon

The Age

time4 hours ago

  • The Age

Two days of carnage: Big names fall in record numbers at Wimbledon

It's been two days of carnage on the famous grass courts at Wimbledon, as the stars crashed out of the first round in record numbers at the All England club. Eight top-10 seeds exited in the first round, which was the highest at a grand slam in the professional era, while 23 seeds — 13 men, 10 women — have failed to reach the second round, equalling the highest total at any grand slam tournament since they began assigning 32 seeds in each singles bracket in 2001. As the shocks kept coming, here's who stumbled and fell in a first round that delivered plenty of surprising results – and opened up the draw significantly for those remaining in the prestigious grasscourt event in London. For the latest on the Australian contingent, click here. Coco Gauff (No.2) Gauff was the day's most surprising casualty, overpowered by fired-up Ukrainian Dayana Yastremska 7-6 (7-3), 6-1. The American was chasing a French Open-Wimbledon double after her Paris triumph but looked out of sorts on Court One's slick surface, slipping several times early in the match. She had nine double faults and made 29 unforced errors, shaking her head in disbelief. 'I think it was a great match today, I was really on fire,' said the world No. 42 Yastremska, whose best previous grand slam performance was reaching the semi-finals at the 2024 Australian Open.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store