
Sweden's Stark grabs one-shot lead at US Women's Open
Sweden's Stark, a European Solheim Cup stalwart chasing her first major title, kept her focus in a round that stretched nearly six hours as players wrestled with firm, fast greens on a breezy, sunny day in Wisconsin.
Her seven-under-par total of 209 put her one stroke clear of Spanish qualifier Lopez Ramirez, whose four-under-par 68 was the best score of a day on which only nine players broke par.
Japan's Mai Saigo, who started the day with a three-shot lead, carded a three-over-par 75 to share third alongside compatriots Rio Takeda and Hinako Shibuno on five-under 211.
World number one Nelly Korda, who played alongside Saigo in the final group, finished strong in a one-over 73 that left her three adrift on four-under 212.
Stark said the very difficulty of the course actually made her less anxious -- a key for her as she tries to kick the habit of "playing scared".
"In normal tournaments, I kind of swing scared because I think it's a birdie competition, but here it's really not," Stark said, adding that on Sunday she'll just "try to play freely".
Stark opened with a confidence-boosting birdie at the first hole. She bogeyed the third, but stuck her second shot at the 10th two feet from the pin for a birdie.
Stark rattled in a 21-foot birdie at the par-three 16th to seize a share of the lead on seven-under, capping her round with a par at the par-five 18th and emerging with the solo lead as Saigo closed with back-to-back bogeys.
The tough scoring made Lopez Ramirez's round look all the more impressive.
The 22-year-old, who had to pause her LPGA rookie campaign in March after undergoing an appendectomy, eagled the par-five first and bounced back frm a bogey at the third with a birdie at th seventh, where she got up and down from a greenside bunker.
She added birdies at 12 and 16 to put herself in contention for a first major title.
"It was just mentally a strong day for me, keeping myself present and dealing with what's in front of me," Lopez Ramirez added.
Saigo, gunning for a second major title of the season after winning the Chevron Championship in April, was battling even before her bogey-bogey finish.
She had two birdies and a bogey in her first three holes then bogeyed the fourth, fifth and sixth -- failing to get up and down after missing the geen at all three.
Korda rallies
The 23-year-old had regained the solo lead with an eight-foot birdie at the 12th but couldn't hang on.
Takeda joined her on five-under with a two-under par 70 highlighted by a six-foot eagle at the first. Former British Open champion Shibuno had two birdies and two bogeys in her even par 72.
Korda appeared to be spiraling out of contention with four bogeys on the front nine. That included three-putts at the second and fifth and a five-foot miss at the seventh.
But the American star clawed back with birdies at the 14th and 15th -- where she took advantage of the US Golf Association's decision to move up the tee to drive the green and calmly rolled in an eight-foot birdie putt.
Her six-foot birdie putt at the 18th circled the cup before falling in, leaving her exactly where she started the day three shots off the lead.
"I was happy to kind of rally back on the back nine after having such a poor start," Korda said. "It's all about being patient. There's just so many ups and downs and you just have to kind of stick with it .... it just takes one shot."
© 2025 AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
3 hours ago
- France 24
Chelsea sign Essugo in time for Club World Cup
The 20-year-old, who spent last season on loan at Spanish side Las Palmas as they were relegated from La Liga, will be available to feature for the Blues at the Club World Cup later this month. Essugo came through Sporting's academy and became the youngest player to appear for the club's first team at the age of 16 in March 2021. Deals for both Essugo and Geovany Quenda were initially agreed in March. Quenda will remain at Sporting until the end of the 2025/26 season before joining for £44 million. Chelsea are set to further boost their squad in the coming days as they close in on a £30 million deal for Ipswich striker Liam Delap. © 2025 AFP


France 24
5 hours ago
- France 24
Spain's Le Normand has 'no resentment' ahead of France clash
The 28-year-old Atletico Madrid centre-back, born in the Brittany region of France, obtained Spanish nationality in May 2023 and has gone on to become a regular for La Roja. Spain coach Luis de la Fuente brought the defender into the fold during the last Nations League final four, and they won it before triumphing at Euro 2024 last summer, where he started in the final against England. "There was no resentment or (thinking) 'I made the right choice'... I never felt that way," Le Normand told AFP at Spain's training centre Las Rozas. "I give my all and try to repay the trust, striving to give my full potential and my best version on the pitch." Le Normand, who played at youth level for French side Brest, joined Basque country club Real Sociedad in 2016. France coach Didier Deschamps told Le Normand he liked his football but did not call up for national team duty and Spain pounced, just as they did for Aymeric Laporte in 2021 and Diego Costa back in 2013. Spain beat France in the Euro 2024 semi-finals but Le Normand was suspended and could not face Les Bleus. On Thursday in Stuttgart he is in line to start but does not feel he is under the microscope because of his origins more than any of his team-mates. "It's a match with a special kind of pressure because it's still a semi-final, with the importance of representing a country, wanting to do things right, and trying to repay the trust they've always placed in me," said Le Normand. "That's where the pressure mainly comes from." Road to recovery This season was not the easiest for Le Normand on a personal level after clashing heads with Real Madrid's Aurelien Tchouameni in a derby clash in October. It left Le Normand with a traumatic brain injury, which took him nearly three months to recover from. "I've taken several hits before, so initially I didn't really take it seriously... (then) the symptoms remind you that it's serious," said Le Normand. "When you want to get back on the bike, when you just want to go up the stairs, your brain ultimately tells you no, you can't. "Well, you can -- but you're tired, you're out of breath, it spins. It's quite striking." Le Normand was out for nearly three months, and it took him longer to get back to his best, which he managed in the final weeks of the season. "Wearing the helmet during recovery wasn't easy, but, it was necessary," he explained. "I think now it's been 15 to 20 matches where we've tried to get back into the rhythm. Now, I feel really good. "I've felt good for the past 10 matches. We're trying to continue along this path." The reward for that could come against France as Spain try to become the first team to defend the Nations League trophy. Spain's triumph against France last summer was inspired by a sensational goal from Barcelona's teenage winger Lamine Yamal. Le Normand is grateful every time he can avoid facing the 17-year-old star in training. "I prefer having him on my team rather than going up one-on-one against him... we've had a few games this year against Barca, and we sometimes feel a bit powerless," said the centre-back. "He is 17 years old and has already played an incredible number of matches at an extraordinary level."

LeMonde
5 hours ago
- LeMonde
'The PSG of 2025, more global than French, has a unique place in the history of French football'
If you are going to make history, you might as well do it with a bang and set a new milestone. With a resounding scoreline (5-0), unexpected heroes and tears in the victors' eyes even before the final whistle, Paris Saint-Germain's triumph in the Champions League final against Inter Milan was also a coronation. Sporting history is written based on results, shaped by the retrospective meaning given to scores, rankings and titles. In Munich, on the evening of Saturday, May 31, the scoreboard delivered the moral of the football fairy tale of PSG in the Qatari era: Past failures have been transformed into tests on the path to triumph. PSG has certainly written itself into the national football narrative by bringing France its second Champions League title. This does not yet make up for the anomaly of France's meager club European honors, nor does it do much to improve its ratio of success in finals, with 13 lost out of 16. But French football welcomes this title with gratitude and admiration for the winners. A PSG that is finally likable The achievement was not just the victory itself. This young squad, stripped of its stars, with a collective spirit and brilliant play, having overcome three representatives of the Premier League – the most powerful European league – has made PSG a team that is finally "likable." This trophy will only strengthen the widespread support that its journey has earned it. Of course, the days when the French public rallied behind any (rare) continental run by a domestic team are gone. Still, the impact will be generational, as it has been for all the great French clubs. What place will PSG take among them?