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Olympic champion Lydia Ko wins Singapore LPGA

Olympic champion Lydia Ko wins Singapore LPGA

Yahoo02-03-2025

SINGAPORE (AP) — Lydia Ko finally conquered the LPGA's HSBC Women's World Championship, clinching her first title at her 11th attempt with a dominant four-stroke win over Ayaka Furue and Jeeno Thitikul in Sunday's final round.
The 2024 Olympic gold medalist and Women's British Open champion overcame a middling start before finding her rhythm with a birdie on the par-5 sixth.
Ko added back-to-back birdies on Nos. 7 and 8, seizing control of the leaderboard from then on.
Despite dropping two bogeys after the turn, the world No. 3 closed with a solid 69, sealing a 13-under-par 275 total at Sentosa Golf Club.
'I dreamt last night that I won but then I woke up, and I was like, dang, it's not real yet," said Ko, who secured her 23rd LPGA title and her first victory since the Kroger Queen City Championship last September. "But I just wanted to focus on my game.'
'I started off really steady, and you know, didn't really put myself in trouble that much. I think that was going to be the key for today."
Ko's previous best finish here was a lone second place in 2015.
"It's exciting to finally add Asia's major to my major collection,' the New Zealander said.
World No. 2 Jeeno Thitikul fought hard to chase Ko down, but her charge fell just short.
Jeeno fired a 70, finishing at nine under, tied for second with Japan's Ayaka Furue, who carded a closing 68. The Thai star made an early push with two birdies in the first four holes to trail Ko by a stroke at 9-under but couldn't maintain the pressure.
Charley Hull, just one shot behind Ko entering the final round, saw her title hopes fade after a frustrating 74, settling for a share of fourth at seven under alongside Im Jin Hee, who fired the day's best round of 67, and Gaby Lopez (70).
The Singapore tournament is the second of three events on the LPGA's first Asian swing of the year. The final event will be played next week at Hainan Island, China.
___
AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

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What is Oakmont's church pew bunker? History behind distinctive U.S. Open course feature
What is Oakmont's church pew bunker? History behind distinctive U.S. Open course feature

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

What is Oakmont's church pew bunker? History behind distinctive U.S. Open course feature

OAKMONT, Pa. — He didn't even want to set foot in it. The year was 2007. Tiger Woods was scouting Oakmont Country Club, seeing the property for the first time outside of TV highlights and photographs. A group of 82 American Express cardholders walked along, watching Woods, jaws open. A 'small' fee of $900 got those AmEx customers onto Oakmont for the day, but little did they know they'd get to spend it with the then 13-time major champion. Woods helped execute the surprise as a cardholder perk, inviting them for a stroll around that year's U.S. Open venue as he strategized for the tournament ahead. Advertisement When they arrived at No. 3, Woods striped a 3-iron off the tee, splitting the fairway with ease. When the group approached his ball, one onlooker curiously asked, 'Can you hit one from the church pews?' 'No,' Woods replied, according to the AP. Woods eventually agreed to stand in the infamous 108-yard-long bunker, smiling momentarily only for a photo-op, before climbing out again: 'I only practice from where I expect to play.' The monstrosity sits between the third and fourth fairways. It now occupies more than 28,000 square feet of Oakmont real estate. And it lives rent-free in the psyche of any golfer who steps up on that tee box. The bunker creeps into your peripheral vision, even if you don't anticipate playing from it. Oakmont's church pew bunker, one of the most recognizable golf course features in the world, is just as beautiful as it is maddening. So is its history. 'Where Augusta National has Amen Corner, and TPC Sawgrass has the 17th, and Pebble Beach has No. 7, the church pews, that's us. That's our signature feature,' says David Moore, Curator of Collections at Oakmont. The church pews, as they are configured today — 13 long, grassy tufts that act as islands within a seemingly endless pit of sand — were never part of the original Oakmont design. Henry Fownes, a big-time steel mogul, built Oakmont in 1903 when his obsession with golf reached the point of setting out to design his own course. 'A poor shot should be a shot irrevocably lost,' Fownes famously said of his design philosophy. Oakmont was soon constructed by a team of 150 people and a dozen horses. It's the only course Fownes ever designed. There were more than 350 bunkers marked in the original Oakmont layout. The church pew bunker was not one of them. But a peculiar detail emerged in aerial photographs of the club taken in 1927, the year it hosted the U.S. Open for the first time. Six separate bunkers, each long and skinny and not particularly deep, lined the left side of the third hole. 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The bunker, now stuck with a permanent name, was tweaked and fiddled with over time. Pews were added, straightened, trimmed and tucked. Ahead of this year's championship, renowned golf course architect Gil Hanse helped put the snake back into the snake mounds, bending the pews to match original photographs. His team also added a 13th pew. 'We deconstructed all of them and used the dirt to build the new pews to more accurately reflect the old style, in an expanded configuration,' Hanse says. For an on-course obstacle so widely recognized in the sport, it is surprising that one simple question proves unanswerable: Who came up with the idea? No one wrote it down. No one thought to document it. No one expected that, almost 100 years later, the club would be hosting its record 10th U.S. Open. With the pews tracing back to the years between the 1927 and 1935 U.S. Opens, there is a working theory that they were not a creation of Henry Fownes himself, but rather his son, William C. Fownes. 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