
Grace Kim produces improbable late comeback at Evian Championship to clinch first major
The 24-year-old was three shots off the lead with four holes left to play in Sunday's final round, but closed with birdie, birdie, par and eagle to draw level with Thailand's Jeeno Thitikul at the top of the leaderboard and force a playoff.
However, the comeback looked like it would end early as she hit her second shot on the first playoff hole into the pond by the 18th green.
But remarkably, Kim chipped in from where she had taken a drop to force the playoff to a second hole, where she sunk a 20-foot eagle putt to seal the most improbable of major triumphs.
'Obviously, it's a huge achievement for me,' Kim said, per Reuters. 'I've had a lot of doubts early this year. I was kind of losing motivation.
'I kind of had to get some hard conversations done with the team. Yeah, kind of had to wake up a little bit. So to be sitting here next to this trophy is definitely surreal.'
Kim, who battled a cold throughout the tournament, has struggled on the LPGA Tour since winning the Lotte Championship in Hawaii in 2023, her rookie season.
She had recorded just one top-10 finish in her last 11 appearances, per Reuters, and earlier this year slipped down to world No. 100.
But after securing her second LPGA Tour title, Kim has now joined exclusive company in Australian women's golf.
Fellow Australian Minjee Lee, also a major winner, was watching from the side of the green as Kim sunk the winning putt, before running on to spray her with champagne.
Seven-time major winner Karrie Webb and three-time winners Jan Stephenson and Hannah Green also make up the exclusive club.
'I saw there is a picture of Karrie as you walk into the locker room, walking down 18 as well, so seeing that each day is motivating' Kim said.
'Obviously, Minjee's first major was this one and this is now mine as well.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 minutes ago
- Yahoo
CVC kicks off refinancing plan for £9bn portfolio of sports assets
The owner of stakes in Six Nations and Premiership Rugby and the top flights of French and Spanish football is plotting refinancing expected to value its sports portfolio at more than £9bn. Sky News has learnt that CVC Capital Partners has hired Goldman Sachs, PJT Partners and Raine Group to advise on a deal involving SportsCo, a new entity established to optimise the buyout giant's investments in the sector. City sources said this weekend that the refinancing was likely to involve raising new debt against one of the largest private equity-owned sports portfolios in the world. CVC also owns stakes in international volleyball, the women's professional tennis tour and Indian Premier League cricket. Sources said the refinancing would enable CVC to remain invested in its sports portfolio for longer, while also paving the way for the sale of a minority stake in SportsCo or a future initial public offering. Last month, Sky News revealed that Marc Allera, the former boss of mobile phone network EE, had been recruited as chairman of SportsCo. The creation of SportsCo is aimed at providing more cohesive support to CVC's investments across the sector. Having made billions of dollars from its ownership of Formula One motor racing - one of the most lucrative deals in the history of sport - CVC has bought stakes in leagues and other assets spanning cricket, football, rugby union, tennis and volleyball over the last two decades. Its investment in the media rights to La Liga - Spain's equivalent of the Premier League - is expected to generate a handsome return for the firm, although a comparable deal in France has faced significant challenges amid broadcasters' financial challenges in the country. CVC's backing of global sports properties is intended to position it to maximise their commercial potential through new media and sponsorship rights deals, as well as their expansion into new formats aimed at drawing wider audiences amid rapid shifts in media consumption. In rugby union, its acquisition of a stake in Premiership Rugby's commercial rights was hit by the pandemic and the subsequent financial pressures on clubs which saw a number of the league's teams forced into insolvency. CVC, which bought into Premiership Rugby in 2019, owns a 27% stake in the league. Under its stewardship, broadcast audiences and attendances have turned a corner, with total TV audiences up 40% this year - partly as a result of an increase in the number of games being shown. It recently agreed a more lucrative TV rights deal for the league. Sponsorship revenues are also said to have nearly doubled since CVC's initial investment, with fan interest among the crucial 18-34 age demographic rising by 30% during the last year. Its SportsCo strategy will see Mr Allera, who also chaired BT Sport, working across the CVC sports portfolio, with other executives expected to be recruited to assist the effort in due course. One source last month likened the initiative to the approach employed by the luxury goods conglomerate LVMH. They added that there would be parallels with the sharing of best practice used at US basketball's NBA through its TeamBusinessOperations (TeamBO) unit to unlock collective opportunities and drive further long-term growth projects. CVC's sporting assets will continue to remain autonomous and independent of one another. One expected benefit of the SportsCo approach would be the sourcing of new investment opportunities in future years, with another likely to mean CVC remaining a stakeholder in its existing portfolio for a longer duration. SportsCo could be used as an acquisition vehicle for future CVC deals in the industry. The firm was recently outbid in an auction of major tennis tournaments by Ari Emanuel, the Endeavor founder whose company was also the seller of the assets. Global sports properties have become one of the hottest growth areas for private capital in recent years, with firms such as Ares Management, Silver Lake Partners and Bridgepoint all investing substantial sums in teams, leagues and other assets across the industry. CVC could not be reached for comment on Saturday.


Associated Press
3 minutes ago
- Associated Press
British & Irish Lions 27, Australia 19
Brisbane, Australia Suncorp Stadium Saturday British & Irish Lions 27 (Sione Tuipulotu, Tom Curry, Dan Sheehan tries; Finn Russell 3 conversions, penalty, Marcus Smith penalty), Australia 19 (Max Jorgensen, Carlo Tizzano, Tate McDermott tries; Ben Donaldson 2 conversions). HT: 17-5
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
British Open Round 3 tee times: Scottie Scheffler surges ahead at midway point at Royal Portrush
Scottie Scheffler is once again out in front. The top-ranked golfer in the world nearly matched the course record Friday while posting a 7-under 64 at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland. That gave him a one-shot lead over Matt Fitzpatrick and the rest of the field at the midway point of the British Open. Scheffler has been incredibly dominant on the PGA Tour in recent years, though he's yet to win the Claret Jug. If he can pull off that feat this weekend, it'd give him his fourth major victory of his career and his 17th overall Tour win. He'd also be just a U.S. Open win away from completing the career grand slam. Scheffler will go off with Fitzpatrick on Saturday. Fitzpatrick, who held a share of the lead after the opening round, shot a 5-under on Friday to remain in the mix. Brian Harman and Haotong Li will start two back. Round 3 of the British Open will kick off at 4:35 a.m. ET on Saturday. Here's everything you need to keep up with the action on Moving Day. How to watch Round 3 All times ET 5-7 a.m.: USA Network, NBC Sports app 7 a.m. - 3 p.m.: NBC, Peacock, NBC Sports app, Fubo Round 3 tee times All times ET 4:35 a.m. — Matti Schmid, Corey Conners4:45 a.m. — Sepp Straka, Hideki Matsuyama4:55 a.m. — Takumi Kanaya, Adrien Saddier5:05 a.m. —Sebastian Soderberg, Henrik Stenson5:15 a.m. — Thomas Detry, Jacob Skov Olesen5:25 a.m. — Nathan Kimsey, Bryson DeChambeau | Stream on Peacock5:35 a.m. — Maverick McNealy, Thriston Lawrence5:45 a.m. — Justin Leonard, John Parry6 a.m. — Andrew Novak, Sergio Garcia6:10 a.m. — Jesper Svensson, Francesco Molinari6:20 a.m. — Riki Kawamoto, Wyndham Clark6:30 a.m. — Shane Lowry, Jon Rahm | Stream on Peacock6:40 a.m. — JJ Spaun, Dustin Johnson6:50 a.m. — Phil Mickelson, Jhonattan Vegas7 a.m. — Viktor Hovland, Jordan Spieth7:15 a.m. — Russell Henley, Antoine Rozner7:25 a.m. — Romaine Langasque, Daniel Berger7:35 a.m. — Sungjae Im, Dean Burmester7:45 a.m. — Matt Wallace, Akshay Bhatia7:55 a.m. — Jason Kokrak, Lucas Glover8:05 a.m. — Tommy Fleetwood, Justin Thomas8:15 a.m. — Aaron Rai, Rickie Fowler8:30 a.m. — Marc Leishman, Oliver Lindell8:40 a.m. — Ryggs Johnston, Xander Schauffele8:50 a.m. — Kristoffer Reitan, Matthew Jordan9 a.m. — Ludvig Aberg, Justin Rose | Stream on Peacock9:10 a.m — Harry Hall, Christiaan Bezuidenhout9:20 a.m. — Sam Burns, Lee Westwood9:30 a.m. — Jordan Smith, Rory McIlroy9:45 a.m. — Keegan Bradley, Nicolai Hojgaard9:55 a.m. — Tony Finau, Chris Gotterup10:05 a.m. — Harris English, Robert MacIntyre10:15 a.m. — Tyrrell Hatton, Rasmus Hojgaard10:25 a.m. — Brian Harman, Haotong Li10:35 a.m. — Scottie Scheffler, Matt Fitzpatrick | Stream on Peacock