Tearful Park claims Women's PGA Championship in playoff
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[July 02, 2018]
(Reuters) - South Korean Park
Sung-hyun won her second major title when she overcame compatriot
Ryu So-yeon and Japan's Nasa Hataoka in a three-way playoff at the
Women's PGA Championship outside Chicago on Sunday.
Less than a year after capturing the U.S. Women's Open, the
sweet-swinging Park doubled her major tally when she sank a 10-foot
birdie putt at the second extra hole to edge Ryu at Kemper Lakes in
Kildeer, Illinois.
The normally stoic 24-year-old burst into tears when victory was
secured as she hugged her caddie David Jones after barely displaying
a hint of emotion all day.
Park and Ryu birdied the first extra hole to eliminate Hataoka, who
had threatened to steal a stunning victory when she came from nine
strokes behind with a closing eight-under-par 64.
Hataoka waited in the clubhouse for a couple of hours to see whether
her 10-under 278 total would be enough for the 19-year-old to claim
a maiden major triumph.
However, the total was matched by Park, who carded a closing 69,
while overnight leader Ryu joined them by carding a battling 73 in
strong and gusty winds which made club selection little more than
guesswork at times.
The trio finished three shots clear of the chasing pack.
"It's been a tough year for me with five missed cuts. I think all
the work I've done has paid off today. That's what really made me
cry," Park told reporters. "I can't still believe that I'm sitting
right next to this trophy."
Earlier, Ryu, also a winner of two majors, seemed likely to complete
the third leg of a career grand slam when she led by two strokes
with two holes remaining in regulation.
Those hopes were dashed when she made double-bogey at the par-three
17th after finding water with her seven-iron tee shot, the Korean
admitting she had trouble gauging what club to use in the
fluctuating wind.
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Sung Hyun Park poses with the trophy after winning the KPMG Women's
PGA Championshipgolf tournament
at Kemper Lakes Golf Club.
Mandatory Credit: Brian Spurlock-USA TODAY Sports
Park and Ryu both missed good birdie chances at the final hole of
regulation but proved quick learners at the same par-four to start
the playoff.
After Ryu banged in a 15-foot birdie from the fringe, Park matched
her from nine feet to send the Korean pair to the par-four 16th.
Play was briefly interrupted by nearby lightning after they had hit
their approach shots but it proved merely a stay of execution for
Ryu, who said she did not know the reticent Park that well.
"I guess she's very shy, and I know because she's not really
comfortable with the language in the U.S. and because of that she's
not really speaking much on the golf course," Ryu said.
"But at the same time, even speaking in Korean, she's not really
talking much. I never really had a chance to get to know her, but on
the golf course I know she always wants to play her A-game."
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by John
O'Brien)
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