Vu triumphs in playoff to win maiden major title at Chevron Championship
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[April 24, 2023]
(Reuters) -American Lilia Vu beat compatriot Angel Yin in a
playoff to collect her maiden major title at the Chevron
Championship on Sunday, taming a challenging and unfamiliar course
at the Club at Carlton Woods near Houston.
Vu started the day four shots back but marched up the leaderboard
with five birdies - including two on 17 and 18 - and one bogey,
carding a four-under par 68 for a winning total of 10-under 278.
She waited nervously on the sidelines as previous leader Yin (72)
let the affair slip to a tiebreak with a pair of late bogeys.
Yin did not put up much of a fight in the playoff as her second shot
hit the water and Vu, who collected her first title on the tour at
the Honda LPGA Thailand in February, held her nerve to drain a long
birdie putt for the win.
"I can't even put into words what I was feeling - I was nervous, I
was scared, I was cold," Vu said in a televised interview
"I just wanted to hit the putt."
The 25-year-old, who had considered quitting the sport only a few
years ago, was overcome with emotion after securing the win and said
it was validation for the struggles she faced in her career.
"Everything happens for a reason, all the bad things," said Vu.
"I had a pretty tough - not easy - past two days. I was definitely
my own enemy and I don't know how I pulled this out."
It was bitter disappointment for Yin, who started the day at the top
of the leaderboard with compatriot Allisen Corpuz (74) and had the
outright lead through 13 with a near-flawless performance at the
Jack Nicklaus designed layout.
But the victory slipped through her fingers as she hit the bunker on
16 and 17, bogeying both holes, and she never regained her nerve for
the playoff.
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Apr 21, 2023; The Woodlands, Texas, USA;
Lilia Vu (USA) drives off the 17th tee during the second round of
The Chevron Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Thomas
Shea-USA TODAY Sports
"Just wasn't hitting it very good. Honestly, I held
it together, and then 16 and 17 really just was like bad club
decision," said Yin.
"Obviously in the playoff hole, I just didn't hit a good shot. It
just kind of spoke a lot about today."
Players adapted to fresh territory at the year's first women's
major, as the tournament kicked off in a new home after some five
decades at Mission Country Club in Palm Springs.
American Nelly Korda drained an eagle putt on 18 to finish third,
one shot back, after missing the tournament a year ago following
surgery for a blood clot in her arm.
The Olympic champion and 2021 Women's PGA Championship winner will
retake the top of the world rankings after Sunday.
"Every single time I can finish well at a major, put myself into
contention, that's what I strive to do," she told reporters.
"I have a lot to work on, but for it to be the first major of the
year, I think I played pretty well, and hopefully I can build on
it."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York; Editing by Toby Davis, Shri
Navaratnam and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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