Xiyu Lin, Hyo Joo Kim hold early lead at U.S. Women's Open
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[July 07, 2023]
Xiyu "Janet" Lin of China set the pace early and Hyo Joo Kim
of South Korea joined her by the end of the day, forging a tie for
the lead at 4-under-par 68 after one round of the U.S. Women's Open
on Thursday at Pebble Beach (Calif.) Golf Links.
Lin, the World No. 9, is the highest-ranked player without a win on
the LPGA Tour. Her counterpart, Kim, is ranked No. 8 in the world
and won her first and only major title at the 2014 Evian
Championship.
They held a one-shot lead over six players tied at 3-under 69,
including 21-year-old Irish amateur Aine Donegan. She was joined
there by Leona Maguire of Ireland, Nasa Hataoka of Japan, South
Korea's Hae Ran Ryu, Bailey Tardy and Allisen Corpuz.
Two more amateurs -- Italy's Benedetta Moresco, 21, and Amari Avery,
19 -- were part of a tie for ninth at 2-under 70.
Lin stayed in great form after finishing tied for third at the KPMG
Women's PGA Championship two weeks ago.
"I feel like when you're on a good run, you better just get
something out of it," Lin said.
She started on the back nine and made her first two birdies at the
par-4 15th and par-5 18th holes, the latter on a 30 1/2-foot putt.
She added birdies at Nos. 2, 4 and 6, and her only bogey came at her
closing hole, No. 9.
Then Kim went out in the afternoon wave and piled up four birdies
over her first eight holes before taking a step back with a bogey at
No. 9. She stayed at 3 under until the par-3 17th, where her 20
1/2-foot birdie putt fell to make her a co-leader again.
"I was quite concerned about the front nine, but I was able to do a
good job," Kim said. "Then the back nine I had some risky stretches,
but I was able to make par each time, and I'm very satisfied with my
overall performance to the end."
Donegan had led for part of the morning wave before Lin passed her.
In her major debut, the LSU student finished with five birdies, four
bogeys and one eagle.
She started her round on the back nine with consecutive bogeys
before holing out from 96 yards for eagle at the par-4 15th hole.
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"Hit a driver down 15 and I had about 96 to the pin
and my coach said, ‘Just play it a little bit right of the pin.' ...
I hit the shot and I knew it was going to be good," Donegan said.
"Then it bounced, bounced, and kind of spins back and it just drops
in."
Donegan's clubs did not arrive in California from overseas until
Tuesday. When they finally did, she discovered her driver was
"completely smashed." She had to use a substitute Ping driver.
"Honestly I am delighted I did," she said. "It's
like everything happens for a reason, that the clubs were late and
then the driver came and it was broken and all of a sudden I have no
choice but to put this Ping driver in."
Her countrywoman, Maguire, birdied two of her final four holes to
move to 3 under. She is playing for the first time since squandering
a 54-hole lead at the Women's PGA Championship.
The champion there, China's Ruoning Yin, posted a 1-under 71
Thursday to start her week at the third major of the women's golf
season.
The U.S. Women's Open is offering up a record $11 million purse,
with $2 million to the winner. It also marks the first modern-era
women's major at Pebble Beach, which stumped some of the best
players in the world early on. World No. 1 Jin Young Ko of South
Korea shot a 7-over 79 and World No. 2 Nelly Korda was at 4-over 76.
Heralded rookie Rose Zhang was 2 under through seven holes but made
a double bogey at the par-4 eighth and finished with a 2-over 74.
One of her playing partners fared better than the other: Canadian
Brooke Henderson birdied two of her last three to shoot 71, while
World No. 3 Lydia Ko of New Zealand had a 76.
Michelle Wie West, in the final event of her playing career, opened
with a 79.
--Field Level Media
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