Megan Khang ties Minjee Lee for
Women's Scottish Open lead
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[August 17, 2024]
Megan Khang joined Australian Minjee Lee atop the 36-hole
leaderboard at the ISPS Handa Women's Scottish Open on Friday as a
handful of players began to break from the pack in Ayrshire,
Scotland.
Khang shot her second straight round of 68 and Lee posted a 69 to
get to 8-under 136. They have a two-stroke lead over Lauren Coughlin
(69), New Zealand's Lydia Ko (69) and Englishwoman Charley Hull
(68).
No other player is lower than 3 under for the tournament (Germany's
Esther Henseleit and China's Mary Liu).
Khang, a 26-year-old from Massachusetts, has just one LPGA win to
her name but entered the week No. 27 in points for the season-long
Race to the CME Globe. Khang put up six birdies and two bogeys at
Dundonald Links Friday.
That included a chip-in birdie for the second straight day. Friday's
came at the par-5 third hole, as Khang helpfully put some backspin
on her ball that sent it straight into the cup.
"I was in the mindset of, ‘Let's try to hit it close and make par,'"
Khang said. "Again, you know, hit a really good chip and kind of
bounced back and spun a little back into the hole. So stuff like
that kind of helps you kind of stay within yourself and not get too
frustrated out there. Even though you hit a good tee shot and may
not get the bounce you want, you can always hole out from anywhere,
I guess."
Lee began on the back nine and had her big stretch midway through
her round, making all four of her birdies between Nos. 17 and 3.
"I would love to win and that is what we strive for as players," Lee
said. "But you know, I'm just going to do what I can control, and
obviously I can't control what other people are doing. I'll just try
my very best, and if that happens to be a win, that's great. But if
it doesn't, it's also part of my process, too."
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The tie for third features two players in the top
six of the CME Globe standings. Coughlin is fifth in points after
she earned her first career LPGA win last month at the CPKC Women's
Open. She had a bogey-free round Friday after making pars for her
entire first nine (the back nine).
"I felt just obviously amazing after the win,"
Coughlin said. "But I feel like I still want to do it again and so
I'm thinking about bigger goals and honestly just feeling super
grateful and just trying to keep doing what I'm doing and obviously
it was working. So I'm just not really changing anything."
Ko, who won in January before picking up the gold medal at the
Olympics last week, is sixth in CME Globe points. She shot her
second straight 69 by making four birdies to just one bogey.
"It's a lot of creativity is required when the wind is this much
because I have to hit a 3-wood from 175 (yards), which is normally a
5-iron distance," Ko said. "I think it's kind of out of the ordinary
situations, but you just have to adjust to the situations really
quick."
Hull's card was much busier than her counterparts. She eagled the
par-5 18th (her ninth hole of the day) to go with six birdies and
four bogeys.
Notables to miss the cut of 4 over par included Ally Ewing (6 over),
Moriya Jutanugarn of Thailand (6 over) and Maja Stark of Sweden (7
over).
--Field Level Media
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