Marina Alex out in front at
inaugural FM Championship
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[August 30, 2024]
Marina Alex carded a bogey-free, 4-under-par 68 to take the
lead after one round of the inaugural FM Championship on Thursday at
TPC Boston in Norton, Mass.
After she started her round on the back nine, Alex's final birdie
came at the par-5 seventh hole, breaking her out of a nine-way tie
at 3 under. She finished her day with two pars to maintain that
one-stroke edge at a course that formerly hosted PGA Tour events.
"I really like the course," Alex said. "Playing the practice rounds,
I felt like it set up well for my golf game, and it's dried out a
little bit even from Tuesday and yesterday, so that's kind of
helping me off the tee just get a little bit more distance.
"Just felt like it wasn't so long that I was hitting long clubs in.
I'm not the longest hitter, so being able to hit wedges and short
irons despite the firmness of greens was helpful, and I managed my
game really well today."
The 34-year-old from New Jersey is a two-time winner on the LPGA
Tour, hoisting trophies in 2018 and 2022. She has slipped to No. 121
in the world rankings and has missed four cuts in her past six
starts.
"It's just kind of really trying to be patient and waiting for the
opportunity to show up," Alex said. "A lot of times you're trying to
force it, make that good round happen every week, every day. That's
the goal. You want to play good. Sometimes trying to hit a perfect
shot or trying to do things when maybe you should just be accepting
of par is better than forcing the issue."
The eight players left at 3-under 69 included Allisen Corpuz and
Lauren Coughlin, who were recently confirmed as members of the
upcoming U.S. Solheim Cup team. Early in the day, Coughlin shot
4-under 32 on her front nine and stayed right at 4 under until
bogeying the par-5 closing hole.
"Disappointing bogey there at the last, but overall played really
well," Coughlin said. "Made a lot of really good putts on the front
nine. Greens were getting really firm and some of them aren't very
deep, and so was kind of glad I got some on the front nine down and
done in the beginning of the day."
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Coughlin will be one of just two Solheim Cup
rookies on the U.S. team. She qualified on the back of her breakout
2024 season, which has featured two LPGA tournament titles this
summer in Canada and Scotland.
"I remember after Canada I was like, ‘I want to do
it again,' so I was just thinking, ‘Keep doing what I'm doing, don't
change anything,'" Coughlin said. "That's kind of been my whole
thing."
Of the eight players at 3-under 69, only Robyn Choi of Australia
went bogey-free. Also tied there are Yealimi Noh, Haeran Ryu of
South Korea, Nicole Broch Estrup of Denmark, Jeeno Thitikul of
Thailand and Yuri Yoshida of Japan.
Lexi Thompson and Sarah Schmelzel -- named two of Stacy Lewis'
captain's picks for the Solheim Cup team earlier this week -- shot
2-under 70, as did Megan Khang, a Boston-area native. Khang
recovered from one early bogey and posted three birdies, including
on two of her final three holes.
"Starting out it's always a little nerve-wracking playing in front
of a home crowd, but trying to take that nervous energy to excited
to hopefully give the home crowd something to root for," Khang said.
Three players -- the group of Sandra Gal of Germany (3 over), Agathe
Laisne of France (3 over) and Muni He of China (7 over) -- have two
holes left to finish Friday morning after their rounds were
suspended due to darkness.
--Field Level Media
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