Allisen Corpuz finally sees results
and shares Boston lead on LPGA
[August 29, 2025]
NORTON, Mass. (AP) — Allisen Corpuz kept her patience while
spinning her wheels for so much of the year and finally saw some
good results Thursday when she opened the FM Championship with a
7-under 65 to share the first-round lead with Sei Young Kim and
fast-closing Jodi Ewart Shadoff.
Corpuz had four birdies on her last six holes at the TPC Boston,
holing a 10-foot birdie putt on the par-4 ninth to catch Kim, who
played in calmer conditions in the morning.
Shadoff was the last to finish, and she did so in style with four
straight birdies.
“Holed a lot of putts outside 20 feet, so that definitely helps. And
then the last four just good ball striking and some really nice
putts,” Ewart Shadoff said.
Nelly Korda switched putters to more of a blade and saw it pay off
with seven birdies in a round of 67 in her debut on the TPC Boston
course that previously hosted one of the four PGA Tour postseason
events.
Corpuz has only one LPGA victory and it was a big one — the U.S.
Women's Open at Pebble Beach two years ago. She had a pair of top
10s early in the year, including a third in the Ford Championship in
Phoenix in late March. That was her last top 10.

“Just feel like golf is such a funny game,” Corpuz said. “Even if it
hasn’t been the results that I wanted to see, it’s just felt really,
really close all season. It was a good start to the season and kind
of just feel like things are starting to turn the corner a bit.”
Kim played in the morning when the weather was slightly cooler and
she wondered if that would make the course play longer with the golf
ball not flying as much. But she birdied three of the par 5s until
having to settle for a par on the closing hole that has a large
ditch in front of the green and big swales around it.
That's what tripped up Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand in her second week
since returning to No. 1 in the women's world ranking. She blasted a
tee shot down the right side, but her approach on the par-5 18th
missed left and went down that steep slope. Her first pitch came up
short and rolled back to her feet, and the Thai took a bogey for a
69.
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Atthaya Thitikul, of Thailand, reacts after a putt from Hannah
Green, of Australia, on the eighth green during the first round of
the FM Championship LPGA golf tournament at TPC Boston, Thursday,
Aug. 28, 2025, in Norton, Mass. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)

Two stories have been in play all year on the LPGA
— 22 consecutive tournaments to start the year with different
winners at each one, and Korda not winning any of them. Korda is
coming off a seven-win 2024 and only two weeks ago lost the No. 1
ranking to Thitikul.
Her 67 left her in a log jam of players tied for third that included
Women's PGA champion Minjee Lee, Celine Boutier, Andrea Lee and
Gurleen Kaur, the LPGA rookie who had to go through Monday
qualifying to get into the field.
Korda said the Florida courses where she lives aren't in the best
shape in the hot summer, so she wasn't sure what she thought of the
putter at home. But she took it to Canada, liked how it felt and
kept it in the bag. It's a similar model to the one she was using
last year.
“Just something new,” Korda said, who also went with a different
grip on the putter. “I knew I had so much success with that kind of
putter and felt confident with it. Just needed to feel something
different."
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