THURSDAY, March 28, 2024
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LIU, BOUTIER LEAD U.S. WOMEN’S OPEN BY ONE STROKE HEADING TO FINAL ROUND

LIU, BOUTIER LEAD U.S. WOMEN’S OPEN BY ONE STROKE HEADING TO FINAL ROUND

Sunday’s final group at the U.S. Women’s Open will be a sea of Duke Royal Blue. French-Thai Celine Boutier and Chinese Yu Liu, close friends who won the 2014 NCAA Women’s Golf National Championship for Duke University, jumped to the top of a crowded U.S. Women’s Open leaderboard at -7.

LIU, BOUTIER LEAD U.S. WOMEN’S OPEN BY ONE STROKE HEADING TO FINAL ROUND

Yu Liu / LPGA Photo 

Liu, a native of Beijing who now lives in Florida, three-putted for bogey at No. 3 but immediately got back on track with birdies at holes 5 and 6. The 23-year-old dropped in four more birdies over her closing 10 holes, including a rare birdie at the difficult par-3 No. 11, to shoot 66, tied for the lowest round of the day. She could become the first player, male or female, from the People’s Republic of China to win a major championship and just the second Chinese winner on the LPGA Tour.

“I think this is something that's really out of my expectations because it's only my first ever U.S. Open. I was just happy to make the cut and being able to play the weekends. But now it's something that I didn't really expect,” said Liu, who played in the final round of the 2019 Bank of Hope Founders Cup, where she bogeyed the final hole to drop out of a potential playoff. “Definitely just trying to embrace the moment, playing with my great friend, possibly on the last group tomorrow. It's going to be a lot of fun.”

Boutier carded birdies at Nos. 5, 9 and 13 to pull two strokes clear of the field, but a three-putt bogey at No. 14 dropped her into a tie for the lead. In February, Boutier became the fourth Frenchwoman to win an LPGA Tour event when she captured the ISPS Handa Vic Open. Move ahead to Charleston and the 25-year-old could become the second U.S. Women’s Open winner from France, joining 1967 winner Catherine Lacoste.

“Honestly, everything was going well. I feel like I was hitting the ball pretty good and pretty straight,” said Boutier, who now lives in Dallas. “Then when I was missing a couple of greens, my short game was there to save me. I feel like all around, my game was pretty solid.”

The former college teammates are looking to give Duke University its second U.S. Women’s Open title, joining 2016 champion Brittany Lang.

A trio of players sit one stroke off the lead. Americans Lexi Thompson and Jaye Marie Green shot matching 68s on Thursday, while 18- and 36-hole leader Mamiko Higa shot her second consecutive even-par 71. Defending champion Ariya Jutanugarn shot her best round of the championship with a 69 on Saturday and is tied for 27th.  

WITH A WIN…

Celine Boutier would become the third major champion from France, joining Catherine Lacoste (1967 U.S. Women’s Open) and Patricia Meunier-Lebouc (2003 ANA Inspiration)

Yu Liu would become the second LPGA winner from the People’s Republic of China, joining nine-time winner Shanshan Feng

Celine Boutier or Yu Liu would become the second U.S. Women’s Open winner from Duke University, joining 2016 winner Brittany Lang

Yu Liu or Jaye Marie Green would become the season’s third Rolex First-Time winner, joining Celine Boutier (ISPS Handa Vic Open) and Bronte Law (Pure Silk Championship)

Lexi Thompson would earn her second major title, joining the 2014 ANA Inspiration

With the $1 million winner’s check, Lexi Thompson would move to $9,844,805 in career earnings and jump to 17th on the Career Money List

Lexi Thompson, who won the 2008 U.S. Girls’ Junior, would become the second consecutive past champion to win the U.S. Women’s Open, following 2011 Girls’ Junior champion Ariya Jutanugarn; five other players have won both titles – Amy Alcott, JoAnne Carner, Inbee Park, Hollis Stacy and Mickey Wright

Lexi Thompson or Jaye Marie Green would become the first American winner of the U.S. Women’s Open since Brittany Lang in 2016 and just the fourth American winner in the last 10 years

Mamiko Higa would become the first U.S. Women’s Open winner from Japan and the second Japanese major winner, joining Chako Higuchi, who won the 1977 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Bay Tree Golf Plantation, also in South Carolina

THOMPSON USING NEW CLAW PUTTING STROKE

All eyes this week have been on Lexi Thompson’s new putting stroke. On Wednesday, the 10-time LPGA Tour winner visited with her brother Curtis Thompson to tinker with her putting stroke. She eventually settled on a claw grip, which is clearly working for the 24-year-old Floridian.

“It feels very good,” said Thompson, who drained a 30-foot eagle putt at No. 15 to jump up the leaderboard. “Obviously, there's some putts out there that I'm like, eh, maybe not so good. But I feel comfortable with it, and I think that's the important part.”

With a win, Thompson would extend her streak of consecutive years with an LPGA Tour victory to seven. She has won at least one event since 2013, the longest active streak on the LPGA Tour.

GREEN RELYING ON BROTHER, A HIGHER POWER AND EVEN BROOKS KOEPKA

Jaye Marie Green has an ichthus tattooed on her right arm, displaying her faith through the symbol closely associated with Christianity. With faith on her arm and close friendship at her side via her brother and caddie Matt, Green finds herself in a good state of mind as she heads into perhaps the most pressure-packed day of her six-year LPGA Tour career, just one stroke off the lead at the U.S. Women’s Open.

“Who am I kidding? I've never been this close in a major before,” said Green, who missed the cut in her last four consecutive events leading into the U.S. Women’s Open. “I felt this calmness that I've never felt before. I think God's blessed me with that because I'm usually a nervous wreck sometimes. But I just feel -- I feel calm. I feel like my game plan has been working, so I'm not going to change it.”

Green pointed to a specific moment on Thursday with her brother as a big turning point in this week’s play. At No. 8 on Thursday, Matt Green told his sister something he’d heard from four-time major champion Brooks Koepka. She needed to putt like a child again.

“He told me that Brooks Koepka was talking about how he putts the same as when he was younger,” said Green, who had only made one previous cut in her five Women’s Open appearances. “My brother said, Jaye, you don't even look like you putting. I'm like, okay, what did I used to do? So he kind of told me, and that just freed me up because under the gun you've got to go to what you know, and what I know is how I was when I was younger. So I just kind of tried to recreate that, and it's helped a lot. I at least feel better over the putter, because I had the shakes so bad the first day.

KOERSTZ MADSEN ENJOYING BREAKTHROUGH MAJOR WEEK

This week’s U.S. Women’s Open marks Nanna Koerstz Madsen’s 10th major appearance. She quickly jumped to success at the AIG Women’s British Open, shooting a final-round 65 at the 2015 championship en route to a tie for 21st and followed that up with a T37 showing in 2016.

But since that week at England’s Woburn Golf and Country Club, Koerstz Madsen has hit a major drought. The 24-year-old from Denmark missed the cut in six consecutive major appearances, including in her U.S. Women’s Open debut in 2017, before finishing T66 at this year’s ANA Inspiration.

Now in her second season on the LPGA Tour, Koerstz Madsen seems to be hitting her stride on the golf course. She has only missed one cut in 2019 and played in the final group of the HUGEL-AIR PREMIA LA Open before finishing 13th. Today’s 66 at the Country Club of Charleston, sparked by a 56-foot eagle at No. 15, pulled Koerstz Madsen yet again into contention heading into the final round.

“It's exciting. I like being in this position,” said Koerstz Madsen, who credited her difficult final-round 76 in Los Angeles as a great learning experience. “I'm just happy to be here and I feel like my game is pretty solid and I'm confident in my game. So, yeah, I'm just excited for tomorrow, and I like going and playing tomorrow.”

NO. 11 CONTINUES TO CHALLENGE USWO FIELD

As expected, No. 11 kept the players on their toes on Saturday. Through 54 holes, the hole has allowed 29 birdies, along with 134 bogeys, 28 double bogeys and five scores worse than double bogey. The hole’s scoring average is 3.4607, making it one of the most difficult par-3s in championship history. In 2012, the 13th hole at Blackwolf Run played to 3.47, while No. 5 at Pine Needles Lodge and Country Club in 1996 played to 3.44.

SECOND-ROUND COMPLETED ON SATURDAY MORNING

Second-round play resumed at 7:15 a.m. due to an extended weather delay on Friday, with 45 players yet to complete their rounds. The cut came at +3, with 70 players reaching the last two rounds. Notables to miss the cut include 2018 runner-up Hyo-Joo Kim (+7); major champions Paula Creamer (+4), Shanshan Feng (+5), Danielle Kang(+5), Jiyai Shin (+6), Pernilla Lindberg (+6), Karrie Webb (+8), Cristie Kerr (+8), Stacy Lewis (+10), Georgia Hall (+11), In Gee Chun (+11), Na Yeon Choi (+12) and Laura Davies (+21); and Emma Talley (+5), who won the 2013 U.S. Women’s Amateur at the Country Club of Charleston.

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