logo
Yan and Buhai share lead at LA Championship

Yan and Buhai share lead at LA Championship

Yahoo18-04-2025

Liu Yan of China shared the lead after the first round of the LA Championship (Katelyn Mulcahy)
China's Liu Yan and South Africa's Ashleigh Buhai both shot 9-under par rounds of 63 to share the lead after the first round of the LA Championship on Thursday.
But on a day of low scoring at El Caballero Country Club, Sweden's Frida Kinhult was just a shot off the leading pair and a chasing pack of five were just a further stroke behind.
Advertisement
Liu made a shaky start with a bogey on her opening hold, the par-4 10th, but she was electric from then on making birdies on three of her next four holes before an eagle on the par-5 16th.
She finished her round with three birdies in a row and carded her lowest score on the LPGA Tour.
"I think on my first hole I was a little nervous. I had high expectations for myself and I was nervous," said the 29-year-old, searching for her first win on the LPGA Tour which she joined in 2018.
"I got bogey and before the next hole I told myself, 'You have to be calm and you have to be confident and be brave. You can do it.' I just talked with myself," she said.
Advertisement
Buhai, the 2022 British Open winner, was blemish free through her round, starting with a birdie on the tenth.
"Obviously any day you have a bogey-free round, that's a good day. I was very patient; hit a lot of good shots. I mean, you have to hole a lot of good putts as well. But I felt the pins were in locations we could access them today as long as you use the slopes correctly," she said.
"I feel that's kind of what this course is like. If you hit it into the right bowls you'll get good results; otherwise you can short side yourself very easily and it can't be fun," added the 35-year old.
Kinhult was also bogey-free and finished her round off in style with birdies on each of the last three holes although she accepted she had relied on her putter.
Advertisement
"I guess it was a smooth ride. Saved maybe two or three pars from, I don't know, six, nine footers. Other than that... golf felt easy for once, so hopefully we'll enjoy that ride the next few days as well," she said.
The chasing pack on 7-under includes South Korean trio Jenny Shin, Chun In-gee and Lee Jeong-eun along with China's Miranda Wang and Sweeden's Madelene Sagstrom.
Sagstrom, who tasted victory in the LPGA Match Play event in Las Vegas earlier this month, ended her round with a hole-in-one on the par-3 ninth her first ever ace on the tour.
But with a tight leaderboard, American Nelly Korda, last year's Tour Player of the Year, who racked up seven victories in 2024, was tied for 15th but was just four shots off the lead.
Korda made three bogeys on her round but all of them were three putts after she shit 18 out of 18 greens.
Her round was saved by a streak of four straight birdies on her back nine.
sev/bfm

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Seeking first LPGA Tour victories, Schmelzel and Valenzuela team to take Dow Championship lead
Seeking first LPGA Tour victories, Schmelzel and Valenzuela team to take Dow Championship lead

Fox Sports

time11 hours ago

  • Fox Sports

Seeking first LPGA Tour victories, Schmelzel and Valenzuela team to take Dow Championship lead

Associated Press MIDLAND, Mich. (AP) — Sarah Schmelzel and Albane Valenzuela took the third-round lead Saturday in the Dow Championship, shooting a 2-under 68 in alternate-shot play to move into position for their first LPGA Tour victories. Schmelzel and Valenzuela had a 13-under 197 total at Midland Country Cup heading into the better-ball final round. They opened with an alternate-shot 68 on Thursday and had a best-ball 61 on Friday. 'You're kind of on pins and needles most of the day, just hoping you don't get your partner in trouble,' Schmelzel said. 'Just super solid. I feel like we had really good attitudes throughout the entire day. I think both of us took every single shot as it came.' The teams of Jin Hee Im-Somi Lee (68) and Manon De Roey-Pauline Roussin-Bouchard (69) were a stroke back. 'I'm very proud of us,' De Roey said. 'We hung in there. We fought until the end.' Jennifer Kupcho and Leona Maguire, the second-round leaders after a 60, birdied the final two holes for a 72 that left them tied for fourth at 11 under with Lauren Hartlage-Brooke Matthews (66) and Sung Hyun Park-Ina Yoon (67) . Kupcho won in 2022 with Lizette Salas. 'Just try and go low and try and post a number early and see what happens.' Maguire said. 'I think it was nice to see two putts go in at the end.' Lexi Thompson-Meghan Kang (68) and Rio Takeda-Miyu Yamashita (67) were 10 under. Defending champions Ruoning Yin and Jeeno Thitikul, both among the top five in the women's world ranking, were 9 under after a 67. Schmelzel and Valenzuela parred the final seven holes. They had four birdies and two bogeys in the round. 'I feel like we had a really good day,' Valenzuela said. 'Our goal in foursomes was just to get a couple under or maybe a little bit better. We had a few mistakes, and that's going to happen in this format. We also did a lot of really good stuff.' ___ AP golf:

Sarah Schmelzel, Albane Valenzuela, both winless on tour, lead LPGA's team event
Sarah Schmelzel, Albane Valenzuela, both winless on tour, lead LPGA's team event

NBC Sports

time11 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

Sarah Schmelzel, Albane Valenzuela, both winless on tour, lead LPGA's team event

Watch the best moments from the second round of the 2025 Dow Championship at Michigan's Midland Country Club. MIDLAND, Mich. — Sarah Schmelzel and Albane Valenzuela took the third-round lead Saturday in the Dow Championship, shooting a 2-under 68 in alternate-shot play to move into position for their first LPGA Tour victories. Schmelzel and Valenzuela had a 13-under 197 total at Midland Country Cup heading into the better-ball final round. They opened with an alternate-shot 68 on Thursday and had a best-ball 61 on Friday. 'You're kind of on pins and needles most of the day, just hoping you don't get your partner in trouble,' Schmelzel said. 'Just super solid. I feel like we had really good attitudes throughout the entire day. I think both of us took every single shot as it came.' The teams of Jin Hee Im-Somi Lee (68) and Manon De Roey-Pauline Roussin-Bouchard (69) were a stroke back. 'I'm very proud of us,' De Roey said. 'We hung in there. We fought until the end.' Jennifer Kupcho and Leona Maguire, the second-round leaders after a 60, birdied the final two holes for a 72 that left them tied for fourth at 11 under with Lauren Hartlage-Brooke Matthews (66) and Sung Hyun Park-Ina Yoon (67) . Kupcho won in 2022 with Lizette Salas. 'Just try and go low and try and post a number early and see what happens.' Maguire said. 'I think it was nice to see two putts go in at the end.' Lexi Thompson-Meghan Kang (68) and Rio Takeda-Miyu Yamashita (67) were 10 under. Defending champions Ruoning Yin and Jeeno Thitikul, both among the top five in the women's world ranking, were 9 under after a 67. Schmelzel and Valenzuela parred the final seven holes. They had four birdies and two bogeys in the round. 'I feel like we had a really good day,' Valenzuela said. 'Our goal in foursomes was just to get a couple under or maybe a little bit better. We had a few mistakes, and that's going to happen in this format. We also did a lot of really good stuff.'

Lynch: Dusting off, reinventing a long-forgotten event could boost both PGA Tour and LPGA
Lynch: Dusting off, reinventing a long-forgotten event could boost both PGA Tour and LPGA

USA Today

time16 hours ago

  • USA Today

Lynch: Dusting off, reinventing a long-forgotten event could boost both PGA Tour and LPGA

As incoming leaders of organizations that face significant challenges, Brian Rolapp and Craig Kessler — respectively, CEO of PGA Tour Enterprises and commissioner of the LPGA Tour — will, by necessity, take a heuristic approach to problem solving, choosing pragmatic solutions since perfect options don't exist. Rolapp's tasks include stalled negotiations with the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, right-sizing the schedule and eligibility amid player opposition, and delivering a return for the investors of Strategic Sports Group, who hand-picked him for the job. And Kessler ... well, he'll have lots of burdens when he assumes his role in a couple of weeks. Too little revenue, too few resources, securing sponsors, adjusting schedules, monetizing media rights, all while the Saudis lurk for a chance to leverage the LPGA for sportswashing and players who'd happily allow them to do so. Hazarding a guess at the landscape either man will preside over a couple of years hence calls to mind a pithy line from the late management theorist Peter Drucker, who likened trying to predict the future to driving down a country road at night with no lights while looking out the back window. But Drucker also said that the best way to predict the future is to create it. While Rolapp and Kessler will work their own sides of the street, there's a way in which they can be useful to each other. Since Rolapp is only nominally a golfer and Kessler is barely out of short pants by the silvery standards of golf administrators, neither may be familiar with the World Cup, an artifact of a bygone era that has long languished in the vaults of Ponte Vedra. A two-man team competition, it began as the Canada Cup in 1953 and for a half-century was a missionary vehicle for the sport, contested in disparate places like Argentina, Thailand, Venezuela, Greece, the Philippines, and China, and in underdeveloped regions like South Carolina and Florida. It was staged sporadically after 2009, and not at all since 2018. (A women's version existed from '05-'08). The World Cup is technically owned by the long-dormant International Golf Association, but it gave the PGA Tour perpetual license to operate the event. In a ranking of Rolapp's priorities, resurrecting the World Cup probably ranks below taking emergency lessons at the TPC Sawgrass Performance Center but well above replying to the latest filing by Justine Reed's attorney of the week. But therein lies an opportunity. 'My goal as CEO is to honor golf's traditions but not be overly bound by them,' he wrote in an open letter on the day of his appointment. The World Cup has tradition, albeit largely forgotten, but it has potential, if the Tour chooses to rethink the value of a shelved asset. A template worth imitating was on display last month at Congaree Golf Club in the Palmer Cup, which pits the best college players in the United States against their International counterparts. Unlike other team events, the Palmer Cup has men and women partner in an alternate shot format. Thus, Tour-bound Jackson Koivun played with Kiara Romero, and World No. 2-ranked amateur Mirabel Ting paired with Justin Hastings, the Latin America Amateur champion. The World Cup should be reimagined as a mixed team tournament with the PGA and LPGA tours' best playing best ball and alternate shot formats. The advantages for the LPGA Tour are obvious. Instead of continuing a chicken/egg debate about how to draw new eyeballs to the weekly product, it presents a fresh product to new eyeballs by partnering with the guys on a prominent stage that isn't a silly season hit and giggle. Doing so can help organically grow fan interest and support for women's golf by giving it equal billing in a competitive environment. (It would also demolish the lingering prejudice — still popular among the crypto-incel fraternity — that the skills of the top women can't compare to those of the men.) But this wouldn't be just a feel-good giveaway for the PGA Tour. Rolapp has global ambitions, and Ponte Vedra needs products that will aid international expansion into markets both robust and emerging. The Presidents Cup won't serve that end. It's held too infrequently, too many top players are ineligible, too few top players are willing to travel far afield in the fall, it's too much a facsimile of the more popular Ryder Cup, its venues are too commercially safe and convenient, with the last international match held within walking distance of the U.S. border. Having countries field teams comprised of their best man and woman in a reinvented World Cup — operated by the PGA Tour, the LPGA and the DP World Tour — would be a more promising, progressive and portable vehicle for international growth in golf's less traveled precincts, and create opportunities to stage adjacent events around the tournament. And as a fresh new product, it might also enable Rolapp to test the market for streaming services globally. There are challenging times ahead for Rolapp and Kessler, and they're certainly not obligated to elevate each other's business. But there exists an opportunity to do so while advancing their individual agendas and improving the lot of the entire sport. They ought to heed Drucker's caution that the greatest danger in times of turbulence isn't the turbulence itself, but the tendency to act with yesterday's logic.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store