
Minjee Lee has 1st bogey-free round at windy Women's PGA to take 4-shot lead into final day
FRISCO, Texas — Minjee Lee knows how to play in windy conditions having growing up in Australia and now living in North Texas. She also has experience winning majors.
The two-time major champion is in position for another one after the first bogey-free round for anyone during the wind-swept KPMG Women's PGA Championship. Her 3-under 69 in the third round Saturday pushed her into the lead, four strokes ahead of Jeeno Thitikul.
'I'm constantly practicing in windy conditions ... It is windy, but not this windy, and it's really consistent as well,' Lee said. 'Yes, I can hit a knock-down shot, but you also have to play the wind. You have to play so much extra out here that you have to be a little more creative.'
Lee was at 6-under 210 after beginning the round three strokes behind Thitikul, the world's No. 2-ranked player who led alone at the end of each of the first two days. Lee went ahead to stay with a 2-foot par at the 405-yard 12th hole when Thitikul had her second consecutive bogey, and fourth of the day on way to a round of 76.
'She played absolutely an `A' game for sure,' Thitikul said. 'I never saw her miss today at all.'
When Lee did miss, she was 7-for-7 scrambling.
Far from tree-lined Sahalee outside Seattle where the Women's PGA was last year, Fields Ranch East at PGA Frisco is much more open and exposed to the ever-present Texas wind that was the strongest it had been all week. There were gusts of more than 30 mph Saturday, with much the same forecast for Sunday. Temperatures were again in the mid-90s.
Nelly Korda, the world's top-ranked player, described the conditions as 'just brutal' after her round of 72 that began with back-to-back bogeys. She finished with five birdies and five bogeys and is tied for sixth at 2-over 218.
Lee and Thitikul, seeking her first major title, were the only players still under par and will play together again Sunday. Lexi Thompson (75), after a triple-bogey start , was tied for third at 1 over with Hye Jin Choi (72) and Miyu Yamashita (73).
Thitikul, from Thailand, had the only birdie Saturday among the 78 players on the 172-yard, par-3 eighth hole, which generally plays downwind and where only 29% of the tee shots all week have stayed on the green. That 13-foot birdie was her first of the day and got her to 5 under, two strokes ahead of Lee.
But Thitikul's lead was gone after back-to-back bogeys on the back side. She pushed a 4-foot par chance past the hole at the 383-yard 11th, her first miss inside 5 feet this week. Then her drive at the 417-yard 12th hole went way right into a penalty area.
Lee, who won the 2022 U.S. Women's Open and 2021 Evian Championship in France, was steady Saturday with eight consecutive pars before a 4-foot birdie at the 487-yard ninth hole. Her other birdies were an 18-footer at the 515-yard, par-5 14th and a 1 1/2-foot at the bunker-surrounded 236-yard par 4 15th hole.
While acknowledging that a four-stroke lead 'feels really big,' Lee isn't taking anything for granted.
'Obviously, major Sunday is a different story. This is round three, so I think, you know, I have to still dig deep and post a score, even with a four-shot lead,' she said. 'So I'm just going to put my head down and just work on the things that I can do and do it to the best of my ability.'
Thitikul three-putt from 50 feet at No. 14 was her third bogey in a four-hole stretch.
'Definitely frustrated about the result today a little bit, like not really making putts like the first two days,' Thitikul said. 'But like still on the positive side that, just two players making under par after three rounds, and I'm one.'
Semi-retired Thompson, in the second-to-last group, hit her tee shot into the fairway on the 517-yard par-5 first hole, a 207-yard drive into the wind. But she topped her second shot that went only 117 yards, then shanked her next shot right, a ball that was never found for a penalty on way to triple bogey. She followed with another bogey on the second hole, but had two birdies and only one bogey the rest of the way.
Thompson, playing for only the seventh time in 16 tournaments this season, won her only major in the 2014 Kraft Nabisco Championship, but her 13 top-five finishes in majors since 2013 are the most by any player and among her 20 top-10 finishes in those events.
LPGA rookie Rio Takeda opened with a bogey 6 at the first hole after starting the round tied with with Lee for second place. Takeda later had a pair of double bogeys/
Grace Kim had the best round of the day with a 68 that included six birdies and two bogeys, moving up from a tie for 68th to tied for 10th. Minjee Lee and Andrea (71) had the only other under-par rounds. Kim, among 11 players who got to the weekend right on the 7-over cut, teed off at 6:55 a.m. local time, six hours before the final group did.
There was even a hole-in-one, Brianna Do acing the 150-yard fourth hole.
___
AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
6 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Rocket Classic purse: How much can PGA Tour golfers make?
USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change. A crowded leaderboard and plenty of golfers already going low should make for an exciting final round of the PGA Tour's Rocket Classic at Detroit Golf Club. Entering play on Sunday, 20-year-old South African Aldrich Potgieter was the leader by two strokes over Max Greyserman and four others, with 19 other golfers within four strokes of second place. Two-time major champion Collin Morikawa is lurking four shots back in a tie for 10th. Advertisement Potgeiter carded a 7-under 65 on Saturday to move to the front of the pack and reclaim the lead he held after shooting an opening-round 62. He is looking for his first PGA Tour victory, though he did prevail in a Korn Ferry Tour event last year. LIVE SCORES: PGA Tour's Rocket Classic How to watch Rocket Classic Round 4 Follow final-round action Sunday, June 29, from Detroit Golf Club on Golf Channel, CBS and various streaming platforms. TV: Golf Channel (1-3 p.m. ET), CBS (3-6 p.m. ET) Streaming: ESPN+, Paramount+, Fubo Aldrich Potgieter began the final round of the 2025 Rocket Classic with a two-stroke advantage at Detroit Golf Club. Rocket Classic purse, payouts The total purse for the PGA Tour's Rocket Classic at Detroit Golf Club is $9.6 million, with $1.728 million going to the winner. The total payouts are as follows: Advertisement 1st: $1,728,000 2nd: $1,046,400 3rd: $662,400 4th: $470,400 5th: $393,600 6th: $348,000 7th: $324,000 8th: $300,000 9th: $280,800 10th: $261,600 11th: $242,400 12th: $223,200 13th: $204,000 14th: $184,800 15th: $175,200 16th: $165,600 17th: $156,000 18th: $146,400 19th: $136,800 20th: $127,200 21st: $117,600 22nd: $108,000 23rd: $100,320 24th: $92,640 25th: $84,960 26th: $77,280 27th: $74,400 28th: $71,520 29th: $68,640 30th: $65,760 31st: $62,880 32nd: $60,000 33rd: $57,120 34th: $54,720 35th: $52,320 36th: $49,920 37th: $47,520 38th: $45,600 39th: $43,680 40th: $41,760 41st: $39,840 42nd: $37,920 43rd: $36,000 44th: $34,080 45th: $32,160 46th: $30,240 47th: $28,320 48th: $26,784 49th: $25,440 50th: $24,672 51st: $24,096 52nd: $23,520 53rd: $23,136 54th: $22,752 55th: $22,560 56th: $22,368 57th: $22,176 58th: $21,984 59th: $21,792 60th: $21,600 61st: $21,408 62nd: $21,216 63rd: $21,024 64th: $20,832 65th: $20,640 This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rocket Classic prize money: PGA Tour purse, payouts from Detroit

Associated Press
17 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Patrick Reed finally wins on LIV Golf with birdie in 4-man playoff
CARROLLTON, Texas (AP) — Patrick Reed lost the lead with a 3-over 75 and then atoned for it by making a 15-foot birdie putt on the first hole of a four-man playoff Sunday to win LIV Golf Dallas, his first title since joining the Saudi-funded league in 2022. Reed, who started the final round with a three-shot lead, fell behind late in the day at Maridoe Golf Club until Jinichiro Kozuma made bogey on the 18th hole and then made par on his final hole at No. 1 for a 68. That got him into a playoff with Reed, Louis Oosthuizen (68) and Paul Casey (72). On the first extra hole, Oosthuizen drove into the water and Casey took four shots to reach the green on the par-4 18th. Kozuma missed his 25-foot birdie try, setting the stage for Reed. Reed said it was a relief to get his first win in his home state of Texas. He won the Hong Kong Open last year on the Asian Tour, but he had gone 0 for 41 on LIV Golf. 'To get my first win here, part of LIV, it means so much to me,' Reed said. 'I tried to mess it up. After making birdie on the first, I seemed to leave every putt short.' Bryson DeChambeau birdied his final hole, significant only because it knocked Jon Rahm out of the top 10 for the first time in LIV Golf. Sergio Garcia was never a factor, but he ends the week at No. 5 in the points standing, earning the lone spot in the British Open for LIV Golf players in the top five in the standings not already eligible for Royal Portrush. ___ AP golf:


USA Today
19 minutes ago
- USA Today
Texas' Arch Manning recalls advice from Matthew McConaughey at Manning Passing Academy
There are lots of eyes that gravitate toward the starting quarterback at a blue-blood college football program, let alone at a program such as Texas. For first-year starter Arch Manning, there comes even more fame and expectations given his family lineage, having Super Bowl-winning uncles Peyton and Eli Manning, and grandpa Archie Manning, who played in the NFL for 13 years. Arch Manning, speaking to The Athletic in an interview at the Manning Passing Academy in Thibodaux, Louisiana, mentioned receiving advice from one of the most famous Longhorns about his newfound position with the program. "A few. It depends on the night, but I stay pretty low key," Arch Manning told reporters via The Athletic on Friday when asked of how many picture requests he gets on campus. "... I had to get used to it a little bit. I've actually talked to Matthew McConaughey about that. He's given me some advice. He's been great to have in my corner." McConaughey, who's at nearly every Texas Longhorns football game and is known for his role as the team's "Minister of Culture," knows a thing or two about dealing with fame, especially within the context of Austin, Texas, as the Academy Award winner graduated from UT in 1993 and has taught classes at the university. Arch Manning, according to On3's name, image and likeness valuations, is the most valuable college athlete in 2025, as he's worth $6.8 million according to the metric. Arch Manning was even recently featured in a Raising Cane's advertisement alongside his dad, Cooper Manning, Archie Manning and LSU quarterback Garrett Nussmeier. MORE: Steve Spurrier questions Arch Manning as Heisman Trophy favorite, Texas as SEC frontrunner Arch Manning, Cooper Manning, Archie Manning, Garrett Nussmeier, and Todd Graves always stop when they pass a Cane's on their way to @Manning Passing Academy What did McConaughey tell Arch Manning as the former No. 1-ranked quarterback takes over as signal caller in 2025 after two years of being Quinn Ewers' backup? "He's way more known than I am, so it's good anytime you get advice from him," Arch Manning said. "… He kind of told me you still have to live your life. He says he goes to the grocery store, walks down every aisle and he lives his life. You can't let you taking a picture or signing an autograph affect your life." Arch Manning passed for 939 yards with nine touchdowns to two interceptions as a redshirt freshman last season, also rushing for 108 yards and four scores. The 6-foot-4 quarterback threw for 325 yards with two touchdowns in a start against Mississippi State, as he filled in for the injured Ewers. Arch Manning is set to be perhaps the most talked about college athlete across all sports in 2025, and he'll look to remember McConaughey's advice as he aims to get Texas back to the College Football Playoff for the third consecutive year.