Three Holes tell the story when Minjee Lee controls female PGA

FRISCO, Texas – With the players stumbled at the PGA Frisco on Saturday, mental and physical exhaustion was evident as the players stumbled on Saturday at PGA Frisco. The combination of wind, heat, firm green and setting makes the best combination in the world. All they can do is try to stay there.
“Believe me, it’s so cruel here,” said world number one Nelly Korda in her post-TV interview after filming PAR 72 times.
“It’s definitely testing you. I think Erin Hills is a psychological test, but Jeez, it’s a real psychological test.”
At her 72-year-old, Ruon Yin: “That’s cruel.”
Yealimi Noh shot 74 with two Eagles and could only smile and shake his head. “A crazy day,” Noh said.
If the main round is the bonus, PGA Frisco passes Haymaker as Haymaker to the best in the world.
Korda opens with back-to-back taboos. Lexi Thompson finished second in the second shot and pushed the third into the free throw area for the opening three tide.
With nerve wear and competitors tilting, one player felt unwelcome about it – gusts of wind, glacier speed of glaciers, rocky green greens and the location of demon nails.
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After the bogey rose, the rankings spread like bogey, but Minjee Lee didn’t flash.
Starting with three matches starting with 36-hole leader Jeeno Thitikul, Lee faces a “brutal” test from PGA Frisco, patiently with the patience of those who experience Cauldron – the ones who can find peace in the chaos.
She had a relaxing performance on the first hole of the par 5, which hit 0.60 on Saturday, and the wind exploded directly into the player’s face before exploding at seven pars before ranking fifth on the ninth five.
Lee stabilized as Thitikul rode the main roller coaster. When she hit the shot, she forced nothing, took the medicine, let her play briefly and put her down when needed.
By the time Lee and Thitikul reached the 14th T-shirt, Lee turned the three-shot deficit into the world’s second-leading lead. That was when Lee controlled the game.
In the 5-14-shot match, Lee hit three on the green green and rolled into an 18-foot birdie putt. Thitikul made a sloppy burn, with three leads. Next was the driveable 4-15, and Lee’s T-shirt hit the green right edge and fell into the bunker. That’s not a problem either. Lee performed an excellent long bunker shot, blowing it into the wind and pausing 14 inches in another bird’s hole. Finally, on the 16th hole of the 4th stroke, Lee’s second shot was not high from the green and was located near the free throw area. But the Australian again showed a great short match as she was six feet from the long distance and she rolled par when Thitikul once again bogeyed.
The lead is four.
Lee finished the day with 17 and 18 points, beating the average of 7 or more with 69 bogeys. She will start at less than six in the final round on Sunday, four shots away from Thitikul, who is in awe of the main champion magic she witnessed.
Titikul said of Lee’s outstanding performance: “Of course, she definitely played in the A game.” “I mean, I’ve never seen her miss her today.”
All in all, Lee hit 66% of her fairway, hit 12 greens in the regulations and got 2.201 TE-te-te-te-te-Green and 3.534 putts. That day, it was a major champion masterclass and the wind blew the rest of the stadium.
“I think I’ve done a great job today,” Lee said. “Take the birds as much as possible and when I lose my position, I’ve had a lot of ups and downs. I think I’m going to try to stick to the same game plan and I can stand out online tomorrow.”
This is not Lee’s new territory. She led the 2022 U.S. Women’s Open with 3 to 54 holes and won four wins with 74 times. In 2021 Evian, she rode a harsh 64-shot game, forcing the playoffs to win her first major championship. Last year’s U.S. Women’s Open was also her Sunday lead, but he led the final round as Yuka Saso conquered Lancaster Country Club.
Minjee Lee knows that Sunday is waiting for her at PGA Frisco. pressure. confusion. The main champion cauldron.
“I mean, there’s nothing else on Major’s Sunday,” Lee said. “So no matter where you are, I don’t think you’re really in a comfortable position until you get the trophy. I have both experiences and I’m sure that both of them will help me tomorrow.”
The U.S. Women’s Open broke out at PGA Frisco on Saturday in northern Texas. The wind is strong, the nerves are disintegrating, and competitors are evacuated.
Korda struggles to go back and post and gives herself a chance. Despite the catastrophic beginning, Thompson is still alive. Thitikul is still one of two players. But all of them left Saturday at PGA Frisco, exhausted under strict conditions and bleeding from six hours of labor.
Everyone except Lee has never looked at the rankings, never got rid of her process. She just put her head down, tamed the cruel conditions and traveled through the main champion chaos that devoured everyone else and tied it to the 2025 Million Second Women’s PGA.
Under the brutal Texas conditions, a walk was taken between Minjee Lee and Major No. 3 until the carving began. Of course, Lee knew a lot could happen in 18 holes. The mission for the future is huge. There is another “cruel” mountain to climb.
“We’re still going tomorrow,” Lee said with a smile, before going to sleep for a four-shot lead.
;)
Josh Schrock
Golf.comEdit
Josh Schrock is a writer and journalist at Golf.com. Before joining golf, Josh was an insider of Chicago Bears in NBC Sports. He has previously reported 49 people and fighters in the NBC Sports Bay area. Josh, an Oregon native and UO alum, spent time hiking with his wife and dogs, pondering how ducks will be sad again and trying to become half-mature. For golf, Josh will never stop trying to break the 90s and never lose Rory McIlroy’s major drought will end (update: he did). Josh Schrock can be contacted at josh.schrock@golf.com.