Choi shoots 67, leads LPGA Championship by a shot

Dunya News

Chella Choi shoot a 5-under 67 to take one-shot lead after the first round of LPGA Championship.

 

PITTSFORD (AP) - Chella Choi overcame a late band of rain and a soggy course to shoot a 5-under 67 on Friday and take a one-shot lead after the first round of the rain-delayed LPGA Championship.

 

The 22-year-old South Korean, who has never won on the LPGA Tour, was a stroke ahead of Morgan Pressel.

 

Brittany Lincicome and Jiyai Shin were tied for third at 69, while Jessica Korda and Se Ri Pak were tied for fifth, another stroke back. Defending champion Shanshan Feng of China had a 2-over 74 as only 14 players broke par in the second major of the year.

 

Playing in the afternoon long after Pressel had shot 68 to gain the early lead, Choi surged up the leaderboard with a flawless performance on the front nine at rain-soaked Locust Hill Country Club. She made five birdies and no bogeys on her opening nine, averting most of the trouble that lurked at every hole of the waterlogged layout by hitting all 14 fairways and reaching 15 greens in regulation.

 

"I had a really good driver today," said Choi, whose 54-year-old father, Ji Yeon, has vowed to serve as her caddie until she gets that first victory. "My goal was to hit the fairways."

 

Playing in light drizzle, Choi reached 6 under with another birdie at the deceptively difficult par-4 10th hole, which yielded only 12 birdies to go with 58 bogeys and seven double bogeys.

 

The first steady rain of the day put a damper on Choi s final seven holes, but she remained steady, making her only bogey at the par-4 13th hole and parring out.

 

Choi s best finish in four-plus years on the tour is a tie for second in the Manulife tournament in Canada a year ago. She had three top-five finishes last year and held the third-round lead at the Mobile Bay Classic last month before fading on the final day and finishing in a tie for fourth.

 

"I want my first win with my father," she said.

 

More than nine inches of rain had fallen on the course in the previous nine days, half of that coming on Thursday when the opening round was pushed back one day. Casual water remained in various spots around the soggy 6,615-yard layout, and players were permitted to lift, clean and place their golf balls.