Minjee Lee, Harigae share 36-hole lead at Pine Needles

What Happened

Mother Nature gave the field in the 77th U.S. Women’s Open presented by ProMedica a bit of a breather for Round 2 on Friday at Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club. Stifling heat was replaced by comfortable temperatures in the 80s, and an overnight shower softened the course just a touch.

Give the world’s best players more benign conditions and watch the leader board turn into a sea of red numbers. A total of 26 players are under par through 36 holes, which is 12 more than the combined number of players in red figures through 36 holes of the previous three U.S. Women’s Opens at Pine Needles.

Minjee Lee, who broke through for her first major-championship victory last July at the Amundi Evian Championship, took full advantage, backing up a first-round 67 with a 5-under-par 66 to share the midway lead at 9-under 133 with 18-hole leader Mina Harigae, a veteran still seeking her first LPGA Tour victory. Harigae, 32, a three-time winner on the developmental Epson Tour, didn’t quite match her brilliant 64 from Saturday, but a 69 left the Monterey, Calif., native in position to claim the biggest victory of her career.

Minjee Lee, Harigae share 36-hole lead at Pine Needles

Mina Harigae. Photo by Mary Anne Pfrogner/Sandhills Sentinel.

Plenty of star power is lurking. Eleven players, including world No. 1 Jin Young Ko, three-time major winner Anna Nordqvist, 2017 U.S. Women’s Open champion Sung Hyun Park and the former amateur phenom she edged that year, Hyejin Choi, are within five strokes of the lead.

Choi, an LPGA Tour rookie with five top 10s in 2022, posted a 7-under 64 on Friday to get within two of the lead with Nordqvist, who added a 68 to her opening-round 67.

All of which should provide plenty of drama over the final two days of the championship.

Lee certainly will draw on her Evian triumph of 2021, where she carded a final-round 64 and eventually prevailed in a playoff.

Harigae, meanwhile, is hoping for a better weekend result than she had last July when she shared the 36-hole lead in the AIG Women’s British Open at Carnoustie, only to shoot a disappointing 76 in Round 3 that derailed her title aspirations. She has already had a breakthrough in this championship, having never broken 70 in 36 previous rounds before doing it twice in two days.

“Today was fun, but stressful for sure,” said Harigae. “I was really happy with the way I hung in there and made some good birdies coming in.”

There was a time in her nascent days as a professional when Harigae might not have been mentally equipped to handle this situation. A poor swing or putt often sent her attitude in the wrong direction.

A more mature Harigae can compartmentalize golf’s highs and lows. She is playing with a joy and freedom many witnessed during her amateur days when she was one of the country’s best players.

“I feel like I have better tools to navigate these new experiences,” said Harigae, whose outstanding amateur career included the 2007 U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links title and a USA victory in the 2008 Curtis Cup Match on the Old Course at St. Andrews. “I’m trying to be calm [and] just go about my day.

“It’s a tough course. It’s a U.S. [Women’s] Open. You’re going to get good breaks; you’re going to get bad breaks.”

On Friday, Harigae birdied the two statistically hardest holes on the course – the 194-yard, par-3 fifth and 429-yard, par-4 17th. When she bogeyed the par-4 seventh (her 17th of the day) due to a poorly executed chip, she immediately bounced back by stuffing her approach on No. 8 within 4 feet to set up a birdie.

Lee, now 10 years removed from her U.S. Girls’ Junior triumph, had nice symmetry to her opening nine with birdies on Nos. 1 and 2, and Nos. 8 and 9. Two birdies against a three-putt bogey on No. 14 gave the Australian her 66.

“I’m not sure how the conditions are going to change and what time I’m playing [on Saturday], but I’ve been taking one shot at a time,” said Lee of her mindset. “The golf course can really catch up to you quickly, so just trying to take whatever I have in front of me as I go. Whenever I have a birdie opportunity, I try to take advantage of that.”

Five years ago, Choi was an amateur phenom that few outside the Republic of Korea had heard of. Then she nearly won at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J., to help kickstart what has been a solid start to her professional career with 12 victories in Asia. Her 64 on Friday included nine birdies and matched Harigae’s low round of the week. It was the seventh 64 in championship history and was one off the record held by Helen Alfredsson. 

“She’s got the ball under control right now,” said veteran caddie Pete Godfrey, who has been on Choi’s bag since the Palos Verdes Championship in late April. “She’s just very good in managing her game, hitting the right targets, hitting the right numbers. If you can do that, you can score.”

Spectator enjoying the experience. Photo by Mary Anne Pfrogner/Sandhills Sentinel.

What’s Next

The 70 competitors who made the 36-hole cut will go off in twosomes on Saturday, beginning at 7:30 a.m. EDT, with the final pairing (Lee and Harigae) teeing off at 1:44 p.m. Peacock (noon-1 p.m. EDT), USA Network (1-3 p.m.) and NBC (3-6 p.m.) will have the live broadcast.

Notable

The cut came at 3-over-par 145 with 66 professionals and four amateurs qualifying for the weekend. Reigning U.S. Girls’ Junior champion and 2022 NCAA Division I individual titlist Rose Zhang, No. 1 in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking®, world No. 2 Ingrid Lindblad, 2022 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball runner-up Bailey Shoemaker and Saki Baba, of Japan, were the four amateurs to make the cut.

At least one amateur has made the cut in every U.S. Women’s Open, which includes the inaugural championship in 1946 that was contested entirely at match play. The week began with 29 amateurs in the starting field of 156.

Five past champions made the cut: Sung Hyun Park (2017), Eun-Hee Ji (2009), Jeongeun Lee6 (2019), A Lim Kim (2020) and In Gee Chun (2015).

So Yeon Ryu, the 2011 champion, saw her streak of 12 consecutive top-25 finishes end with a missed cut. The Korean had played the weekend in every start since her first appearance in 2010 at Oakmont Country Club.

Six other past winners also missed the cut, including Yuka Saso, who became the second consecutive defending champion who failed to qualify for the final 36 holes. The others missing were Michelle Wie West (2014), Brittany Lang (2016), Ariya Jutanugarn (2018), Na Yeon Choi (2012) and World Golf Hall of Famer Annika Sorenstam (1995, 1996 and 2006). Sorenstam is the reigning U.S. Senior Women’s Open champion.

Annika Sorenstam. Photo by Mary Anne Pfrogner/Sandhills Sentinel.

Five players who gained entrance into the field over the past couple of weeks as first alternates made the cut: Lindblad, Andrea Lee, Allisen Corpuz, Lilia Vu and the lone North Carolinian in the field, Allison Emrey, of Charlotte.

Dawn Woodard, a veteran of more than 30 USGA championships (two-time U.S. Mid-Amateur quarterfinalist and a three-time medalist), is Mina Harigae’s mental coach. Woodard, the founder/owner of Judgement Matters, works with athletes at all levels to improve their performance.

Ai Suzuki, of Japan, withdrew prior to her second round on Friday due to an undisclosed illness. She had carded a 78 in Round 1.

Security is all smiles. Photo by Mary Anne Pfrogner/Sandhills Sentinel.

Quotable

“It never really crosses my mind at all. I guess I’ve been lucky to win three majors so far, and it just happened to be three different ones. Even if I would have won three of the same [major], I would have been extremely proud of myself.” – Anna Nordqvist (7-under 135) when asked about the possibility of winning a fourth different major title.

“I was thinking about asking her, but I didn’t end up [doing it]. I just saw her pictures around the place, and it was just kind of nice.” – Minjee Lee (9-under 133) on whether she asked mentor and 2001 champion Karrie Webb for any advice on how to play Pine Needles.

“I think I was fairly good when I was an amateur, but once I turned to pro, I think I became a more sophisticated and detailed player, and I will continue to work very hard.” – Hyejin Choi (7-under 135) on how her game has changed since finishing runner-up in 2017 as an amateur.

“I really fought hard on the back even though the results don’t show it. I tried through the end. It just didn’t work. Maybe it could have been a little bit more nostalgic in a way, but some people being here at … 8 [p.m.] to sit here with some raindrops, it shows true support, true fans, and I appreciate that.” – Annika Sorenstam after missing the cut.

“I’m probably going to let the clubs collect some dust on them for a little bit now, but I’m excited. There’s a lot of projects that I’m working on that I haven’t had time to do before, so I’m just going to dive into those. I’m really excited.” – Michelle Wie West (5-over 147), who is stepping away from competitive golf, on her immediate plans after missing the cut.

Feature photo: Minjee Lee. Photo by Mary Anne Pfrogner/Sandhills Sentinel.

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