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Allisen Corpuz only Hawaii golfer to make cut at U.S. Women’s Open

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                Jin Young Ko hit off the sixth tee during the second round on Friday.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jin Young Ko hit off the sixth tee during the second round on Friday.

SOUTHERN PINES, N.C. >> Jin Young Ko never seems to stress. Nor does she let up.

The world’s No. 1 player vaulted into contention for a third major championship Friday, playing the final five holes in 3 under to pull within three shots of second-round leaders Minjee Lee and Mina Harigae at the U.S. Women’s Open.

Harigae and Lee were at 9-under 133 after 36 holes at Pine Needles. Lee shot a 5-under 66, and Harigae had a 69.

Three-time major champion Anna Nordqvist and Hye-Jin Choi, who shot a 64 to come within shot of matching the lowest round in the event’s 77-year history, were 7 under. Nordqvist had a 68.

Punahou product Allisen Corpuz struggled to a 74 but made the cut by two strokes and is in a tie for 36th. She made it interesting on the back nine when she bogeyed No. 14 and then doubled the 16th before coming home with successive pars.

She is the only Hawaii player to make the cut, with Britney Yada shooting a 73 with bogeys on 17 and 18 to miss by two strokes. Michelle Wie West also fell two strokes short.

Mariel Galdiano matched Yada with a 73 to finish at 6 over. Amateur Karissa Kilby finished at plus 13 after a 78.

Ko was tied for fifth at 6 under with Swedish amateur Ingrid Lindblad. Ko shot 67, and Lindblad followed up her event amateur-record 65 on Thursday with a 71.

Ko hasn’t won a major since 2019, but won five LPGA Tour events last year and has one win this year.

“I don’t think about winning,” Ko said. “I just think just myself and just focus on my game. I just talk with my caddie and have fun.”

Ko made her move with a birdie on No. 14, then pounded a 3-wood into the green on the par-5 15th and made a 65-foot eagle putt.

Nelly Korda, the No. 2 player in the world, was six shots off the pace after a 69. She’s playing in her first tournament since undergoing surgery on her left arm to fix a blood clot.

It looked for a while like Harigae might maintain sole possession of the lead for a second straight day.

But Lee, ranked No. 4 in the world, surged into a tie in the afternoon after shooting 31 on the front nine. Lee has already won two LPGA events this year.

Several players talked about the slow pace of play on an afternoon where light rain threatened to stop play.

“A lot of waiting, so I feel like I just tried to pace myself,” Nordqvist said.

Lexi Thompson struggled down the stretch just as she did in the final round of last year’s U.S. Open, when she surrendered a five-shot lead after a back-nine meltdown and lost.

But she managed to close with a birdie for a 69 that left her 3 under.

“Got a few bad breaks, but it is what it is — it’s golf,” said Thompson, the No. 6 player in the world.

Harigae, who played collegiately about 80 miles away at Duke and idolized North Carolina’s Michael Jordan growing up, said she is a much more mature person since she first joined the LPGA Tour — and hopes that will help down the stretch.

“I feel like I have better tools to navigate these new experiences,” the 32-year-old Harigae said. “I think just trying to be calm, just go about my day.”

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