KO AND JUTANUGARN SHARE AUSSIE OPEN LEAD
LET NEWS RELEASE
FROM BETHAN CUTLER, L E T Media Manager
Melbourne, Saturday:
Lydia
Ko loves playing in Australia; she loves the thrill of contending in
big tournaments. But asked if she’d take a 71 in tomorrow’s final round,
the affable New Zealander jumped at the offer.
“Yeah,
I would in that heat,” the world No.1 only half-joked after firing a
one-under-par 72 today to share the ISPS Handa Women’s Australian
Open lead at seven under.
So
oppressive was the heat that Royal Melbourne’s already challenging
greens became super slippery downhill and Ko reiterated her halfway
thought that she’d be surprised if the winner reached double-digits
under par.
Four players held or shared the lead today as putting drifted between science and art form on glassy greens.
“They’re really hard. I’m scratching my head over a three-footer or a thirty-footer,” Ko said.
“It’s
really tough and because (the hole) is so tight, the lip-outs, they
hurt. They’re not nice here. The greens are one of the hardest
parts and because (they) are so firm, it affects the shots that are
coming into the green also.
“On
a course like this, unless you really get going on a putting streak,
you’re not going to make seven, eight birdies and shoot the
most incredible eight under.
“I
think this course you really have to play smart and when you have those
chances, try (to) grab it because birdies are hard to see.”
Ko
will tee up on Sunday alongside power-hitting Thai Ariya Jutanugarn at
seven under, one clear of a South Korean with a strong Aussie twist,
Amy Yang.
Lurking
three shots from the lead are Paraguayan Julieta Granada and suddenly
white-hot Aussie Katherine Kirk, who charged into contention
with a withering back-nine run on a day when others simply withered in
stifling heat.
Kirk,
runner-up in last week’s Australian Ladies Masters, was as far back as
one over after an indifferent bogey on the short par-five
10th.
But
five birdies in the next six holes propelled the amiable Queenslander
right into the mix as the lead changed hands repeatedly in
the final groups.
“It’s not easy to make birdies out there and I made six today and I’m still kind of a little puzzled as to how,” she joked.
“I know I made two long putts, so they’re just bonuses. I think that was probably as good as it was going to get today.”
Crowd favourite Kirk said it would be a dream come true to get her hands on the Patricia Bridges Bowl tomorrow.
“I’d
be very honoured. I actually had the pleasure of travelling on an
Australian team in 2002 to Malaysia to play the (World Amateur
Teams Championship) and Patricia made the trip and she’s just an
incredible lady,” Kirk said.
“I’d be delighted to hoist the trophy and certainly proud to fly the flag for Australia tomorrow.”
Kirk wasn’t the only Aussie to shine in a dramatic third round.
West
Australian Minjee Lee isn’t out of the hunt after a 72 left her square
overall, while veterans Karrie Webb and Rachel Hetherington
each shot 71 after going out in the second group of the day only to
roar through the 73-woman field and finish tied for 27th.
Catriona Matthjew is T17 on 220 after a 72 while Kylie Walker had a 77 for 225 and a share of 39th place.
THIRD-ROUND SCOREBOARD
212 - Ariya Jutanugarn (THA) 69 71 72, Lydia Ko (NZ) 70 70 72
213 - Amy Yang (SKOR) 73 70 70
215 - Katherine Kirk (AUS) 72 73 70, Julieta Granada (PAR) 73 72 70
216 - Ha-Na Jang (SKOR) 71 69 76
218
- Paz Echeverria (CHL) 71 76 71, Chella Choi (SKOR) 72 75 71, Charley
Hull (ENG) 71 71 76, Jessica Korda (USA) 72 71 75, Gwladys
Nocera (FRA) 71 73 74, Beatriz Recari (ESP) 75 71 72
219 - Mina Harigae (USA) 75 71 73, Il Hee Lee (SKOR) 68 82 69, Minjee Lee (AUS) 76 71 72, Beth Allen (USA) 78 71 70
220
- Melissa Reid (ENG) 71 74 75, Kyu-Jung Baek (SKOR) 77 72 71, Catriona
Matthew (SCO) 74 74 72, Marianne Skarpnord (NOR) 75 72
73
221
- Mi Hyang Lee (SKOR) 75 70 76, Marion Ricordeau (FRA) 72 73 76, Mika
Miyazato (JPN) 73 74 74, Jenny Shin (SKOR) 76 71 74, Na Yeon
Choi (SKOR) 74 74 73, Pernilla Lindberg (SWE) 76 74 71
222
- So Yeon Ryu (SKOR) 77 74 71, Mo Martin (USA) 77 73 72, Kelly Tan
(MYS) 74 73 75, Sydnee Michaels (USA) 73 76 73, Laetitia Beck
(ISR) 78 71 73, Karrie Webb (AUS) 73 78 71, Shanshan Feng (CHN) 74
74 74, Marina Alex (USA) 72 77 73, Rachel Hetherington (AUS) 73 78 71
223 - Alena Sharp (CAN) 70 78 75, Tiffany Joh (USA) 72 75 76, Holly Clyburn (ENG) 73 75 75
225
- Ayako Uehara (JPN) 72 75 78, Christine Wolf (AUT) 75 72 78, Ai
Miyazato (JPN) 73 75 77, Maria Mcbride (SWE) 74 77 74, Nikki
Garrett (AUS) 79 72 74, Kylie Walker (SCO) 75 73 77
226
- Anne-Lise Caudal (FRA) 75 75 76, Alison Walshe (USA) 74 75 77,
Ssu-Chai Cheng (TPE) 76 73 77, Min Seo Kwak (SKOR) 70 81 75,
Amy Anderson (USA) 77 72 77, Christina Kim (USA) 74 71 81
227
- Sophie Walker (ENG) 73 76 78, Sarah Kemp (AUS) 77 73 77, Katie
Burnett (USA) 74 75 78, Mariajo Uribe (COL) 72 76 79, Lisa McCloskey
(USA) 75 76 76, Chloe Leurquin (BEL) 75 75 77, Karine Icher (FRA) 75
73 79
228
- Amy Boulden (WAL) 77 74 77, Kristy Mcpherson (USA) 75 76 77, Karlin
Beck (USA) 74 77 77, Mallory Blackwelder (USA) 75 75 78
229
- Kendall Dye (USA) 78 71 80, Rebecca Artis (AUS) 72 77 80, Maria
Hernandez (ESP) 75 74 80, Cheyenne Woods (USA) 74 75 80
230 - Ann-Kathrin Lindner (GER) 78 73 79, Garrett Phillips (USA) 74 77 79, Ju Young Park (sKOR) 73 78 79
231 - Christel Boeljon (NED) 76 73 82, Min Lee (TPE) 72 78 81, Wei Ling Hsu (TWN) 78 73 80
232 - Brooke Pancake (USA) 71 78 83
233 - Kris Tamulis (USA) 75 76 82
For more, see
www.womensausopen.com/news-display/84609
For third round highlights, see
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ybtgpy67wd0 (Preview)
Watch all the scores as they happen, live at
www.womensausopen.com/scores
For Ko’s press conference, see
www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPMM0p9f2ug (Preview)
For Kirk’s purple patch, see
www.womensausopen.com/news-display/84606
For more on the veteran Aussies’ charge, see
www.womensausopen.com/news-display/84601
The
final round begins on Royal Melbourne’s famous Composite Course at
7.25am on Sunday morning. The final group, featuring Lydia Ko and Ariya
Jutanugarn will be off at 1.25pm.
For the full list of tee times, see
www.womensausopen.com/tee-times
Follow
our on-course twitter correspondents, taking you all the places the
cameras can’t quite reach. Shot by shot, hole by hole.
Follow us at www.twitter.com/WomensAusOpen
For all the latest news, videos and other tournament information,
see www.womensausopen.com/news
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