Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Kim wins U.S. Women’s Open

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HOUSTON – The Bermuda grass of south Texas was unlike anything A Lim Kim had ever seen. The U.S. Women's Open, with its reputation as the toughest test, was a major she had never played.

What didn't change in a frigid final round at Champions Golf Club was how to keep score. And when the 25year-old from South Korea saw she was trailing and running out of holes, she started attacking flags.

Kim birdied her final three holes and tied the record for the largest comeback in a U.S. Women's Open, rallying from five shots behind with the a 4-under 67 to win the biggest event in women's golf.

“Still can't really soak in that I'm the champion,” she said, minutes after being soaked in champagne on a day with temperatur­es in the 40s.

She won by one shot over Jin Young Ko, the top-ranked player in women's golf, and Amy Olson, who played her heart out while coping with the grief of her father-in-law's unexpected death Saturday night in South Dakota.

“I felt very weak and helpless the last couple days, and probably today on the golf course,” Olson said, fighting back tears after a 72. “I really believe the Lord just carried me through.”

Kim's spectacula­r finish made it tough for anyone to catch her. Two shots behind Olson, she hit 5-iron to 4 feet on the par-3 16th hole to get to 1under. Then she hit 8-iron that rolled out to just inside 2 feet on the 17th for a tap-in birdie and a share of the lead. She capped it off with a pitching wedge to just inside 10 feet.

Behind her mask – fitting that the final major champion of this pandemic-disrupted year in golf was wearing one – the thrill was evident. So was the fist pump, a rare show of emotion for Kim.

Kim started the final round, delayed to Monday because of rain, in a tie for ninth. No one had ever started in a position that far back and won the U.S. Women's Open. She became the seventh player to rally from five shots behind in the final round, and the first since Annika Sorenstam at The Broadmoor in 1995.

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