Stamford Advocate

In Gee Chun races to record-tying 5-shot lead at Women’s PGA

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BETHESDA, Md. — In Gee Chun is alone atop the Women’s PGA Championsh­ip following a sensationa­l start.

In fact, no player has ever been further ahead after 18 holes at a women’s major.

Chun breezed to an 8under 64 on Thursday to take a five-stroke advantage after the first round at Congressio­nal. While most of the field slogged through the day on the wet Blue Course, Chun birdied seven of eight holes during one stretch. She was seven shots ahead when she finished her round and ended up tying a record for the largest 18-hole lead at a major.

Mickey Wright led this tournament by five after the first round in 1961.

“I don’t know what golf course In Gee is playing,” defending champion Nelly Korda said after finishing her round of 71.

Chun was playing the same course as everyone else — one that went through a full restoratio­n last year. There was heavy rain in the area overnight and more precipitat­ion during play Thursday morning. That softened the course but also made Congressio­nal’s length — 6,809 yards for this first round — more of a factor.

No big deal for Chun, a two-time major winner.

“The course, after a lot of rain, feels longer,” the 27year-old South Korean said. “At the same time, greens were softer. So I think it was just a balance.”

Although there was plenty of golf left to play, Chun’s big lead certainly turned heads.

“I can’t stop staring at the leaderboar­d,” Justin Thomas tweeted. “Leading by 7 halfway thru day 1 !!!! ”

Pornanong Phatlum and Hye-Jin Choi shot bogeyfree rounds of 69 to cut Chun’s lead to five, but that was still a big enough advantage to tie Wright’s mark. The 1961 tournament was one of a record four victories by Wright at this event. Chun is trying for her first.

Chun did set a major championsh­ip record — for men or women — when she won the Evian Championsh­ip

in 2016 at 21 under. She also won the U.S. Women’s Open the previous year.

Paula Reto and Jennifer Chang were at 2 under. Korda and playing partner Brooke Henderson were part of a nine-player group at 1 under. One example of how challengin­g the course was: Korda hit driver, hybrid and 7-wood while making par on the 587-yard ninth hole.

“That’s the longest par 5 I’ve ever played,” she said. “I was happy to play the front nine even.”

Chun, who started on the back nine, birdied Nos. 15, 16, 17 and 18. After a bogey on No. 1, she rebounded with three more birdies in a row.

Chun hit all 14 fairways and said she passed the time by discussing non-golf topics with caddie Dean Herden.

“We talk about the kiwis because I love to eat kiwis on the course,” she said. “It’s really tough to find a good kiwi from the supermarke­t. Luckily, we have a good Korean supermarke­t near here, so I got a good gold kiwi from there.”

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