Lauren Walsh birdied the 36th hole of the Meijer LPGA Classic at Blythefield Country Club in Michigan to make the cut on the number, and she made further progress up the leaderboard on day three.
The LPGA rookie carded 11 consecutive pars to start the round but then bogeyed two of the next four to face into the final three holes at +2 for the day and close to the foot of the leaderboard which had just 66 names on it after the 36-hole cut.
But a strong finish in which she reeled off birdies on the par-4 16th and 17th holes, then another on the par-5 18th and it pushed her up into a share for 46th having started the day tied for 49th.
At the top of the leaderboard, the question as to how Jing Yan would handle being a first-time leader on the LPGA Tour was quickly answered as the 36-hole leader became the 54-hole leader.
“I was a little bit nervous, but I tried to take it as a good thing. You don’t learn to be in this position without being in this position,” Yan told Golf Channel after her round. “I try to think of it as excitement and helped me focus and yeah, but there were some nerves there. The heart was beating.”
Yan has gone bogey-free over her last 47 holes at Blythefield Country Club and will seek to maintain that same consistency on Sunday as the 12-year LPGA Tour veteran hopes to hold off Lottie Woad, who sits just one-back of Yan, and Cassie Porter, who trails by two strokes, in hopes of winning for the first time on Tour.
“I feel like pressure can be a good thing, and it’s fun to just try and play the best game that I can play. That’s all I can do. Not try to look too much left or right because there is a ton of great players out here,” Yan said about her strategy for the final round. “I feel like I can only do what I can do instead of sometimes you get caught up in other people’s strengths.”
Yan took a one-stroke lead into Saturday’s round but was quickly joined at the top of the leaderboard by Woad and Porter who sat in a three-way tie at the top as Yan made the turn. She looked poised to give up her first shot of the day at the par five, 14th hole when her pitch short of the putting surface ran well past the hole. Yan was able to save par with a critical two-putt through the shadows to maintain her one-stroke lead. At the par four, 17th Yan made another important save after her tee ball found the right rough and behind a huge tree. Yan managed to hoist her second shot up and over the branches and on to the green where she again managed to two-putt for par.
“I just try to play like how I would normally play. And I got close to a couple bogeys, so skirted them,” Yan said about the critical par saves she made over the closing stretch. “I just try to play really steady and I’m glad that I didn’t have any bogeys.”
Woad fought a wayward driver throughout the day in which she found only six fairways that ultimately cost her the outright lead. After the round Woad said that with the golf course firming up on Saturday that some of her tee shots ran out of the fairways and into the rough. Load settled for a round of 68 with a critical closing birdie to still remained in the hunt for a chance to win for the second time in her last three starts on the LPGA Tour.
“I’ve been in a few final groups now and it’s gone my way on a couple occasions. But obviously if someone plays better than you it’s going to go their way,” Woad said about her chances on Sunday. “I think just trying to get off to a good start and try and get back ahead and push early and just keep putting the pressure on is what we’re going to try to do.”
Porter, like Yan, will be chasing her first career victory come Sunday at Blythefield Country Club. Saturday, the second-year member struggled with a balky putter and missed multiple putts on the high side for a round of 69.
“I think we did a really good job out there today managing the different conditions, the greens got firmer as the day went on so my speed was a little iffy,” Porter said about her struggles with her putting. “I’m going to work on that right now.”
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