South Koreans Ryu and Park, US teen Noh share LPGA lead

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WASHINGTON, Dec 6, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – South Korea’s Ryu So-yeon fired a six-
under par 65 to grab a share of the lead with compatriot Park In-bee and US
teen Yealimi Noh after Saturday’s third round of the LPGA Volunteers of
America Championship.

World number 15 Ryu’s bogey-free round featured five birdies in the first
eight holes and another at the par-5 13th to leave her level with Noh and
Park on four-under 209 after 54 holes at The Colony in suburban Dallas.

“I have no complaints about my ball-striking today,” said Ryu. “I hit 17
greens, I believe, and then I made so many birdie chances. I wish I could
have made more putts on the back nine.”

Ryu, a two-time major champion who captured this year’s Korean Women’s
Open, seeks her seventh career LPGA victory and her first since the 2018
Meijer Classic.

Noh, a 19-year-old rookie, birdied all four par-5 holes — the second,
sixth, 13th and 17th, but then closed with a double bogey to shoot 71 and
fall back into a share of the lead with Ryu and Park.

Noh’s best LPGA finish was a runner-up effort at last year’s Portland
Classic. “As soon as I finish, I wanted to see the leaderboard and to see
that I’m playing with those two tomorrow,” said Noh about playing with Park
and Ryu.

“I’m really, really excited. Actually in the beginning of the week I was
talking to my parents about Inbee and So Yeon and how I really wanted to play
with them and see just how good they are and be light there next to them. So
I’m excited for tomorrow.” World number five Park fired a 69, making a birdie
at the sixth as well as back-to-back birdies at the eighth and ninth before
her lone bogey at the par-3 11th.

Park, a seven-time major winner, seeks her second title of 2020 after
taking her 20th career LPGA victory at the Women’s Australian Open in
February just before the season was halted for the Covid-19 pandemic.

A pack sharing fourth on 210 included England’s Charley Hull, Japan’s Nasa
Hataoka, Americans Angela Stanford, Jessica Korda and Kristen Gillman, world
number one Ko Jin-young of South Korea and Thailand’s Pornanong Phatlum.