Photos: Allisen Corpuz through the years

View photos of Allisen Corpuz throughout her amateur and professional career.

Allisen Corpuz is no stranger to success.

Finding herself near the top side of the leaderboard at the 78th U.S. Women’s Open, Corpuz is in prime position to secure not just her first major title, but her first LPGA Tour victory.

The 25-year-old from Honolulu, Hawaii, enjoyed an outstanding amateur and collegiate career. Named to two Arnold Palmer Cup teams and the 2021 Curtis Cup team and making deep runs at multiple USGA events while at the USC, Corpuz turned professional in 2021.

After a T-16 finish at LPGA Q-School in 2021, Corpuz earned LPGA status. Making 17 of 21 cuts and finishing 41st in the Rolex rankings, Corpuz has become a familiar name on leaderboards.

To date, Corpuz has tallied five top-10 finishes on the LPGA with a runner-up finish at the 2022 ISPS Handa World Invitational, a third-place finish at the 2022 Pelican Women’s Championship and a career-best major finish of T-4 at the 2023 Chevron Championship.

Michelle Wie West, Annika Sorenstam end U.S. Women’s Open careers at Pebble Beach

Sorenstam and Wie West, two icons in women’s sport, couldn’t have had more different journeys to stardom.

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PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — B.J. Wie had a feeling it might go in. Standing to the right of the green, wearing a Nike bucket hat, sweatshirt and high-top golf shoes designed by his daugther, B.J.’s face lit up with joy as a 30-foot putt for par that meant absolutely nothing and everything all at once, dropped in on the 18th at Pebble Beach Golf Links.

As Makenna slept in a stroller by the gallery rope line, Bo Wie clenched a fist and raised her right arm to the sky.

This was it. Quite possibly Michelle Wie West’s last competitive shot. It wouldn’t be a Michelle Wie West ending without some sort of drama, husband Jonnie noted, good or bad.

“The only putt she made of significance all week,” he said, laughing.

Jack Nicklaus said goodbye to the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach nearly a quarter century ago. On Friday, two of the most influential women in golf history did the same, with Annika Sorenstam playing alongside Wie West in the first U.S. Women’s Open ever contested at Pebble Beach.

While Wie West enjoyed a sweet finish, Sorenstam’s trip up the 18th was anything but, with a wayward tee shot that required a lengthy ruling and good deal of confusion.

U.S. Women’s OpenHow to watch | Photo gallery

Sorenstam and Wie West, two icons in women’s sport, couldn’t have had more different journeys to stardom. Yet somehow all roads led to a shared tee time, with their husbands on the bag, their kids along for the ride and a bouquet of flowers as they walked off the 18th.

“I definitely held back tears the entire round,” said Wie West as she held her daughter tight.

Sorenstam, the greatest player of the modern era, built her reputation on the back of 10 major championships. The three-time U.S. Women’s Open champion retired for the first time 15 years ago but came back to take part in what has felt like the most impactful women’s major in decades – maybe ever.

Wie West, 33, walked away from playing competitively at last year’s Women’s Open at Pine Needles, but wanted to come back one more time this week with family as her 10-year exemption expires.

Wie West summed up her legacy in the game in one word: bold.

“Made a lot of bold choices in my career,” she said early in the week, “and I’m proud of it. I’m proud of being fearless at times and just doing what felt right.”

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She hopes her story inspires other girls to do the same, noting that she certainly made a number of bad decisions along the way. Mistakes are part of everyone’s story, too.

Walking down the 18th fairway, B.J. said his overwhelming feeling was of relief. He no longer had to worry about his daughter’s injuries. If he could do it all over again, he’d have her hit less balls. More short game.

Wie West had three big dreams: win a U.S. Women’s Open, graduate from Stanford and play in the Masters. Her wildest dream – compete in a men’s major – was the only one she didn’t reach, though her run at the 2005 U.S. Amateur Public Links was one for the ages as she advanced to the quarterfinals. USGA officials had to borrow gallery ropes from the nearby U.S. Senior Open and bring marshals in to help with the thousands of fans who stormed a typically sleepy championship. A victory at the now defunct APL would’ve secured a special invitation to Augusta National.

Time competing on the men’s stage allowed Wie West to break through to the mainstream media, earning unprecedented amounts of sponsorship money before she even secured an LPGA card.

She was a polarizing figure in the game from the start, as many in the game wanted her to win at every level and take a more traditional route, raising the women’s game with Tiger Woods-like domination.

That, however, never transpired. An injury-plagued Wie West won *only* five times on the LPGA, her crowning achievement coming at the 2014 U.S. Women’s Open at Pinehurst, where she table-topped her way to victory.

Wie West’s career never did transform the LPGA, but she was a marketer’s dream and a magnet for attention.

Sorenstam’s finish at Pebble Beach doesn’t quite feel as final as Wie West’s because she’ll soon be seen in competition again at the U.S. Senior Women’s Open, which she won two years ago.

But this might be the last time Wie West tees it up in anything of note for a long time – maybe ever.

“I’m going to put my clubs in the darkest corner of my garage,” she said, “let it sit there for a little bit. My garden has been unkempt right now … the cucumbers are really coming in, so I’m definitely going to make some pickles.”

That kind of ordinary sounds perfect for someone whose extraordinary talent led to monumental pressure and criticism.

Wie West spent most of her career working on building her personal brand, but to listen to her now, there’s an undeniable shift toward the bigger picture. Much of that stems from being mom to Makenna and wanting more for her.

Sorenstam, ever the competitor, was angry about having to line up a putt for double bogey on her final hole. But that frustration was overridden by her appreciation for the warmth she felt from those watching and where she feels the game is headed.

As Sorenstam prepares for yet another major, Wie West said she’s headed to the spa.

Retirement awaits.

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Saturday tee times for the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach

Here are the third round tee times for the U.S. Women’s Open.

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It’s time for the weekend at Pebble Beach Golf Links.

Bailey Tardy, an LPGA rookie, holds the 36-hole lead at 7-under 137 after rounds of 69-68 to open. Allisen Corpuz and Hyo Joo Kim sit two shots behind at 5 under. Meanwhile, World No. 1 Jin Young Ko and other stars are heading home early.

Only seven players are under par after the first two rounds

Pebble Beach is playing as a par 72 this week, measuring 6,816 yards.

Here are the tee times for the third round of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open on the Monterey Peninsula.

Note: All times listed are ET. Pebble Beach is three hours behind.

U.S. Women’s OpenHow to watch | Photo gallery

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Tee times

1st tee

Tee time Players
10 a.m.
Celine Boutier, Ashleigh Buhai
10:11 a.m.
Carlota Ciganda, Nanna Koerstz Madsen
10:22 a.m.
Haruka Kawasaki, Moriya Jutanugarn
10:33 a.m.
Azahara Munoz, Brittany Lang
10:44 a.m.
Miyu Sato, Grace Kim
10:55 a.m.
Gemma Dryburgh, Linn Grant
11:06 a.m.
Minji Park, Chisato Iwai
11:17 a.m.
Marina Alex, Cheyenne Knight
11:28 a.m.
Minami Katsu, Aya Kinoshita
11:39 a.m.
Nelly Korda, Gaby Lopez
11:50 a.m.
Sei Young Kim, Emma Spitz
12:01 p.m.
Lindy Duncan, Haeji Kang
12:12 p.m.
Gabriela Ruffels, So Mi Lee
12:23 p.m.
A Lim Kim, Jenny Coleman
12:34 p.m.
Haru Nomura, Albane Valenzuela
12:45 p.m.
Lizette Salas, Charlotte Thomas
12:56 p.m.
Aditi Ashok, Ruixin Lin
1:07 p.m.
Yuka Saso, Amari Avery
1:18 p.m.
Hye-Jin Choi, Mina Harigae
1:29 p.m.
Jodi Ewart Shadoff, Benedetta Moresco
1:40 p.m.
Monet Chun, Bronte Law
1:51 p.m.
Lydia Ko, Mao Saigo
2:02 p.m.
Hannah Green, Andrea Lee
2:13 p.m.
Pajaree Anannarukarn, DaYeon Lee
2:24 p.m.
Kana Mikashima, So Yeon Ryu
2:35 p.m.
Ally Ewing, Jeongeun Lee6
2:46 p.m.
Patty Tavatanakit, Brooke Henderson
2:57 p.m.
Charley Hull, Minjee Lee
3:08 p.m.
Xiyu Janet Lin, Ruoning Yin
3:19 p.m.
Amy Yang, Aine Donegan
3:30 p.m.
Rose Zhang, Maja Stark
3:41 p.m.
Perrine Delacour, Dottie Ardina
3:52 p.m.
Angel Yin, In Gee Chun
4:03 p.m.
Ayaka Furue, Jiyai Shin
4:14 p.m.
Nasa Hataoka, Leona Maguire
4:25 p.m.
Hae Ran Ryu, Hyo Joo Kim
4:26 p.m.
Bailey Tardy, Allisen Corpuz

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Some big names missed the cut at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach

Plenty of big names are heading home from Pebble Beach

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PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — While a relatively unknown American rookie paces the field at the 78th U.S. Women’s Open, a bevy of top names are headed home early from a historic week at Pebble Beach Golf Links. The most shocking of all: World No. 1 Jin Young Ko.

Ko came into the week with 18 of 36 rounds this season in the 60s. No one could’ve predicted the opening 79 that followed.

The first-round scoring average of 75.5 climbed even higher in Round 2 at 76.07. The cut fell at 6 over, with 74 players advancing to the weekend.

Bailey Tardy paces the field at 7 under, with only six players finishing the first two rounds under par.

U.S. Women’s OpenHow to watch | Photo gallery

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Here’s a look at other notables who missed the cut at Pebble Beach.

Meet the amateurs to make the cut at 2023 U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach

When the week started, nearly 20 percent of the field was amateurs.

When the week started, nearly 20 percent of the U.S. Women’s Open field at Pebble Beach was comprised of amateurs.

There were 28 amateurs who started the week on the Monterey Peninsula in the field of 156, including world No. 2 Saki Baba, but most of them are heading home after two days at the third women’s major championship of the year.

Only four amateurs earned weekend tee times and will vie for the low-amateur medal, which will be awarded during Sunday’s trophy presentation. The cut was 6-over par.

Here’s a look at the amateurs who made the cut at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open.

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American bomber Bailey Tardy unlikely leader at U.S. Women’s Open

“I love this place,” said Tardy of her inspired play at Pebble Beach. “It’s heaven on earth.”

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PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Bailey Tardy procrastinated so much about signing up for U.S. Women’s Open qualifying that she nearly forgot it altogether. The Georgia native wound up in Minnesota, where she thought a bogey on her 36th hole put her in the first alternate position. She’d showered, changed clubs and packed up her golf clubs for an evening flight when another player suddenly three-putted the last hole.

“I was like oh, my gosh, I’ve got to go hit golf balls, I’ve been sitting down for an hour and a half,” recalled Tardy. “So I threw golf clothes back on, found my golf shoes, hit about 15 balls, and just went and played four more holes, which felt like an eternity.”

Tardy holed a 20-foot birdie putt on her fourth extra hole to secure a spot at Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, California, for her fourth U.S. Women’s Open start. Now, the 26-year-old, ranked No. 455 in the world, finds herself the unlikely leader at the midway point of this historic championship.

Not that she seems too surprised.

“I’ve always believed in myself to win any tournament that I enter,” said Tardy. “I’m good enough to be here, and I’ve been on the LPGA, so I feel like I definitely have the game to hang with the best in the world.”

The powerful Tardy hit a 306-yard drive on the sixth hole Friday to reach the par 5 in two and make eagle for a consecutive day, A second-round 68 gave her the solo lead at 7 under at the midway point Friday. She missed the cut in her three previous USWO appearances and finished inside the top 50 only once thus far in her rookie season.

“I love this place,” said Tardy of her inspired play this week. “It’s heaven on earth.”

U.S. Women’s OpenHow to watch | Photo gallery

Tardy leads former USC player Allisen Corpuz and Hyo Joo Kim by two shots. While Kim, a five-time winner on the LPGA including the 2014 Evian Championship, is a veteran of this position, 29th-ranked Corpuz is still getting used to it all. The 25-year-old is only in her second full season on the LPGA.

“I honestly still need to get a little more comfortable, I think, in contention,” said Corpuz. “So that’s really been the focus this year, just really trying to put myself into that spot and then hopefully learn how to convert as it keeps happening.”

Kim, currently ranked eighth in the world, leads the LPGA in greens in regulation and scoring, and ranks fifth in putts per green in regulation. She closed her round Friday with a pair of bogeys to follow an opening 68 with 71.

“Starting tomorrow, I will have an excellent mindset as a new day,” said Kim of her disappointing finish.

Rookie sensation Rose Zhang heads into the weekend at 1 over par, eight strokes back of Tardy. Zhang shot 34 on her back nine for a 1-under 71, feeling like she’d steadied things enough to go into the weekend with a fresh mind.

Zhang, who holds the women’s course record of 63 at Pebble Beach, currently ranks 10th in the field in strokes gained off the tee. Her ball-striking hasn’t been as pristine as usual, however, as she’s hit only 20 of 36 greens.

“I’ve been in this position before where you have to chase,” said Zhang, “and it’s nothing new to me.”

Good-sized crowds have followed Zhang around an overcast Pebble Beach the first two days. The former Stanford star said she’s “super lucky” that people like her.

“I think that it does change a lot of how I play just because you have people just randomly shouting at and you randomly cheering you on,” said Zhang.

“It’s great and all, but definitely something that I’ve never been used to or been accustomed to. This is all very foreign and new to me. Week three as a pro.”

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5 things to know from first round of U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach

Here’s what you need to know about the opening round at Pebble Beach Golf Links.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – A couple of amateurs from Stanford – Kelly Xu and Sadie Englemann – hit the opening tee shots off Nos. 1 and 10 at Pebble Beach and with that, history was a made. The first women’s major ever contested on this American treasure was underway and, well, it was a rough start for many of the best.

World No. 1 Jin Young Ko and No. 2 Nelly Korda started on the 10th tee and dug a hole early, carding a shocking 79 and 76, respectively. As bad as that was, rookie Natthakritta Vongtaveelap had it worse: She was disqualified after five holes.

Meanwhile, as is often the case, several amateurs had career days with three of the 27 inside the top 10.

Here’s the lowdown on how Round 1 unfolded on a damp and chilly day for some of the biggest names in the field, including rookie sensation Rose Zhang:

Watch: Rose Zhang’s chip from off the putting surface on 17th at Pebble Beach

“It was a bit risky, but I felt like that was the shot of the day.”

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Rose Zhang wasn’t thinking about Gary Woodland’s shot on the 17th at Pebble Beach when she faced a similar chip shot from off the putting surface on the front right portion of the green. While Woodlands’ gutsy second shot that won him the 2019 U.S. Open was 93 feet from the hole, Zhang’s near chip-in came from 53 feet. She nestled it to a foot and saved par.

“Oh wow, dude, that’s crazy,” said Zhang as her agent showed her the video after the round.

While Zhang had practiced chipping off the putting surface plenty of times back at Stanford’s practice facility, she’d never tried it in competition.

“I definitely knew right was not a place to miss,” said Zhang. “Once I saw where my ball was, I couldn’t even think about even putting it. So it was a really good shot. It was a bit risky, but I felt like that was the shot of the day.”

Zhang’s opening 74 puts her six back of leaders Xiyu Lin and Hyo Joo Kim. Her biggest blemish of the day came on the par-4 eighth hole, where she lost the ball right in the cliffs and made double.

The betting favorite coming into the week, Zhang enjoyed sizable crowds on the front nine that included her mom and older brother. While her father watches every shot, Zhang’s mother rarely comes out and her older brother, Bill, watched her play in person for the first time on Thursday.

“He doesn’t play golf,” said Zhang of her brother. “He thinks it’s too slow-paced for him. He’s – yeah, I don’t think he ever found an interest to watch me. He has watched me on TV though, so at least he’s cheering me on. At least I know he’s supporting me.”

It’s already been a week of firsts for Zhang. On Monday, after she hit a shot into the iconic par-3 seventh, her tee landed in her back pocket. No one standing on the tee had a clue what had happened until Callaway later posted a video of the shot and fans took note.

The moment quickly went viral. Zhang called it “unintended sorcery.”

“That’s a video that I’ll save forever,” she said. “I don’t think I can ever do that again.”

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LPGA rookie disqualified from 2023 U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach

Vongtaveelap’s caddie used a distance-measuring device.

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PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Thailand’s Natthakritta Vongtaveelap was disqualified from the first round of the 78th U.S. Women’s Open after her caddie, Jinsup Kim, used a distance-measuring device on multiple holes.

Vongtaveelap, a promising 20-year-old rookie from Thailand, was even par through five holes at Pebble Beach Golf Links and competing in her first U.S. Women’s Open on Thursday.

The USGA released a statement that read:

“During the first round, on multiple occasions, the caddie for Natthakritta Vongtaveelap used a distance measuring device, which is not allowed in the U.S. Women’s Open. The first breach is a general penalty, and the second breach resulted in disqualification.”

Distance measuring devices were allowed at the recent KPMG Women’s PGA at Baltusrol. The only places on tour they are not allowed are here at the U.S. Women’s Open and the AIG Women’s British Open.

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Amateur Aine Donegan turns missing clubs into positive at U.S. Women’s Open

When Donegan’s clubs finally arrived, her driver head was completely smashed.

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PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Aine Donegan’s missing club fiasco turned into a storybook silver lining early on at the 78th U.S. Women’s Open. The Irishwoman’s travels from the Vagliano Trophy in Scotland took her to Dublin and then San Francisco via Newark, the epicenter of travel nightmares over the past two weeks.

When Donegan, a rising junior at LSU, arrived in San Francisco after 30 hours of travel, her clubs did not. The airport assured her they would arrive the next day. When they didn’t, the 21-year-old played her first practice round at Pebble Beach Golf Links with a courtesy set of Ping clubs.

Donegan typically plays Ping irons, but found herself hitting a new Ping driver so well during practice that she told her coach/caddie, Gary Madden, that she might put it in play.

Turns out that when Donegan’s clubs finally did arrive, her driver head was completely smashed.

“At least it stopped us thinking ‘Oh, which driver we’ll use. We had only one choice then,’ ” said Donegan.

“Honestly, I am delighted I did. It’s like everything happens for a reason, that the clubs were late and then the driver came and it was broken, and all of a sudden I have no choice, but to put this Ping driver in.”

That driver set up the 96-yard shot Donegan holed on the 15th for eagle that erased the two bogeys she made at the start of the round on Nos. 10 and 11. The reset propelled her to a career day in her U.S. Women’s Open debut. In fact, she topped the board early in the morning at 4 under before a late bogey dropped her to 3-under 69, one shot behind leader Xiyu “Janet” Lin.

“I hit the shot and I knew it was going to be good,” said Donegan. “Then it bounced, bounced, and kind of spins back and it just drops in. I have my family here and a few other Irish over here who live in the United States, and big scream from all the Irish people.”

On a day when many of the best players in the world struggled mightily, Donegan is one of three amateurs in the top five midway through the day.  World No. 1 Jin Young Ko shot 79 while No. 2 Nelly Korda shot 74.

Italy’s Bernadetta Moresco, an Alabama standout who survived a 2-for-1 playoff in sectional qualifying to advance to Pebble, carded a bogey-free 70 to open play and holds a share of fifth with USC’s Amari Avery. Moresco said her putter “was on fire” Thursday.

“I was definitely nervous my first holes,” she said. “But it’s my third major, so I’ve experienced it already, and for the first time, I feel like in the right place. I’m happy about it, as I’m also trying to turn professional soon.”

Avery made headlines earlier this year at the Chevron Championship when she made the cut without ever playing a practice round in Texas. The Pac 12 Conference Championship was held earlier in the same week, and after Avery helped the Trojans win the title, she finished 45th in the LPGA’s first major of the year.

This is Avery’s second USWO start.

“It’s so surreal,” said Avery, who played Pebble Beach for the first time on Monday. “I catch myself on every hole just kind of looking out to the ocean and just appreciating the fact that I’m even here, and playing a U.S. Open here as well is even more special.”

While Rose Zhang, the newly-minted pro who came in this week as the betting favorite, garnered much of the attention this week, her former Stanford teammates Kelly Xu and Sadie Englemann enjoyed a special honor on Thursday. At 7 a.m., Xu hit the first tee shot off No. 1 while Englemann went first off the 10th.

“I almost started crying on the first tee,” said Xu. “It was just amazing. I don’t even have words to describe it.”

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