Celine Boutier fends off Georgia Hall in a playoff to win 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship

The 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship came down to a playoff between a pair of Solheim Cup teammates.

SUPERSTITION MOUNTAIN, Ariz. — The 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship came down to a playoff between a pair of Solheim Cup teammates.

France’s Celine Boutier got up-and-down for a must-have tying birdie on the par-5 18th hole Sunday to get to 20 under to knot things up with England’s Georgia Hall, who also birdied the closing hole about an hour earlier.

They replayed the 18th, playing 469 yards Sunday, with Boutier hitting a similar second shot right of the green. Hall then hit her approach into the back bunker. Boutier chipped up to about four feet, setting up a birdie try. Hall, meanwhile, faced a dicey sand shot and ended up about 20 feet past the hole.

After Hall’s birdie putt missed to the left, the stage was set for Boutier to close it out, which she did, making birdie on 18 for the second time Sunday to clinch the victory, her first playoff win.

Following her round Saturday, which gave her a one-shot, 54-hole lead, Boutier said “I think I just realized that my game is good enough.” She sounds even more confident Sunday after earning the win.

“I think it’s definitely not easy to win. I feel like my game was good enough for the past couple years for sure. I just wasn’t able to win. I feel like it’s something you need to learn,” she said. “I definitely had a bunch of opportunities last year and wasn’t able to do it, so to be able to do it this early in the season this year is definitely very satisfying.”

2023 LPGA Drive On Championship
Celine Boutier holds the trophy after winning the 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship at Superstition Mountain Golf & Country Club in Arizona. (Photo: : Alex Gould/The Republic)

She proved it Sunday by winning for the second time in five tries when holding the third-round lead. She also becomes the winningest player from France in LPGA history, surpassing Anne Marie Palli, who lives in Scottsdale and followed Boutier’s group Sunday.

“It’s wonderful for her to win, and what’s so fun, and I just made her aware, she won in Australia, she won in Atlantic City and here, and Atlantic City and here are the two tournaments I won as well, on tour,” said Palli. “She’s a hard worker. She’s a great player. Yeah, and she’s very nice. I’m very excited for her.”

Hall last won just over a year ago at the 2022 Aramco Saudi Ladies International. The 2018 Women’s British Open champ also has the 2020 Cambia Portland Classic on her resume.

“Obviously fantastic to get to the position I was in. I knew I had to shoot low today, and obviously gutted about the playoff.”

Boutier’s 268 total (69-66-65-68) sets the 72-hole scoring mark. The tournament was 54-holes a year ago and while the LPGA has staged the Drive On event since 2020, the 2022 version is considered the first official event.

Japan’s Ayaka Furue finished solo third. Korea’s Narin An finished solo fourth. Defending champion Leona Maguire finished tied for 23rd.

Chip shots

Gina Kim recorded the first hole-in-one of the 2023 LPGA season when she aced the par-3 eighth hole early in Sunday’s round. “At first I was scared because I was like, ‘Oh, crap. It probably hit the pin and went down the hill or something like that.’ Then I heard my mom screaming and everyone screaming and then that’s when I realized, holy cow,” Kim said. She had a final-round 66 and tied for 66th.

Lydia Ko will remain No. 1 in the Rolex Rankings after skipping the Drive On. World No. 2 Nelly Korda, who finished tied for 57 after closing with a 1-over 73, and No. 3 Jin Young Ko, who finished tied for fifth, each came up short of supplanting Lydia Ko. Among the scenarios for Korda was a win or a solo second. For Jin Young Ko, she needed to win and have Korda finish solo third or worse.

Golfers from four different countries have won the four LPGA events so far: Boutier (France), Brooke Henderson (Canada), Jin Young Ko (Korea) and Lilia Vu (U.S.).

Tournament director Scott Wood says ticket sales, despite the tournament only having been announced in November and no title sponsor to drive promotion, reached close to 35,000 for the week.

Up next: The DIO Implant LA Open starts Thursday at Palos Verdes Golf Club in Palos Verdes Estates, California.

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Gina Kim makes first LPGA hole-in-one of 2023 at Drive On Championship

There was an albatross before there was an ace on the LPGA in 2023.

SUPERSTITION MOUNTAIN, Ariz. — There was an albatross before there was an ace on the LPGA in 2023.

During Friday’s second round, Yuka Saso posted a 2 on the par-5 second hole, the first albatross in three years on tour.

On Sunday, Gina Kim recorded the first hole-in-one of the season. It happened on the par-3 eighth hole when she holed out to spark her final-round 66.

“It’s a little still chilly in the morning,” she said. “Wind was kind of going left to right, and I said, ‘Hey, you know, you thinking that 8-iron would be good?’ Because we were trying to play like a 146 shot and my caddie, Jorge said ‘I don’t want you to be muscling this. I think that 7-iron, just a nice grip-down easy 7-iron should be good.’

“And so I aimed left of it and let the wind take the ball, and it looked like it was going great, and suddenly we heard this loud bang and turns out it didn’t even just hop into the hole it just dunked straight into the hole. No damage to the hole. Just sank right to the bottom of the cup.”

As (bad) luck would have it, there was no video captured of the shot.

“At first I was scared because I was like, oh, crap. It probably hit the pin and went down the hill or something like that,” Kim said. “Then I heard my mom screaming and everyone screaming and then that’s when I realized, ‘Holy cow.'”

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Meet the 10 Epson Tour players who earned LPGA cards for 2023

The top 10 players on the Ascensus Race for the Card earned LPGA status for the 2023 season.

Hyo Joon Jang, a 19-year-old rookie from South Korea, entered the Epson Tour Championship ranked 11th on the money list with $74,202, just $1,076 behind No. 10 Alexa Pano. Jang’s T-11 finish was enough to push her into the 10th spot, forcing Pano to head to Q-Series to earn her LPGA card.

The top 10 players on the Ascensus Race for the Card earned LPGA status for the 2023 season. The top three players – Linnea Strom, Xiaowen Yin and Lucy Li – had their cards locked up coming into Daytona Beach, Florida.

For the second time in three years, Bailey Tardy missed her card by one spot. In 2020, Tardy missed her card by $343. She held the lead on Sunday at the Tour Championship on the strength of five birdies in six holes on the front nine. A back-nine 37, however, dropped her down to third place. This time, the former Georgia standout missed the 10th spot by $1,765.

Jaravee Boonchant birdied the 18th to win her first Epson Tour title at LPGA International and moved up to 12th on the money list. While it wasn’t enough to earn her LPGA card, the former Duke player will get to skip the second stage of Q-School.

Find out more about the card winners for the 2022 Epson Tour season:

‘People underrate the college experience’: A mature Gina Kim makes pro debut on Epson Tour with balanced perspective

The Duke star earned her LPGA card at Q-Series but just because a player has a card doesn’t guarantee starts.

WINTER HAVEN, Fla. – Gina Kim was 14 years old when she got her picture taken with Laura Davies in Evian, France. At 21, Kim finds it hard to believe that she’s now a card-carrying member of the same tour as the World Golf Hall of Famer.

The Duke star earned her LPGA card at Q-Series, but hasn’t yet teed it up in an event. Just because a player has a card doesn’t guarantee early starts. Which is why Kim, who is currently 174th on the LPGA priority list, makes her professional debut this week on the Epson Tour.

“I’m trying to be kind to myself and realize that this is a long-term investment,” said Kim. “God knows how many rounds are in front of me.”

This kind of well-beyond-her-years perspective flows as beautifully as the rest of her tidy game. Kim is already an A+ pro-am player, conversing easily with tour officials, sponsors and the media at the Florida’s Natural Charity Classic like she’d done this sort of thing 1,000 times before.

But this is all learned behavior, a byproduct of 3 ½ years of college, where she outgrew a self-described “hot-headed” temperament that could send her to tears at a moment’s notice. It was at Duke, she said, that she learned how to value a big-picture mindset.

In 2019, Kim played a pivotal role in helping Duke win the NCAA title and then later that same summer, she contended over the weekend at the U.S. Women’s Open in Charleston, South Carolina.

“After the 2019 U.S. Open, I thought I was ready,” said Kim. “I thought I was ready to go out and kill it.”

But she needed more time to develop the intangible skills, to appreciate the value of a par and the need for life balance. There was physical work, too. The gutsy Kim reconstructed her swing with the help of Ted Oh, learning how to compress the ball to gain more consistency.

Kim has worked hard toward a life on the LPGA for a long time, but even before it begins, she knows that she’ll probably retire in her mid-30s to start a family. And then what?

“You’ve got more than half your life ahead of you,” she said. “What do you do after that?”

While Kim decided to forgo her final semester of golf at Duke, she’s still a student there with a 3.79 GPA and one class left: sports ethics. She’ll have to rush back to be there on Monday afternoons until mid-April and will graduate in early May. Kim went to Duke despite both parents being professors at the University of North Carolina.

“I think people underrate the college experience because that’s where you really do a lot of maturing as a person,” she said, “and not just as a golfer.”

Kim plans to play in the first two Epson Tour events and will then try to Monday-qualify for the JTBC Classic at Aviara in Carlsbad, California. She’s hoping her status will get her into the Lotte Championship in Hawaii without having to qualify.

The LPGA’s first reshuffle is after the Cognizant Founders Cup in mid-May, and one good week on tour could score her a boatload of starts.

The goal, of course, is for Kim to play a few early on the Epson Tour and never go back.

Kim begins her pro career with a familiar face on the bag in Ben Sorrells, who first caddied for her at the 2019 Augusta National Women’s Amateur. Sorrells has caddied on the PGA and Korn Ferry Tours for seven years and loved Kim’s attitude right from the start.

“Her bubbly personality, the smile on her face,” said Sorrells, “it got me.”

If all goes to plan, much of the world will soon see it, too.

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Duke star Gina Kim turns pro, leaves college early after earning LPGA card

“I am more than excited to start a new chapter of my life.”

The Duke women’s golf team has some big shoes to fill this Spring.

Senior Gina Kim, a key player for the Blue Devil’s 2019 national championship team, announced on Wednesday she will turn professional after earning her LPGA card during Q-Series last month.

“I am more than excited to start a new chapter of my life,” said Kim via a release.  “Although it is bittersweet to say goodbye to my home for the past four years, I am more energized and determined to make my mark on the LPGA. I am immensely grateful to my team, coaches, and support staff here at Duke University and Duke Athletics for constantly supporting me and my passion for golf.”

According to a release from the school, Kim will attempt to Monday qualify for the first two LPGA events in Florida: the Gainbridge LPGA at Boca Rio (Jan. 27-30) and the LPGA Drive on Championship (Feb. 3-5).

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In 24 starts Kim earned a pair of victories and a 72.92 scoring average. She finished in the top 10 in a third of her appearances for the Blue Devils and was a two-time All-American.

All eyes will be on Erica Shepherd to shoulder the load, with underclassmen Ryle Heflin, Anne Chen, and Phoebe Brinker all more than capable to step into a bigger role.

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College stars show out at 2021 PXG College Golf Showcase, which donated $1 million to military foundations

Check out some of the highlights from the second-annual college showcase.

The big winner of the PXG College Golf Showcase was once again charity.

The second annual event at Scottsdale National Golf Club aimed to elevate collegiate golfers and PGA Tour University while also benefiting military-focused foundations was shot last month but aired Wednesday night on Golf Channel. The teams, led by playing captains actor and Marine veteran Rob Riggle and Hall of Fame NFL running back Jerome Bettis, were filled with some of the nation’s best college golfers – for now – and the players didn’t disappoint.

Riggle’s Semper Fi & America’s Fund team, featuring Oklahoma State’s Eugenio Chacarra, Washington’s RJ Manke and Duke’s Gina Kim, were down big at the turn to Bettis’ team representing Mount Sinai, comprised of Arkansas’ Brooke Matthews, SMU’s Noah Goodwin and Oklahoma’s Logan McAllister, but fought back down the stretch. Ultimately, it was Riggle’s squad coming out on top in the end with $512,500 to the Semper Fi fund, just ahead of Mount Sinai with $487,500.

The tagline for the event is, “Elite college golfers should be household names.” While that’s true, if you’re just learning about Kim and Matthews, you might have missed their college careers. A total of 46 players recently earned LPGA cards for next season, including Matthews and Kim. Both said they plan to announce their decision about whether they will turn pro or defer and finish their college seasons in the coming days.

The money was donated by the Bob and Renee Parsons Foundation. Parsons, the founder of internet domain and registrar company GoDaddy, purchased Scottsdale National in 2013 and started PXG in 2014.

Check out some of the highlights from the second-annual showcase.

McAllister hates putting in Arizona

OK, maybe not, but at last year’s NCAA Championship the Sooner star made two aces, then at the PXG event he chips in for eagle to give his team some early juice.

Blowout at the turn

Things weren’t looking good midway through the event.

‘Be the number!’

The Semper Fi squad started to get a little swagger after the turn and Chacarra couldn’t get enough of Manke’s approach at the par-5 10th.

Gina Kim throws darts

A 325 carry?!

No words, just watch.

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Fifth time is a charm: Affable Gina Kim masters Pinehurst, wins North & South Women’s Amateur

After five years, Gina Kim has finally solved the Pinehurst riddle.

After five years, Gina Kim has finally solved the Pinehurst riddle. It couldn’t have come at a better time, considering that this week’s Women’s North & South Amateur may have been Kim’s summer-amateur swan song.

The 21-year-old’s week-long crusade to the iconic Putter Boy trophy awarded at the long-running amateur event at Pinehurst No. 2 played out in phases. She barely made the match-play bracket – advancing out of a 10-for-8 playoff just to get the 32nd and last spot on the bracket against medalist Abbey Daniels.

Then, with no expectations, she watched closely as Daniels deftly navigated her way through sandy No. 2.

“She knew how to make up out of those waste areas, it was amazing the way she used those slopes,” Kim said. “I learned a lot form her. . . .  It was actually a really tough battle to get out on top because she was doing so well and playing such solid golf.”

Kim has a similar story about every opponent she faced through the week. Catching Addie Baggarly in the next round “was the unluckiest draw” because the two are such good friends.

By the time she reached the semifinals, she had to face Allisen Corpuz, a finalist at this event last year.

“She’s had a great track record over there,” Kim said. “I, on the other hand, have not. Getting into match play was a miracle for me.

“Getting to the semifinals was one thing, having to face Allison was another.”

Regardless, Kim took down Corpuz, 6 and 4, and suddenly had a Saturday afternoon match against Furman’s Anna Morgan for the title.

In the brutally hot Sandhills, the seven-round North & South is an endurance event. That, and Kim got a 3 a.m. wakeup call each day from a train that rolled by the condos she and her mom stayed in by Pinehurst No. 3. When Kim and Morgan were evacuated for the first weather delay, Kim got so comfortable on a couch that she closed her eyes for a short snooze. She was so deep in sleep she’s not even sure how long that nap lasted – only that it could have gone on much longer.

“If somebody wasn’t there with me,” she said, “I would still be there snoozing, just gone.”

When the match was halted for weather a second time, Kim came off the course before hitting a difficult chip on No. 7. She knew she had that waiting for her but she relished it.

“For me, I was like, ‘I want this chip,’” she said, “because I know I can do it. I can make this work.”

In facing that return shot, Kim drew on a memory from earlier this summer at the Palmer Cup. Kim was paired with Walker Cup hero Pierceson Coody in the opening mixed fourball session and they were 2 down through nine holes to Julian Perico and Pauline Roussin-Bouchard, who were “firing on all cylinders, going ham and egg on us.”

A weather delay also paused that match, and when Kim and Coody returned to the course, Kim told her partner she could feel it in their bones they were going to win.

“We ended up taking it to the 18th hole and Pierceson makes this unreal eagle putt,” she said.

They won, 1 up.

At Pinehurst, Kim tied that seventh hole before winning that next hole. She eventually closed out Morgan, 3 and 1.

Kim would like nothing more than to play on the Curtis Cup later this fall, the women’s equivalent to the Walker Cup. She has already been selected for two practice sessions for team hopefuls, and this week’s North & South run should have left a big impression on team selectors. Kim was very aware that this would be a good time to show what she can do. Instead of playing next month’s U.S. Women’s Amateur, Kim will head to California to prepare for LPGA Q-School later this year. In fact, she won’t appear in a women’s amateur field again this summer.

“I knew this tournament would really swing things in my favor if things go well,” Kim said. “I think that was the no. 1 thing that was on my priority list. It’s every amateur golfer’s dream to make the Curtis cup or the walker cup. These tournaments are just so prestigious.”

It was a short drive home for Kim after claiming her trophy late on Saturday evening because of two weather delays. She grew up just 60 miles northeast in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

Even though she won the tournament, there were debts to pay when she got home. Kim had convinced her mom, Sansuk, to caddie for her this week, but there was a catch.

“We made a deal that if I get mad at her, I would have to pay $50,” Gina said. “Even though I won this tournament I actually lost some money.”

She confessed the final total was $100, but it’s a small caddie fee to pay for an unforgettable week.

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Gina Kim keeps fighting forward at North & South Women’s Am; will meet 2020 finalist Allisen Corpuz

Gina Kim is living on the edge at Pinehurst. The close calls keep coming, and yet Kim keeps advancing at the North & South Women’s Amateur.

Gina Kim is living on the edge at Pinehurst. The close calls keep coming, and yet Kim, a Duke junior, keeps advancing at the North & South Women’s Amateur.

It all started with a 10-for-8 playoff just to make the 32-woman match-play bracket on Wednesday. Kim advanced through that to take the No. 32 seed. The next morning she returned to dispatch medalist Abbey Daniel.

From there, Kim had to face good friend Addie Baggarly. Victory in 19 holes followed. It was the same 19-hole story in the quarterfinals against Jessica Spicer.

Now Kim finds herself with a Saturday-morning tee time alongside Allisen Corpuz, a finalist in this event a year ago.

Kim is the No. 23-ranked amateur in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. She won the individual title at the ACC Championship and was fifth at the NCAA Women’s Championship this spring. This week marks the fifth North & South start for the North Carolina native.

Scoring: North & South Women’s Amateur

As close as Kim’s matches have been, Corpuz’s have been just the opposite. Two of her past three matches have ended on the 14th hole, including her Friday afternoon quarterfinal match against Mississippi State’s Blair Stockett.

Asked for her best piece of match-play advice at this event a year ago, Corpuz, who just completed her fifth year at USC, had this to offer: “I think most of the time it’s really just trying to keep it as close to stroke play as possible. Just trying to play my game. If they make a mistake, try to capitalize on that.”

Two matches remain until the iconic Putter Boy trophy is handed out at Pinehurst. The winner of the Kim-Corpuz showdown will meet the winner of Anna Morgan vs. Megan Schofill for the championship match on Saturday afternoon.

Morgan, a Furman sophomore, is a recurring figure in Carolinas golf events, having won both the Carolinas Amateur and the South Carolina Amateur last summer.

Schofill, who won the Florida Women’s Amateur in a big comeback last year, was a member of Auburn’s SEC-title winning team this spring.

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Gina Kim returns from competitive break to win Harder Hall Women’s Invitational

Gina Kim focused on school over golf the past four months, but she showed little rust in returning at the Harder Hall Women’s Invitational.

After 36 holes at the Harder Hall Women’s Invitational, Gina Kim looked poised to run away with it. The Duke junior had an eight-shot lead at Harder Hall Golf Club in Sebring, Florida.

From there, Kim got a little reckless, to the tune of seven bogeys and a double for a 78, her highest round of the week. She called that third round a reality check on a golf course that may not seem that difficult at the outset, but one that can reach up and bite you.

“I think yesterday even though my score was not that great, I think it just gave me a quick reality check and kind of humbled me and put me back in my place,” Kim said. “I was ready for the challenge. I was glad that I faced all the obstacles yesterday because now I know what not to do today.”

On the last day of the year, Kim rebounded to close out a victory in her first tournament start in more than four months. She played the back nine at Harder Hall in 1 under for a closing 73 and at 1 under for the tournament, finished one shot ahead of Chloe Kovelesky, a Florida teenager.

Scores: Harder Hall Women’s Invitational

Minji Kang was 2 over and in solo third while Florida sophomore Annabell Fuller and San Jose State junior Natasha A. Oon tied for fourth at 5 over.

There are some nuances to competing at the Harder Hall. Its slot on the calendar can mean it is one of the coldest, windiest weeks of competitive golf of the year, Florida location notwithstanding.

Kim has never competed here, but having been out of competition since finishing third at the South Carolina Women’s Open on Aug. 16, it seemed a good place to start tuning up for 2021.

“It was definitely very windy and that proved to be the biggest challenge, in my opinion, for this golf course,” Kim said. “I think you have to learn how to manage the windy conditions well and that’s where it helped me win this tournament.”

Kim was also able to focus better in the final round and forget about who else was chasing her or how close they were.

At Duke, which competes in the ACC, there was no fall golf. Kim found competition in the summer – finishing second at the Carolinas Amateur then making match play at both the North & South Women’s Amateur (Round of 16) and U.S. Women’s Amateur (Round of 64). She shelved the clubs in the fall, though, to try to get a leg up on school.

Kim, a psychology major, took five classes in the fall instead of four and hopes that will allow her to reduce her load in the spring when golf hopefully returns.

“I told myself maybe I need this break,” said Kim, who continued to practice.

Kim didn’t just get a refresher in competition this week, she got a refresher in winning.

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