Photos: An inside look at Lilia Vu’s Champions Dinner at Chevron, featuring renowned chef Thomas Keller

What a night: A private helicopter, a world-renowned chef, Bentleys, Rolls-Royces and Bò Kho.

THE WOODLANDS, Texas — Lilia Vu didn’t see the menu for the Champions Dinner at the Chevron Championship until she sat down Monday evening. There was supposed to be a group phone call about it when Vu was playing in China, but a bad flareup with her back disrupted the plan, and she ended up conversing with renowned chef Thomas Keller via group chat.

“I told Chef Keller, hey, really love steak, made it my personality trait,” said Vu, who won her first major championship title last year at The Club at Carlton Woods.

“Then I also said that I’m Vietnamese, and I kind of want to do some Vietnamese flavors. You can do whatever you want. I know he’s so GOAT’ed, so like, just let him do whatever he wants.”

Needless to say, Vu was impressed when she saw that Keller, owner of The French Laundry and once named the Best Chef in America, had made Bò Kho, a dish her mom makes that’s her absolute favorite. Every single course, she said, was a home run.

The dinner began with a white asparagus panna cotta, followed by sweet pea agnolotti and Bò Kho, which the menu notes as “All Day Braised Snake River Farms American Wagyu Brisket.”

“For that Vietnamese dish he brought out,” she said, “I looked at my whole table, everything was clear. Everyone ate every single piece off that plate. Yeah, it was amazing.”

Jennifer Kupcho, the 2022 champion, had one request from Keller last year: macaroni and cheese.

Kupcho was one of several players who arrived to the dinner via private helicopter.

“Kupcho tried to convince me,” said Vu, “but I was like, no, you go do it. Send me a video after.”

Past champions in the field also received a Bentley courtesy car for the week. Past champions who weren’t part of the field were chauffeured around in a Rolls-Royce.

Every player in the field received a free Avis rental car.

There was a lot of angst when this event moved from beloved Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, to Texas. Even past champion Stacy Lewis, whose childhood home isn’t too far from the course, had mixed feelings.

But on a day when the championship’s purse moved to $7.9 million, up $4.8 million from when Chevron assumed title sponsorship in 2022, Lewis had nothing but praise.

“They’re pushing the envelope with this tournament, and I like it,” she said. “They want to make it special for us, and last night was certainly a testament to that.”

World No. 1 Nelly Korda enters this week’s Chevron on a streak of four victories, including the last three scheduled events. She’s the undisputed favorite, and her trek toward rarified air takes a lot of eyeballs away from Vu, who prefers it that way.

Vu followed her breakout victory here in Texas with three more titles, including a second major at the AIG Women’s British Open. She ended the 2023 campaign as LPGA Player of the Year.

So far, her 2024 campaign hasn’t gone to plan.

“It’s been a rough couple months battling with my injury,” said Vu, who withdrew from back-to-back events in Asia this spring. “It’s been a little scary. I’ve definitely cried a lot on the range sometimes because my back just couldn’t hold up.”

Vu said she’s 95 percent there now physically and is focused on trying to enjoy herself. She’s under the belief that her body aches because she’s been internally angry inside, frustrated with her performance when she has been able to play. Vu has only one top 10 showing so far this season.

It helps that the California native likes the vibe here in Houston, calling it calming. Almost like home in a way.

“Even my parents were talking about it last night,” said Vu. “Could be a place to consider to move.”

Champions Dinner at the Chevron Championship

 

Chevron increases purse to $7.9 million at LPGA’s first major

Chevron has increased the purse by $4.8 million since assuming title sponsorship in 2022.

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Chevron’s commitment to the LPGA went a step higher on Tuesday with the announcement of a purse increase to $7.9 million in 2024. The move brings the tour’s first major in line with the purses of other championships. The U.S. Women’s Open purse of $12 million paces the tour, with the KPMG Women’s PGA second at $10 million. The AIG Women’s British Open purse checks in at $9 million while Amundi Evian is $6.5 million.

Chevron, which moved the event away from Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, to Texas, last year, has increased the purse by $4.8 million since assuming title sponsorship in 2022. The company has committed to title sponsor the event through 2029.

Purses at the majors and CME Group Tour Championship have set the tone for the LPGA in reason years. In 2021, the LPGA’s five majors awarded $23 million in official money. This year’s tally of $45.4 million, which may yet increase as the season unfolds, represents a 97 percent increase in three years.

In addition, those who miss the cut at the Chevron will receive $10,000 to cover expenses, double what was given last year.

The LPGA’s total prize fund is up 79 percent in the last five years.

World No. 1 Nelly Korda comes into the Chevron fresh off of four consecutive victories. The event will be played April 18-21 at The Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands, Texas. First place at the Chevron is good for $1.2 million.

Augusta National Women’s Amateur champ Lottie Woad chooses LPGA major over ACCs

Woad, ranked No. 4 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, hasn’t finished outside the top 8 in college golf this season.

Lottie Woad faced a tough decision in the aftermath of her Augusta National Women’s Amateur. The victory comes with special invitations to four major championships, including next week’s Chevron Championship, which overlaps the ACC Championship.

Woad, a 20-year-old sophomore at Florida State, has opted to make her major championship debut at the Chevron April 18-21 at The Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands, Texas, in what will be her first LPGA start.

“I wasn’t really going to turn down a major,” said Woad, who had full support form her Seminole coaches.

The Englishwoman delivered a finish for the ages on Saturday in the final round at Augusta National, making birdie on three of the last four holes to beat USC’s Bailey Shoemaker by one stroke.

“If I’d been told before this week that I’d be two back with four to play, I would have been like, yeah, perfect, that sounds great,” said Woad. “To be in the mix on the back nine at Augusta is something that everyone dreams about.”

Woad, ranked No. 4 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, hasn’t finished outside the top 8 in college golf this season, with co-medalist honors at the Annika Intercollegiate.

With her parents and English national coach/caddie back home in England, Woad will be on her own in Texas, though former FSU player Frida Kinhult did have an extra room in her Airbnb. Woad is in the process of trying to find a local caddie for next week.

On Sunday at Augusta, Woad met Nancy Lopez and Tom Watson as she handed out awards at the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals. She also met 2016 Masters champ Danny Willett for the first time in the clubhouse.

It’s back to class for Woad this week in Tallahassee. On Tuesday night, she’ll throw out the first pitch in the sold-out FSU vs. Florida game on ESPN2. While Woad hasn’t played baseball, she did play cricket back home in England.

World No. 1 Nelly Korda headlines the field at Chevron after winning her fourth consecutive start on Sunday at the T-Mobile Match Play. Korda is the first American to win four consecutive starts on the LPGA since Nancy Lopez won five consecutive starts in 1978.

Woad received a warm welcome-home reception when she returned to Tallahassee. Kinhult made cupcakes. Check out the photos from the surprise gathering:

 

2024 women’s major championship venues including St. Andrews

The best women golfers in the world will take on the Old Course next year.

The 2024 LPGA schedule was released Thursday morning and there are plenty of tournaments to look forward to.

There will be 33 official events with a record total prize fund of $118 million. In 2023, there were three events with a purse of $3 million or more. In 2024, there will be 10.

The first two events — Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions (Jan. 18-21), LPGA Drive On Championship (Jan. 25-28) — will be in Florida before a three-week stretch overseas.

The new Boston event — FM Global Championship (Aug. 29-Sept. 1) — will be the final tournament before the Solheim Cup.

However, let’s get to what the people really care about — the majors.

Here’s everything you need to know for the five major championships next year.

Chevron Championship was NBC’s most watched sports program of the week

Things really heated up when Lilia Vu and Angel Yin went to a playoff, with an impressive number of peak viewers.

The Chevron Championship’s move from California to Texas might not have been popular with LPGA players, but the tour’s first major of the year was a bona fide success in terms of its television audience, according to numbers that were unveiled early this week.

The final round of coverage from The Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands averaged 941,000 viewers across all platforms, including NBC Sports, the NBC Sports app and Peacock, which is up considerably from the 349,000 average viewers when the event was on Golf Channel last year.

But things really heated up when champ Lilia Vu and Angel Yin went to a playoff, with a peak of 1.54 million viewers or a 1.0 rating between 7:15 and 7:30 p.m. ET. Yin went in the water as the two played 18 again in the playoff, and Vu dropped a birdie putt to capture her first major title.

The tournament’s numbers were clearly aided by a schedule move away from the Augusta National Women’s Amateur and into a better timeslot against the PGA Tour’s Zurich Classic.

Other important stats:

  • This year’s event was the most-watched since 2010 and was the best for NBC Sports
  • The Chevron was the top-rated sports program on NBC for the week
  • It was also in the top 20 sports programs for the week across all broadcast networks
  • Even though it falls in the heart of a busy week that included NBA and NHL playoffs, Major League Baseball games and the PGA Tour’s Zurich, Sunday’s broadcast of the Chevron was among the top 10 sports broadcasts for the day

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Premium practice balls, ball tracking technology, VR, Rolls-Royces and more: How Carlton Woods wowed LPGA players at the Chevron Championship

“We’ve already got plans to make this so much bigger and better.”

THE WOODLANDS, Texas — As the sun magnificently lit up The Club at Carlton Woods for Saturday’s third round of the LPGA’s Chevron Championship, adding a hue of green that previously hadn’t been seen by TV audiences, the biggest concern tournament organizers faced was an overload of patrons waiting for the shuttle bus at a nearby park-and-ride.

Too many fans. That was the biggest takeaway after the first few rounds of play after the event moved from sacred ground in California to its new Texas home.

Steve Salzman, the general manager and chief operating officer of the club, knew many were sensitive and sentimental about the move away from Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage after 51 years. So he knew to give players a reason to keep circling the date, tournament organizers would need to dig deep into a bag of Texas hospitality.

The reaction was overwhelmingly positive. Stipends of $5,000 were added for players who missed the cut, marking the first time in the tournament’s history that was offered. Players received courtesy cars for the week, with returning champs rolling around town in Bentleys and Rolls-Royces.

2023 Chevron Championship
Patty Tavatanakit picks up her ball after finishing the 18th hole during the second round of the 2023 Chevron Championship. (Photo: Thomas Shea-USA TODAY Sports)

And those are just some of the perks the new partnership between Carlton Woods and Chevron has cooked up. LPGA players often aren’t given an option when it comes to practice balls, meaning they often have a different feel on the range. Salzman and his staff reached out to ball manufacturers and while some did provide extra balls for the range, a few did not.

“That didn’t sit really well with us,” he said. “So we contacted all the ball manufacturers to get balls. Most of the big ones came through, but there were a few that didn’t, so we dug into our own stock and made sure that was the case, so that they can practice with the balls that they play with. And I think that’s the first time that’s ever been done. The gals are walking up there and seeing their balls in boxes and they’re really happy.”

Players noticed

Many said the LPGA pros were excited about the new roots the event put down, even though it was painful to move away from the Coachella Valley. Brittany Lincicome, for example, was impressed with the treatment the players received.

“It’s been spectacular. From when we got here, picked up at the airport on Sunday, the Past Champions Dinner on Monday was spectacular, getting my Bentley on Tuesday, just the golf course even, too,” said Lincicome, who won the event twice, in 2009 and again in 2015. “You walk up to the range where the practice facility I’d probably practice more if I had that practice facility. I’m so jealous.

“But the golf course is perfect. It’s so beautiful. … it’s a long-hitter’s course. It’s narrow. There’s a lot of water and trouble. You really kind of have to work your way around the course, don’t short-side yourself. That’s where you’re going to be in big trouble.”

In terms of the practice range, Salzman said the organizers of the Chevron wanted to borrow ideas from perhaps the world’s most well-respected tournament, the Masters, even using the same technology on the range as those seen at Augusta National.

“This is the first time Toptracer Range has ever been at an LPGA event,” Salzman explained. “That package here was at the Masters and as soon as the Masters was done, we got it on a semi and they brought it here to set it up. First time in the history of the LPGA that arranged product has been available.”

Korda: ‘Crowds were amazing’

So most everything went well during the initial move, aside from some lengthy lines at the shuttle bus stop. Even the historic jump into the lake off 18 for winner Lilia Vu went off without a hitch. Fans were treated to a captivating playoff as Vu edged Angel Yin on the first hole. Nelly Korda was third after she buried a long eagle putt on the 18th hole to get within a shot of the playoff.

“The crowds were amazing. The crowds that we have gotten and followed my group were really great. They’re treating us really well. I like the golf course, too,” Korda said. “It’s challenging. I think the difference between Palm Springs that we played for so long and this golf course is that there’s just more water. It’s a little bit more wide open, let’s say, off the tee, but there are a lot of trees, so you kind of have to play within. The greens are pretty tough, as well. I would say Palm Springs is a little tighter off the tee, but they’re both really great golf courses, and I’ve heard, I’m not sure if this is true, that they’re going to be redoing the greens for next year, so we’ll see.”

“Chevron put together a player advisory group, just they wanted to know what was important to us to make the championship special,” said Stacy Lewis, who is a product of The Woodlands. “There’s obviously a lot of traditions with this event, and what was the traditions that were most important to us. They asked current players, they asked retired players, they asked everybody.

2023 Chevron Championship
Lilia Vu holds the trophy after winning the 2023 Chevron Championship at The Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands, Texas. (Photo: Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

“Chevron crushed it. You see it with the trophy. Dinah’s Place on 18. Everything was about Dinah this week, and that’s what we tried to tell them over and over again is what was important.”

Fans also got an enhanced experience as just behind the ninth green sat an impressive structure named the Inspiration Dome, half of which housed a virtual reality experience sponsored by Accenture tapping into the life of an LPGA pro.

Among those who took part in the exhibit was LPGA Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan.

LPGA Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan engages herself in the Putt Like A Lady virtual reality experience during the final round of The Chevron Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Thomas Shea-USA TODAY Sports

It was all part of a plan to make a splash in the first year of the event. Salzman understood the tradition the tournament built and wanted to stay true to the roots, but he said organizers were also shooting to make this an even larger spectacle, and insisted the plans for the future are to go even bigger.

“If the players need something, they get it. If they want it, they get it,” he said. “There are so many things about an event like this that I’ve heard, ‘Well, they don’t expect this or they typically don’t get that.’ But I ask, but they’d like it, right? Then let’s get it. I’ve already heard this is incomparable to anything they’ve experienced and I’m thinking, ‘Oh boy, then I’m really going to blow them away next year.’

“We’ve already got plans to make this so much bigger and better.”

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Photos: Lilia Vu makes a splash with 2023 Chevron Championship win, continues pond jump tradition in Texas

Check out the best photos of the first pond jump in Texas.

The jump into Poppie’s Pond at Mission Hills was a special tradition for the first women’s major championship of the year dating back to 1988.

Now named the Chevron Championship, the event moved from the course in Rancho Mirage, California, to The Club at Carlton Woods in the Woodlands, Texas, outside Houston, and with the change of venue came the natural question: will the winner jump? With snakes and gators present in the area, it wasn’t an easy question to answer.

Vu and her caddie walked by the 18th green during the practice round and discussed if she would make the leap.

“I was like, ‘Yeah, I would jump. If I won here, of course I would jump,'” said Vu after the win. “(Saturday) or the day before we saw a snake on 17 pond, so I was kind of thinking about that today, but I think the emotions were high and just adrenaline, got to jump into that pond.”

And jump she did.

Check out the best photos of the traditional pond jump, the championship’s first in Texas.

DINAH SHORE: How will its legacy continue in Texas?

2023 Chevron Championship pond jump

2023 Chevron Championship prize money payouts for each LPGA player

Here are the prize money payouts for each LPGA player at 2023 Chevron Championship.

THE WOODLANDS, Texas – Lilia Vu made one cut in nine starts and earned $3,830 in her first season on the LPGA in 2019. Now, the Chevron Championship winner has more than $2 million in career earnings after claiming her second LPGA title of the season and a first-place prize of $765,000. The total prize fund this year was $5.1 million.

Angel Yin, who lost to Vu in a playoff, earned $479,680. Prior to this week, she’d made $3,256 in 2023.

This year, for the first time, players who missed the cut were given $5,000 in unofficial money to help cover expenses at the Chevron. Additionally, the cut was reduced to top 65 and ties this year, down from 70 and ties.

Here are the prize money payouts for each LPGA player at 2023 Chevron Championship.

Pos Player Score Winnings
T1 Lilia Vu -10* $765,000
T1 Angel Yin -10 $479,680
3 Nelly Korda -9 $347,974
T4 A Lim Kim -8 $188,300
T4 Atthaya Thitikul -8 $188,300
T4 Allisen Corpuz -8 $188,300
T4 Albane Valenzuela -8 $188,300
T4 Amy Yang -8 $188,300
T9 Megan Khang -7 $111,615
T9 Jin Young Ko -7 $111,615
11 Hyo Joo Kim -6 $98,481
T12 Georgia Hall -5 $89,026
T12 Carlota Ciganda -5 $89,026
T14 Ariya Jutanugarn -4 $76,334
T14 Celine Boutier -4 $76,334
T14 Xiyu Lin -4 $76,334
17 Hye Jin Choi -3 $68,283
T18 Ashleigh Buhai -2 $61,585
T18 In-gee Chun -2 $61,585
T18 Cheyenne Knight -2 $61,585
T18 Maddie Szeryk -2 $61,585
22 Amanda Doherty -1 $56,200
T23 Brittany Lincicome E $50,214
T23 Brooke Henderson E $50,214
T23 Eun-Hee Ji E $50,214
T23 Leona Maguire E $50,214
T23 Ally Ewing E $50,214
T28 Hinako Shibuno 1 $38,933
T28 Marina Alex 1 $38,933
T28 Danielle Kang 1 $38,933
T28 Nanna Koerstz Madsen 1 $38,933
T28 Gaby Lopez 1 $38,933
T28 Matilda Castren 1 $38,933
T28 Jessica Korda 1 $38,933
T28 Lindsey Weaver-Wright 1 $38,933
T28 Eila Galitsky (a) 1
T37 Nasa Hataoka 2 $30,333
T37 Maja Stark 2 $30,333
T37 Pajaree Anannarukarn 2 $30,333
T37 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 2 $30,333
T41 Patty Tavatanakit 3 $25,737
T41 Minjee Lee 3 $25,737
T41 Ruoning Yin 3 $25,737
T41 Na Rin An 3 $25,737
T45 Gemma Dryburgh 4 $22,322
T45 Pavarisa Yoktuan 4 $22,322
T45 Dana Fall 4 $22,322
T45 Amari Avery (a) 4
T49 Chella Choi 5 $19,958
T49 Stephanie Kyriacou 5 $19,958
T49 Pei-Yun Chien 5 $19,958
T52 Sei Young Kim 6 $18,121
T52 Ayaka Furue 6 $18,121
T54 Ryann O’Toole 7 $17,069
T54 Lucy Li 7 $17,069
T56 Andrea Lee 8 $15,232
T56 Hae Ran Ryu 8 $15,232
T56 Linnea Strom 8 $15,232
T56 Karis Davidson 8 $15,232
T56 Yuna Nishimura 8 $15,232
T61 Dewi Weber 9 $13,395
T61 Jing Yan 9 $13,395
T63 Wei Ling Hsu 10 $12,737
T63 Brittany Altomare 10 $12,737
65 Mao Saigo 11 $12,343
66 Sarah Schmelzel 12 $12,082
T67 Lauren Stephenson 13 $11,686
T67 Charlotte Thomas 13 $11,686

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2023 Chevron Championship: Lilia Vu, golf’s newest major champion, draws inspiration from her late grandfather, who built a boat to escape a war-torn Vietnam

A change in outlook freed up Vu to unlock her potential.

THE WOODLANDS, Texas – Lilia Vu felt an unusual amount of anger bubbling up inside this week over little things. Upset by the way she handled that anger, there were times during the final round of the 2023 Chevron Championship that Vu thought about her grandpa, Dinh Du, and how disappointed he’d be if she didn’t get her act together.

Standing at the podium soaked in champagne and cloaked in a white robe and slippers, the shiny Dinah Shore trophy by her side, Vu told the story of how her grandfather built a boat to help his family escape a war-torn Vietnam. How he’d go off in the countryside for months at a time, trying to literally build a better life for their family with his bare hands.

Vu’s mom, Yvonne, and her siblings ran through the forest the day in 1982 her father told them it was time to go. The boat was meant to hold no more than 54 people, but as others swam out to meet them, the number swelled to 82.

“He took them all,” said Yvonne.

After two days, the boat sprang a leak. They shot off a flare and were. soon rescued by the USS Brewton, a Naval ship that was decommissioned in 1992.

“My grandpa is the reason why I’m here,” said Vu, who birdied the last two holes on the Nicklaus Course at the Club at Carlton Woods to make her way into a playoff against fellow American Angel Yin.

After finishing the tournament knotted at 10 under, the pair headed down the par-5 18th once again, where Vu hit a drive so long she had 7-iron in on a hole she hit hybrid not long before in regulation.

After Yin’s approach found the water, Vu’s second shot went long over the green. Vu opted to putt through the long grass for her eagle attempt and left it 14 feet short of the hole.

Vu didn’t lose her turn, and after she stoically converted the birdie putt broke down in a heap of sobs as friends showered her with champagne.

“One of the things I noticed early on when I started caddying for her was that she rises to the occasion pretty well,” said Cole Pensanti, who also looped for Danielle Kang when she won the 2017 KPMG Women’s PGA.

Yin, who has yet to win on the LPGA, was emotional after the round not because she lost, but because she wondered if she’d ever have a chance to contend like this again after battling injuries.

“I think I’ve just come a long way,” said Yin. “I’m just really happy with who I am, where I am, and what I’m doing right now. Just a lot to appreciate.”

During her first year on the LPGA in 2019, Vu made one cut in nine starts and earned $3,830. The winningest player in UCLA history, with eight titles, considered hanging it up and going to law school.

Vu’s mom, however, convinced her to stay the course.

As Vu prepared to head down to Florida for an Epson Tour event during the 2020 pandemic, her grandfather was in the hospital battling a heart condition.

2023 Chevron Championship
Lilia Vu jumps in the lake after winning the 2023 Chevron Championship. (Photo: Thomas Shea-USA TODAY Sports)

“The last thing he told me was to play my best,” said Vu. “He’s in the hospital, thinking of me and my tournament.”

It wasn’t long after they returned to California that her grandfather died.

It was then Vu began to realize that she’d been treating every shot like it was life or death, comparing her success to that of the peers she’d grown up competing against.

A change in outlook freed up Vu to unlock her potential and, in 2021, she finished first on the Epson Tour money list to earn back her LPGA card.

After finishing in the top 3 on three different occasions last year and not hoisting a trophy, a frustrated Vu once again changed her mental approach. She decided she’d been putting too much pressure on herself. Vu determined that she was bound to win one day and needed to just let it happen.

Vu won in her second start of the season at the Honda LPGA Thailand and has yet to finish outside the top 15 in 2023. A $765,000 winner’s check at the Chevron gives her $2,036,647 in career earnings.

At this time last year, Vu was ranked 127th in the world. She came into the Chevron ranked 12th, and while Nelly Korda is projected to rise to No. 1 once again after her third-place finish in Texas, Vu is undoubtedly the hottest American player in the world right now.

Sunday at the Chevron was a windy, chilly and, early on, rainy affair. There certainly were no guarantees that this year’s winner would have any interest in stepping foot on the shiny new dock next to the 18th green. Even Vu wasn’t sure if she’d leap into the murky water after spotting a snake near the pond on the 17th earlier in the week.

But the emotions were running high as the crowd chanted “Jump! Jump!” and, well, this is the major the kid from southern California was most familiar with – and this was her chance.

Vu took off her shoes and socks, grabbed the hand of her trainer and as her caddie belly-flopped off to the left, Vu carried on the most storied tradition in women’s golf.

What would her grandfather think?

“I think he’d say that all my struggles were worth it,” she said.

As were his.

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Meet the top 10 players in contention at the Chevron Championship and what they’re saying about a potential jump in a new pond

Will the winner jump or not?

THE WOODLANDS, Texas — Angel Yin remembers vividly a practice round she had with Cristie Kerr several years ago at an LPGA Drive On event in Georgia.

“She was walking after she hit a tee shot off a practice round, and she was like, ‘I’m four days away from people knowing I’m back,'” said Yin.

“That’s the confidence. Every day I tell myself that: ‘Just channel your Cristie Kerr.'”

Yin hasn’t yet won on the LPGA and co-leads the 2023 Chevron Championship with Allisen Corpuz, another American player looking for her first LPGA victory at the year’s first major. The third-round leaderboard at the Club at Carlton Woods is littered with players looking for a break-through week – whether that’s a first-time LPGA victory or a maiden major win.

Only a trio in a share of sixth know what it’s like to win a major – Nelly Korda, Hyo Joo Kim and A Lim Kim, who won her first major down the road in Houston at the 2020 U.S. Women’s Open at Champion Golf Club.

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Here’s a breakdown of the top 10 players at the Chevron, and what some are saying about the champion’s leap: