When spring rolled in this morning at 7:46 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time, three groups of golfers had already teed off from both the 1st and 10th tee boxes at Sharon Heights Golf & Country Club. It’s Friday, sometimes referred to as “moving day” – the day in a golf tournament when things get real, and the cut line on the scoreboard is watched with eagle eyes by players, caddies, friends, family, and fans.
If a player had a good day on Thursday, they want to keep it going; if not, they are grittily determined to step up their game and improve their position and climb higher in the standings – especially if their name is sitting below that dreaded line at tee time.
The Cut-line Dance/Moving DayWhen play opened this morning six players with Bay Area connections were at or above the cut line: Minjee Lee (winner of the 2012 USGA Girls’ Junior Amateur at Lake Merced Golf Club) at -4; Stanford alumna Aline Krauter at -2; Lydia Ko (part-time SF resident and 3-time winner of the former LPGA event at Lake Merced) and Stanford alumnae Albane Valenzuela and Rose Zhang at -1; Lucy Li of Redwood Shores and Natasha Oon (LPGA rookie and San Jose State alumna) at even par.
After sitting at even par all morning, in the early afternoon the cut line moved to 1-under, dropping Bay Area native Lucy Li and a slipping Aline Krauter from the weekend field, and putting Lydia Ko in a precarious position. An hour or so later the cut line was back to even par; this is the cut-line dance that drives players – and golf writers who are pre-positioning their stories – crazy.
By the end of the day, though, things had changed a bit, and not everyone went home happy.
Minjee Lee balanced six birdies, including a run of four on holes 14 through 16, against four bogeys to card a two-under 70 for a solid T-3 finish on the day.
Natasha Oon posted a psycho scorecard with one double-bogey, five bogeys, seven birdies, and an eagle (that’s right – only four pars) for a two-under 70, moving up 30 spots to T-30 and a chance to play for a paycheck in her first round as an LPGA rookie.
Lucy Li, Lydia Ko, Rose Zhang, and Aline Krauter hung on just above the cut line at even par to survive to play the weekend, while Albane Valenzuela faded in the home stretch – after an even-par 36 going out (two birdies, two bogeys), she came home in 42 with two bogeys and two doubles to fall below the cut line.
Sadly, Concord native Yealimi Noh, the 2018 U.S. Girls Jr Amateur champion at Poppy Hills and the defending champion in this event, suffered a meltdown on the back nine yesterday and finished the first round at 7-over. That scoring hill proved to be a more difficult climb for her than the physical hills on the course – Noh would eventually close out her 36-hole run at a trunk-slamming (1) nine-over, well below the final cut line.
And, as if to justify the “moving day” moniker for the Friday round, here are some big positive moves that were recorded today:
• Jeeno Thitikul and Aditi Ashok each moved up 57 spots to join Nelly Korda and Karis Davidson (25 spots) in the T-3 logjam with Minjee Lee and three other players.
• Miyu Yamashita moved up 49 places on the leaderboard to T-11 (5-under.)
• Germany’s Helen Briem posted the second-best round of the day, a 5-under 67 (an eight-stroke improvement on her first-round 75), to jump a nose-bleeding 79 spots from below the cut line to T-30 and a spot in the field for the weekend.
With more comfortable temperatures in the mid- to high-70s forecast for the weekend it’s reasonable to predict a continued high level of play along the lines of what was seen today – which should be a treat for fans on course and watching from home.
1 (For those who might be unfamiliar with the term, “trunk-slamming” is a somewhat outdated reference to the move of the player who has missed the cut and can be found in the parking lot tossing their golf bag into the trunk of their car for the drive to the airport or the next event.)
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