Minjee Lee takes strong lead with second impressive round at Women’s PGA Championship
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Leader Minjee Lee of Australia hugging her caddie on the 18th hole green after finishing the third round of the KPMG Women's PGA Championship 2025.
PHOTO: AFP
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FRISCO – Higher scores have been on full display at the Women’s PGA Championship in Frisco, Texas. That makes Minjee Lee’s performance so far even more impressive.
The Australian fired a three-under 69 on June 21, her second round under par, to reach six-under 210 and take a commanding four-stroke lead going into the final round.
Just five rounds in total at the tournament have been in the 60s, and Lee has owned two of them.
“I just try to stay patient out there,” Lee said. “You can’t get ahead of yourself, especially in these conditions.
“It’s just only getting harder and harder just with I think pressure of a Major championship, and also just the course just demands so much from you.”
The 10-time LPGA Tour winner is pursuing her third Major title, having previously won the 2022 US Women’s Open and the 2021 Evian Championship.
“I know what it takes to win and I know just kind of what to feel and what to expect now that I have two under my belt,” Lee said.
“So, yeah, I just think the experience that I’ve had is really going to help me hopefully get over the line tomorrow.”
Lee avoided the ever-present bogey, which has haunted most of the golfers on this course, and instead grabbed three birdies, on holes 9, 14 and 15 to distance herself from the competition.
That came on the heels of an opening-round 69, which featured birdies on holes 3, 5, 7, 9, 10, 14 and 15 – to counter four bogeys.
The Fields Ranch East course at PGA Frisco was especially unkind on June 21 to world No. 2 Jeeno Thitikul, who is pursuing her first Major, and who enjoyed a three-stroke lead coming into the weekend.
The 22-year-old from Thailand suffered six bogeys while scoring two birdies to shoot a four-over 76 and fall from six under to two under.
Despite that disastrous round, she still sits in a better position than everyone else as one of just two golfers under par, and she holds a three-shot advantage on the rest of the field.
The three golfers in the best position to make a potential run on the two leaders on June 22 (June 23, Singapore time) are tied for third at one-over 217.
South Korea’s Choi Hye-jin had the best round of the three (72), but Japan’s Miyu Yamashita (73) and American Lexi Thompson (75) are technically still in the hunt.
Thompson shook off a triple-bogey on her first hole and a bogey to follow to shoot one-under golf the rest of the round.
“Yeah, definitely proud of how I just stayed strong,” she said. “It was kind of a nightmare of a start, but I knew coming into the day it was going to play very difficult.
“I don’t know really what happened on my first hole, but happy I got it out of the way and stayed positive out there and just made pars and a few birdies here and there.”
World No. 1 Nelly Korda (72) is tied with three others – Yealimi Noh (74), Ireland’s Leona Maguire (72) and Japan’s Chisato Iwai (75) – in sixth place at 218.
On the PGA Tour, England’s Tommy Fleetwood shot a seven-under 63 in the third round of the Travelers Championship on June 21 to carry a three-shot advantage into the final round at Cromwell, Connecticut.
Russell Henley had a 61 and Keegan Bradley posted 63 to sit joint-second at 13-under 197. Australia’s Jason Day is alone in fourth at 199 after a 67. REUTERS

