Sei Young Kim wins LPGA Classic in playoff
Alena Sharp finishes 13th, Brooke Henderson 21st
Sei Young Kim won the Meijer LPGA Classic on Sunday for her second victory of the year, beating Carlota Ciganda with a birdie on the first hole of a playoff.
After bogeying the 18th in regulation to drop into the playoff, the 23-year-old Kim rebounded on the par-4 hole in the playoff. She hit a 124-yard shot from the deep left rough — so deep that she momentarily lost her ball after looking away — ran onto the green and settled at 3 1/2 feet.
The South Korean player finished with a 3-under 68 at Blythefield to match Ciganda at 17-under 267.
Alena Sharp, who lives in Phoenix, Ariz., was the top Canadian, finishing tied for 13th. One week after her first major title in the LPGA Championship, Brooke Henderson finished a disappointing 21st.
Ciganda, from Spain, parred the final five holes in a bogey-free 67. Winless on the tour with four fourth runner-up finishes, she also hit into the left rough in the playoff. She hit a 156-yard shot through the green and couldn't get up-and-down for par.
Kim perfect in playoffs
Kim has five career victories, going 3-0 in playoffs. She also won the Founders Cup this year in Phoenix, shooting 63-66-70-62 to match Annika Sorenstam's LPGA Tour scoring record of 27 under. Last year, she won three times and was the rookie of the year.
On 18 in regulation, Kim drove left into the rough under trees, hit her second into thick rough left of the green and missed a 15-foot par putt.
South Korea's In Gee Chun, tied for the third-round lead with defending champion Lexi Thompson, had a 71 to finish third at 15 under. The U.S. Women's Open champion bogeyed two of the first four holes.
Thompson, fighting back pain, shot a 72 to tie for fourth with top-ranked Lydia Ko at 14 under. Ko, coming off her playoff loss to Henderson last week outside Seattle, closed with a 68.
Ariya Jutanugarn, third last week after winning her previous three starts, tied for 18th at 7 under after a 68.
Michelle Wie shot a 75 to tie for 56th at 1 under. She's winless since the 2014 U.S. Women's Open and hasn't had a top-10 finish in 38 events.