Thailand's Thitikul wins CME Group championship and biggest payout in women's golf history




Down by two with two holes to play, Jeeno Thitikul knew exactly what was needed to capture the biggest prize in women's golf history.

And another eagle-birdie finish — for the second straight day — made it happen.

Thitikul won the record-setting $4 million US first-place check by capturing the CME Group Tour Championship on Sunday. It's the biggest money prize in women's golf history, bigger than even the winner's shares in three of the four men's major championships this year.

Thitikul shot a 7-under 65 on Sunday and finished the week at 22 under, one shot ahead of Angel Yin (66). Yin had a two-shot lead walking to the 17th tee, only to wind up settling for the $1 million runner-up check.

The win and the massive check came down to the 18th hole, Thitikul and Yin tied at 21 under after a back-and-forth day atop the leaderboard — both knowing a mistake would likely come with a $3 million cost.

Her plans for all that cash?

"Definitely spend it," Thitikul said. "That's an honest answer, for sure. Definitely going to spend it for a little while."

Canada's Brooke Henderson, from Smith Falls, Ont., finished tied for eighth after 13 under.

Thitkul had a two-shot lead after three holes; Yin had a two-shot lead with two holes left. Neither was safe; Yin birdied and Thitikul bogeyed the par-4 fourth for a tie at 16 under, and Thitikul eagled the par-5 17th to pull into a tie with Yin at 21 under.

They both hit the fairway on 18. Thitikul's approach was nearly perfect, stopping about 5 feet from the cup. Yin's response stopped maybe 15 feet away, giving Thitkul the edge as they walked up the fairway.

A woman reacts after making a putt.
Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand reacts after making a putt for birdie on the 18th green to win the CME Group Tour Championship in Naples, Fla., on Sunday. (Getty Images)

Yin's birdie putt just missed. Thitikul's was dead centre. And history was hers.

She already had clinched a $1 million bonus this week through the Aon Risk-Reward Challenge, a competition based on how players score on a designated hole each week. In the end, it wound up as a whopping $5 million week for the 21-year-old from Thailand — and going 8-under over the four days on the Nos. 17 and 18 at Tiburon Golf Club made it happen.

On the PGA Tour, Maverick McNealy finished with a final-round 68 to earned his first victory on Sunday, edging a trio of players by one shot at the RSM Classic in St. Simons Island, Ga.

Playing at Sea Island's Seaside Course, the 29-year-old sank a 5-foot, 5-inch putt on the par-4 18th hole to finish at 16-under 266, just ahead of Luke Clanton (66 on Sunday), Nico Echavarria of Spain (65) and Daniel Berger (67).

Hamilton's Mackenzie Hughes finished tied for fifth, two shots back. 



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Posted: 2024-11-25 05:59:03

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