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Japan's Saigo wins playoff for LPGA Chevron title, first major win

Agence France-Presse
Japan's Saigo wins playoff for LPGA Chevron title, first major win
Mao Saigo of Japan poses with the trophy after winning The Chevron Championship 2025 in a playoff at The Club at Carlton Woods on April 27, 2025 in The Woodlands, Texas.
Alex Slitz/Getty Images/AFP

HOUSTON, United States — Japan’s Mao Saigo birdied the first extra hole to win a five-woman playoff and capture her first major title on Sunday (Monday Manila time) at the LPGA Chevron Championship.

Saigo sank a tension-packed birdie putt on the 18th hole in regulation to fire a final-round two-over par 74 at Carlton Woods and finish 72 holes on seven-under 281 just to reach the playoff.

At the 18th again in the playoff, Saigo sank a four-foot birdie putt to capture the crown after clutch putt misses by her rivals.

Saigo, a 23-year-old who was last year's LPGA Rookie of the Year, defeated China's Yin Ruoning, South Korean Kim Hyo-joo, Thailand's Ariya Jutanugarn and American Lindy Duncan in the playoff.

"It was my dream to earn this major. I was able to realize my dream and I'm very happy," Saigo said.

"It means a lot that I made a birdie putt on 18. That gave me more confidence for the playoff."

Saigo plans to carry that confidence boost into the remainder of the campaign.

"I'm extremely excited," she said. "I still have four more majors to go and I want to shoot for number one in the world."

The playoff was at the par-five 18th and Yin reached the green in two by blasting over a water hazard. Saigo and Ariya each went over the green with their second shots, Duncan was short of the green in three and Kim found the green near Yin's ball with her third shot.

Ariya and Saigo missed their eagle bids, setting the stage for Yin's eagle attempt to win from about 12 feet. It went eight feet past the hole as tension mounted.

Kim missed her birdie putt, Duncan missed a 10-foot par putt and tapped in for bogey, then Yin lipped out a birdie putt and tapped in for par.

Ariya lipped out on her eight-foot birdie putt and tapped in for par, leaving Saigo to sink her four-foot birdie for the triumph.

"I was shaking from nervousness, but I did my best to calm down and I shot and it went in," Saigo said.

Ariya had botched a chip on the 72nd hole in regulation and made a bogey that dropped her into a share of the lead, helping to deny her a third major victory and first in seven years.

"Overall I'm very happy," Ariya said. "Back nine just a couple mistakes, but I did really well the rest of the tournament. It has built my confidence for the rest of the season for sure."

Yin and Kim each sought a second career major while Duncan settled for her first top-10 major finish.

Rest, good food

Saigo had more tense moments after the victory when she took the traditional winner's leap into a pond.

"I'm not really a good swimmer," she said. "When I went inside it was deep and at first I thought I was going to drown."

She's less worried about celebrating and more concerned about keeping her focus for upcoming events.

"Next week and the week after, I really need to be in the zone for the tournaments," she said. "I'm so happy I can't even think about how I'm going to celebrate. Off the top of my head, I want my manager to cook something really good and then give me some rest."

Ariya led by a stroke at the 18th tee in regulation and blasted her second shot from the fairway over the green and off the grandstand.

Stunningly, she then miss-hit a chip from the rough that barely moved the ball before sending her fourth shot 15 feet beyond the hole. She missed the comeback attempt and made bogey, falling into a share of the lead with Kim and Yin.

Saigo and Duncan each birdied the 18th to reach the playoff.

GOLF

MAO SAIGO

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