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Hannah Green keeps getting out of tough spots, and it's taken her to a place she has never been.
- Perth golfer Hannah Green is on her second year on the LPGA Tour after coming fifth in the Rookie of the Year standings last year
- Green, a former Karrie Webb Scholarship winner, was ranked 114th in the world before this week
- The 22-year-old has the chance to join Karrie Webb and Jan Stephenson as the only Australian women to win golf major titles
Green twice escaped trouble with unlikely par saves, including one shot she holed from off the green, and made four birdies for a 3-under 69 to set a daunting target at Hazeltine National in the Women's PGA Championship.
The 22-year-old Australian has made just one bogey over 36 holes at Hazeltine, one of the strongest tests of the year on the LPGA Tour.
It is her first 36-hole lead on the LPGA Tour.
"Even when you play this type of golf at just a regular event, you're pretty proud of yourself, but this week especially," Green said.
"I've never put myself in this position in any event, so to be doing it this week at such a great venue definitely shows things are going the right way. I've had some luck going my way. I do hope that continues."
Green was at 7-under 137 and led by three shots over dual major-winner Ariya Jutanugarn of Thailand and four shots over defending champion Sung Hyun Park of South Korea, who had a 71, along with New Zealand's Lydia Ko who shot a second round 70.
Nelly Korda and Angel Yin were another shot behind after a 70. Only 15 golfers from the 151-strong field completed 36 holes under par for the tournament.
Green thought luck was on her side when she holed a short-sided bunker shot for birdie on the par-5 seventh near the end of her opening round.
Friday was even better.
She didn't notice the water right of the 12th green during practice rounds. She took a penalty drop, and with the pin on a shelf in the back left of the green, her biggest concern was getting it close without the risk of a big number.
"If I landed it too far there was a possibility of it going over the back. I didn't want to leave myself with another chip to then possibly make bogey or double," Green said.
"I had to land it perfectly and I guess I did. I knew it was going to be close but I didn't think it had the chance of going in.
"I really wasn't really watching it going into the hole. I just heard the crowd roar.
"I just laughed because with the hole-out on 7 yesterday [from the bunker] and with the hole-out today, it's really going my way."
After a missed chance at birdie on the par-five 15th, Green was in trouble again on the 16th hole, the signature hole at Hazeltine.
Her shot took a surprising kick to the right, leaving the ball between clumps of grass. She got that up-and-down for par and was on her way.
Green is in her second full year on the LPGA Tour, having won three times on the Symetra Tour in 2017 to earn her card.
She had such a successful amateur career in Australia that she was awarded the Karrie Webb Scholarship in 2015, and one of the perks was coming to the US Women's Open at Lancaster.
The 44-year-old Webb is Australia's most prolific champion with seven majors as part of her 41 titles on the LPGA Tour.
Webb, the only player to win five different LPGA Tour majors, first came to America under a similar program started by Greg Norman, and now has one in place for female amateurs.
Green swam, played tennis and golf as a teen before devoting her time to golf when she was 15.
She wasn't even playing golf when Webb was winning five out of eight majors, giving her the career Grand Slam at the quickest rate.
About the time Green realised she might have a future in golf, Webb already was in the Hall of Fame.
"As soon as I had the chance to come to the US Open, that's when Karrie was my idol," Green said.
"I feel like all other Australian golfers have her as an idol. She had Greg Norman as her idol and had a similar scholarship.
"She's done that for us. I'm really grateful that she's given so much to so many people."
AP
Topics: sport, golf, united-states, australia