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West Australian stars Minjee Lee and Hannah Green in contention at US Open

Darren WaltonAAP
Aussie ace Minjee Lee is six shots off the lead halfway through the US Women's Open in Wisconsin. (AP PHOTO)
Camera IconAussie ace Minjee Lee is six shots off the lead halfway through the US Women's Open in Wisconsin. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

Minjee Lee is up for the chase after Japanese sensation Mao Saigo set a cracking pace in pursuit of a second straight major championship at the weather-hit US Women’s Open in Wisconsin.

Playing alongside Lee, Saigo produced the low second round, a sizzling six-under-par 66, to vault to a two-stroke lead before storms forced the suspension of play at Erin Hills, outside Milwaukee.

The 23-year-old 2024 rookie of the year and winner of last month’s Chevron Championship is eight under through 36 holes, with South Korean A Lim Kim her closest challenger.

At six under, Kim still had two holes to play when the horn sounded on Friday (Saturday AEST).

After a frustrating first day on the greens, world No.1 Nelly Korda fired up with seven birdies in a second-round 67 to surge into a five-way tie for third at five under with fellow Americans Sarah Schmelzel (68) and Yealimi Noh (71), Japan’s Hinako Shibuno (69) and Swede Maja Stark, who was playing the last hole.

Lee and fellow WA major champion Hannah Green are the leading Australians - and only two to make the halfway cut - and were likely to start the weekend six back of Saigo at two under.

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Green still had the par-5 18th hole to complete.

Hannah Green.
Camera IconHannah Green. Credit: Stacy Revere/Getty Images

Lee, the 2022 US Open champion and final-round leader last year, was chuffed to climb 39 spots up the leaderboard to move into the top 20 and back in red numbers with a three-under 69.

“I just hit it a little bit closer than yesterday. I probably had a lot of outside chances for birdie yesterday, like 25 to 30 feet, but today I had a few more that were like inside 15 feet,” Lee said.

“Just started really well, made two birdies on the get-go, so it was nice turning three under and had even on the back, just seeing a few more putts roll in and then just hitting it a little bit better.”

After watching Saigo drain seven birdies, Lee knows there will be weekend opportunities to make up the six-shot deficit and capture a third career major.

“Just with maybe a little bit of rain softening the greens a couple of days ago, but I think USGA has a lot of tricks up their sleeve so they can always make it as tough as they can make it or they can make it really challenging and fun to play,” Lee said.

“The greens are probably going to get a little bit quicker and it will be a bit more interesting with, I guess, putting the tees in different places.

“I’m looking forward to the weekend. Hopefully I can hit it a little bit closer, just play aggressively when I can and play smart when I have to. That’s going to be the key.”

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