In-Kyung Kim Takes 3-Shot Lead at Dubai Masters
By wchung | 30 Apr, 2026
Having Fun: In-Kyung Kim continues to widen her lead over Michelle Wie.
Korea's In Kyung Kim tees off at the second hole during the third round of the Dubai Ladies Masters Golf tournament, Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Friday Dec. 11, 2009. (AP Photo/Karl Jeffs)
In-Kyung Kim shot a 5-under 67 Friday to take a three-stroke lead after three rounds of the Dubai Ladies Masters.
Kim, who stands at 202 overall, leads Anna Nordqvist (65) by three shots and Maria Hjorth (67) by four at the Emirates Golf Club. Michelle Wie (71) is in a four-way tie for fourth at 208.
Wie three-putted the par-5 10th hole for her only bogey.
“I did not get any putts in,” Wie said. “Hopefully, they will all go in tomorrow.”
Kim made her only bogey of the day at No. 8.
“Even though I am ahead, I have got to play my game,” Kim said. “I have to play what the golf course gives me and go out there and have some fun. Nothing is easy, so I better go and have a good sleep.”
Nordqvist, who turned pro after winning the Ladies European Tour Qualifying School in January this year and won the LPGA Championship, threatened the course record. But a birdie attempt on the 17th fell short and another on the par-5 18th lipped out.
“I was a lot more aggressive with my irons,” Nordqvist said. “I had my putting going a bit too … hit a lot of good putts. A couple of them went in, a couple of them did not.”
12/11/2009 9:45 AM DUBAI, United Arab Emirates
Recent Articles
- Vox Momenti: What Did We Do to Deserve Don?
- Microsoft Expects Cloud Business to Beat Wall Street Forecasts
- Meta Plunges 6% on High Spending Forecast, Social Media Troubles
- Amazon Web Services Soared on AI Demand
- Alphabet Beats Top Line Estimates on AI Cloud Revenue Growth
- Musk Portrays Altman As Schemer Who Misled Him
- S. Korea Exports Seen Rising Sharply Again in April on Chip Boom
- House Democrats Urge Trump to Keep Ban on Chinese Cars
- China Tech Firms Scramble for Huawei AI Chips after DeepSeek V4 Launch
- US Orders Halt on Chip Equipment Shipments to China's No. 2 Chipmaker
