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Jiyai Shin leads Wegmans LPGA

ROCHESTER, N.Y. ' South Korean star Jiyai Shin, seeking her fifth win in 11 months, shot a 4-under 68 on Friday to vault into a three-stroke lead at the storm-plagued Wegmans LPGA.

I really am happy with my putter ' its really good, the 21-year-old Shin said after moving to 11-under 133, a record low at the demanding Locust Hill course in suburban Rochester. I would like to keep this feeling through tomorrow and the final round.

Play was interrupted by thunderstorms for nearly five hours, then called off at 8:37 p.m. as darkness fell. In all, 71 players will complete their second round Saturday morning, including Tiger Woods niece, Cheyenne, who was battling to make the cut.
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Fans leave the course as severe weather causes suspension of play during the second round at Locust Hill Country Club. (Getty Images)

Morgan Pressel was in second place at 8 under through 13 holes. That was one better than Kristy McPherson on the same hole, Michelle Wie through 10 holes and Stacy Lewis through 14 holes. First-round leader Sandra Gal of Germany, blaming fatigue for a string of wayward tee shots on the back nine, shot a 1-over 73 to drop to 7 under.

Last year, Shin became the first non-LPGA member to win three events. She reeled in the Womens British Open last August, then followed with late-season wins in the Mizuno Classic and ADT Championship. In March, she captured the HSBC Womens Champions in Singapore for her first victory as a tour member.

Her steadfast accuracy off the tee box and the fairways got her within 3 feet for early birdies on Nos. 3 and 4. Her only bogey came when she caught a greenside bunker at No. 10. As Gal faltered, she took the lead with an 8-foot birdie putt on No. 14 and widened the gap atop the leaderboard when she birdied from 6 feet at the par-5 17th.

On Tuesday afternoon, Shin spent nearly five hours practicing her putting at Locust Hill, a traditional, tree-lined course with compact, undulating greens. So it was easy play with my putter, she said with a shy smile.

Gal, 24, who grew up near Cologne, was a two-time all-American in her three seasons at the University of Florida and the top-ranked European amateur in 2007. In her second year on tour, her best finish was a tie for fifth at last months LPGA Corning Classic.

Im in the hunt for the weekend, so I cant complain, she said. I just accept it as it is and move forward.

From the 12th hole onward, I started hitting a few drives crooked, maybe it was tiredness, she said. After knocking in a 15-foot birdie putt on No. 11, she got caught in heavy rough for bogeys on Nos. 12 and 14 and double-bogeyed No. 16, when she fluffed a chip, landed in a bunker and then missed a 7-foot putt.

Woods, making her first start on the professional tour by way of a sponsor exemption, was at 1 over through 10 holes. If that score holds up, it might just be enough to get the 18-year-old into weekend play.

Defending champion Eun-Hee Ji was in much more difficult straits: 6 over through 13 holes.

The $2 million tournament drew 18 of the seasons top 20 money winners, including No. 1 Cristie Kerr, who was at 1 under through 12 holes. Absent is Lorena Ochoa, the worlds top-ranked player, and Suzann Pettersen, the runner-up here last June.

Related Links:
  • Full Coverage - Wegmans LPGA