-
England rugby captain Itoje slams Ratcliffe's 'ridiculous' immigration comments
-
Europe should speak to Russia with 'one voice', Putin foe says
-
US Congress impasse over immigration set to trigger partial shutdown
-
US to deploy new aircraft carrier to Middle East as Trump warns Iran
-
Ubisoft targets new decade of 'Rainbow 6' with China expansion
-
Stocks trend lower as AI disruption worries move to fore
-
Spurs set to hire Tudor as interim boss until end of season: reports
-
International crew en route to space station
-
Man City's Rodri charged over ref rant
-
Italian biathlete Passler cleared to compete at Olympics despite positive test
-
Macron slams 'antisemitic hydra' as he honours 2006 Jewish murder victim
-
Tuipulotu warns England to beware 'desperate' Scotland in Six Nations
-
Cash-starved French hospitals ask public to pitch in
-
US consumer inflation eases more than expected to lowest since May
-
Germany's Merz urges US to repair ties with Europe
-
Europe seeks new 'partnership' with US at security gathering
-
Fresh water leak adds to Louvre museum woes
-
Floods wreak havoc in Morocco farmlands after severe drought
-
Russia, Ukraine to hold talks in Geneva on February 17-18
-
Ukraine's Heraskevych hopes 'truth will prevail' in Olympics appeal
-
Dumplings and work stress as Chinese rush home for Lunar New Year
-
Macron denounces 'antisemitic hydra' as he honours 2006 Jewish murder victim
-
India-Pakistan: Hottest ticket in cricket sparks T20 World Cup fever
-
Cross-country king Klaebo equals Winter Olympics record with eighth gold
-
Ukraine's Heraskevych appeals to CAS over Olympic ban as Malinin eyes second gold
-
Stocks mostly drop after Wall Street slide
-
Sophie Adenot, the second French woman to fly to space
-
Alleged rape victim of Norway princess's son says she took sleeping pills
-
Activist group Palestine Action wins legal challenge against UK ban
-
Driven by Dhoni, Pakistan's X-factor tweaker Tariq targets India
-
Davidson set to make history as Ireland seek to rebound against Italy
-
Europe defends NATO, US ties at security gathering
-
China's fireworks heartland faces fizzling Lunar New Year sales
-
Bangladesh's Yunus 'banker to the poor', pushing democratic reform
-
Cracknell given Six Nations debut as Wales make changes for France
-
L'Oreal shares sink as sales miss forecasts
-
Bangladesh nationalists celebrate landslide win, Islamists cry foul
-
Thai PM agrees coalition with Thaksin-backed party
-
Zimbabwe pull off shock win over Australia at T20 World Cup
-
Merz, Macron to address first day of Munich security meet
-
Three dead, many without power after storm lashes France and Spain
-
Bennett half-century as Zimbabwe make 169-2 against Australia
-
Asian stocks track Wall St down as traders rethink tech bets
-
'Weak by design' African Union gathers for summit
-
Nigerian conservative city turns to online matchmaking for love
-
Serb-zero: the 'iceman' seeking solace in extreme cold
-
LeBron James nabs another NBA milestone with triple-double in Lakers win
-
Hundreds of thousands without power after storm lashes France
-
US Congress impasse over migrant crackdown set to trigger partial shutdown
-
AI's bitter rivalry heads to Washington
Hull wins LPGA Queen City title after Jeeno four-putt bogey at 18
England's Charley Hull won her third LPGA title on Sunday at the Queen City Championship with a last-hole birdie after Jeeno Thitikul squandered the lead with a closing four-putt bogey.
Hull, a four-time winner on the Ladies European Tour, also won the LPGA 2016 Tour Championship and 2022 Volunteers of America Classic and was a 2023 Queen City runner-up.
Hull fired a four-under par 68 in the final round to finish 72 holes on 20-under 268 and beat top-ranked Jeeno by one stroke at TPC River's Bend in Cincinnati, Ohio.
At the par-five 18th, Jeeno led by one but the world number one and top LPGA putter missed a five-foot birdie putt then lipped out for par from four feet, setting up Hull's two-footer for birdie and the win.
"I thought I had to make eagle to be fair," Hull said. "I wasn't really watching her putt for birdie because I thought she was going to hole it.
"I guess it's not over until the fat lady sings but I was shaking over that last putt because I just didn't expect it. But yeah, it feels great."
Hull sank a long birdie putt at par-three 16th to seize a share of the lead but found a bunker off the tee at the 17th and made bogey, falling a stroke behind Jeeno.
"At 17, I hit a decent tee shot," Hull said. "The bunker was fine but I was in the lip of the bunker. If it was three feet back I would've had a shot at the green. To get that one and birdie the last, it's pretty cool."
Hull, who led by one when the round began, reeled off three birdies in a row starting at the par-five sixth hole then birdied the par-five 11th before making a bogey at the 13th.
Jeeno made a birdie-bogey start then charged with birdies at the fourth and par-three seventh before starting the back nine with back-to-back birdies and grabbing the solo lead with a birdie at the 14th.
She kept the lead with an up-and-down for par from a bunker at 15, setting up the last-hole drama.
England's Lottie Woad was third on 270 with Japan's Miyu Yamashita fourth on 271.
A fifth-place pack on 273 included Japan's Nasa Hataoka and Chisato Iwai, world number two Nelly Korda and fellow American Jennifer Kupcho, Sweden's Maja Stark, South Korea's Kim Sei-young and China's Mary Liu.
L.Henrique--PC