Evans, ga.
Woad, Junior in the state of Florida and player number 1 in the female amateur ranking, addresses Augusta National for a practice round on Friday and the final round on Saturday.
She takes with her much experience, not only having competed in the house of the Masters, but has gathered to win the last day.
“I have all the experience of last year of 48 hours between,” Woad said about Friday's break so that all contestants play Augusta National. “It's quite positive for me.”
Romero was dynamic, and it had to be after a difficult section in the middle of its second nine holes. He crashed from the lead with a double bogey in No. 4 and a Bogey in No. 5, only to close with three consecutive Birdies for a 68.
They were in 9 under 135 in what should be a convincing final round with five players inside two leadership shots.
Carla Bernat Escuder of Spain had a 68 and shot, along with Andre Revuelta de España (66) and Megha Ganne, who had an early unstable patch and another late late hole. He had a 73, 10 shots worse than his opening round, but he was still in the mixture.
“I tried to create impulse inside the holes and shouted at what I thought it was a quite good 73,” said Ganne, who locked a 25 -foot putt Birdie in his final hole to enter a single shot.
The real drama came at the bottom. The 71 players can play a round of practice in Augusta National on Friday, but only the top 30 and the ties make the cut to play in the final round.
Kelly Xu buzzed his last hole to reach the number. Ko Kurabashi did so from Japan, who shot 65 to advance on Saturday.
Emma McMyler fell under the cutting line with a Bogey on 17, only for Birdie on 18 to cut in 1 low 143.
Among those of 7 -under 137 was Asterisk Talley, who last year was runner-up in the US Junior girls and the US female amateur. He also shared amateur low honors at the US Women's Open. In Lancaster.
Talley opened with a 71 and tried to avoid any drama making the cut. It turns out that it was not a problem when he made five birdies in a six -hole stretch from number 9 and ended with a 66.
“I was sitting near the cutting line, so I knew I had to play a good golf to make the cut,” Talley said. “I started quite stable in the nine front, and then captured some fire on my back.”