Alison Lee, Ruoning Yin surge atop
Riviera leaderboard after 2 rounds at U.S. Women's Open
[June 06, 2026]
By GREG BEACHAM
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Alison Lee seized a share of the lead at the 81st
U.S. Women's Open on Friday with a second-round 68 in her native Los
Angeles area, joining Ruoning Yin at 4-under 138 atop a crowded
leaderboard at Riviera.
World No. 1 Nelly Korda jumped into the hunt for her first Women’s
Open title by shooting the day’s lowest round at 67, leaving her
just two shots back after struggling Thursday.
Opening-round leader Jennifer Kupcho, Sei Young Kim and Mexico's
Gaby Lopez were in a group of six at 3-under 139, while Korda and
three others were at 140.
The venerable course at this 100-year-old country club is hosting
its first U.S. Women’s Open, and it remained unforgiving for the
world’s best. Only two players managed a bogey-free round Friday —
including China's Yin, who semi-jokingly called Riviera “passive
aggressive" despite being the only player in the field to shoot two
sub-70 rounds so far.
“I love it,” Yin said. “I always say that the more difficult (the
course), the better.”
Yin carded her second straight 69 in the same city where she earned
her first LPGA Tour victory in 2023, a couple of months before she
won the Women’s PGA Championship. She tied for fourth at last year's
U.S. Open at Erin Hills.
Lee played under par for the second straight day at Riviera,
highlighted by back-to-back birdies just before the turn. The new
mother’s first two rounds are an extension of a strong start to the
season that includes a third-place finish at the Mizuho Americas
Open four weeks ago.

“To win in basically my backyard, where I grew up, would be super
cool,” Lee said. I don’t want to get ahead of myself ... but if
you’d told me I would be in this spot at the beginning of the week,
I probably would have started crying.”
The 31-year-old Lee grew up in suburban Valencia and had a stellar
junior career before playing at UCLA and embarking on her pro
career. She is a two-time Solheim Cup participant, but she has yet
to win on the LPGA Tour while managing just two top-10 finishes at
44 majors.
“I'm not going to lie, it’s been very tough,” Lee said. “I’ve gone
through a few stages, a few slumps, if you want to call it, in my
career, even since I was like 15 years old. ... no matter what I
did, no matter how much I practiced, it just wasn’t going my way.”
Lee then took most of last year off for the birth of her son, Levi.
While she says her sleep rhythms are regularly interrupted by her
13-month-old these days, her parents and extended family in Valencia
have relieved some of the burden during the Open.
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Sei Young Kim, of South Korea, hits of the 13th tee during the
second round of the U.S. Women's Open golf tournament Friday, June
5, 2026, in the Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles. (AP
Photo/Jessie Alcheh)

Levi was in attendance for Friday's round, but
Lee's partner only brought him out to watch the 18th hole because
the youngster has a tendency to get excited: He yelled “Ball!”
during his mom's backswing at The Chevron Championship earlier this
year.
With family around her, Lee is finally having the
moment she had long anticipated.
“I feel like I’ve definitely underachieved what I could have done
out here on tour,” Lee said. “It’s definitely been really
frustrating. I’m at a point now where I’ve truly accepted it, but
like I said, that’s part of why I want to come back and play. I feel
like I was so close so many times.”
Kim was one shot behind Kupcho after the opening round, and she was
thrust into the lead early in the second despite shooting 1 over on
the front nine. She bogeyed the 18th to drop her share of the lead
in one of the day's final groups.
Kupcho scuffled to a second-round 73 after carding the only 66 of
the tournament so far on Thursday.
Among the players who missed the 36-hole cut were world No. 3 Hyo
Joo Kim, three-time major champion Lydia Ko, five-time major
champion Yani Tseng and Michelle Wie West, who largely left golf in
2023.
The 36-year-old Wie West returned to competition last month at the
Mizuho Americas Open, but she isn't currently planning to play
beyond this U.S. Open.
She shot 7 over at Riviera — the former club of her late
father-in-law, Lakers icon Jerry West — after using the final year
of her exemption from winning the 2014 U.S. Open. Her husband,
Jonnie West, was her caddie.
“Obviously, I would be lying to say I wasn’t disappointed,” Wie West
said. “I would have loved to have made the cut today, but I had a
blast, honestly, playing here at Riv. Such a special week to have
played it, and to have family, friends, a lot of familiar faces
coming out. It was a lot of fun. I hit some good shots, hit some
good putts and kind of felt that feeling again, which is awesome.”
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