Angela Stanford and Kris Tamulis walked side by side off Hazeltine National's par-4 16th with both the elation and anger the PGA of America was looking for when it made the signature hole a 245-yarder with an extreme front-left pin for Saturday's third round of the KPMG Women's PGA Championship.
"I thought it was a lot of fun and I hope they do it again [Sunday]," Stanford said.
Tamulis? Not so much.
Both players grabbed 3-wood with hopes of running the ball onto the green through a narrow opening or, at worst, leaving a pitch inside 20 yards from the left side of the fairway.
Stanford came up 4 yards short of the green, lipped out an eagle putt up the smooth slope to the green and tapped in for birdie. Tamulis pushed her tee shot into the deep reeds in the hazard area on the right, tried and failed to wedge it out, took a penalty drop, stubbed a chip and ended up with triple bogey and an 8-over 80.
The hole, which was shortened by 140 yards from the first two rounds, played as the third-easiest hole. It surrendered no eagles, but the 29 birdies matched the total from the first two rounds combined.
"It's definitely a risk-reward hole," said Danielle Kang, who's tied for seventh at 3 under. "Somebody like me, I'm going for it. I don't like laying up."
Tamulis had the only score higher than bogey. There were just nine bogeys, but one of them belonged to big-hitting Ariya Jutanugarn, who sits at 8 under and one shot off the lead behind Hannah Green, who parred 16.