SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, France — Morgane Metraux of Switzerland gave up her spot to her sister in the last Olympics so she could concentrate on her tour status. She had the stage to herself Thursday at Le Golf National that made it worth the wait.
Metraux had eight 3s on her card on the front nine — an 8-under 28 — until getting slowed by the wind and a bad shot at the wrong time. She still had a 6-under 66, giving her a one-shot lead over Ruoning Yin of China at the halfway point of the women's golf competition.
One week after the men's competition had a dynamic medal chase, the women lined up for some special possibilities of their own.
Lydia Ko, the only golfer to win medals in the last two Olympics, had a 67 and was only three shots behind. The Kiwi star — she reached No. 1 in the world at age 17 — won the silver in Rio de Janeiro and the bronze in Tokyo. A gold would put her into the LPGA Hall of Fame.
Mariajo Uribe of Colombia is retiring from golf and wanted the Olympics to be her final competition. She had another 70 and was four behind. Celine Boutier had the French crowd chanting and singing again, but she had three straight 6s on her card along the back nine for a 76. She was five behind.
Nelly Korda, the world No. 1 and defending Olympic champion, could have been right there. She was 6 under on the day until one bad swing, one bad lie and three putts for a quadruple bogey on the par-3 16th. She shot 70 and was six behind.
''If I would have done this on the last day — or let's say the third day — then I would be extremely heartbroken,'' Korda said. ''But I have 36 more holes and anything can happen.''
The biggest surprise was Metraux, who was still on the developmental Epson Tour when the Tokyo Games arrived. She decided to keep playing the tour to earn money toward an LPGA card and was pleased that the alternate in line to replace her was her older sister, Kim.