
Jeeno Thitikul mastered the second win of the LPGA season on the Kroger Queen City Championship on Sunday. Then, for the world’s number one world, everything is separated.
Thitikul and Charley Hull fought in Cincinnati all weekend. In the final round, the leader slipped back and forth between the two, and Thitikul shrank one at Hull No. 17 bogeyed bogeyed bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bogey bo
However, one of the best putts on the last hole revealed the matter. Thitikul hit a five-shot green on two-shot green, shooting her second shot 50 feet from the hole. Her Eagles tried to pass a five-foot hole, but were still in good shape and could at least make the playoffs with Hull. Thitikul tried to burn his lips with a birdie and then pushed a four-foot par putt that would win the playoffs in Hull.
Congratulations to Charley Hull, I feel sorry for Atthaya Thitikul.
Remember, everyone can have four putts. Even the best in the world. Practice your 6 feet.
Stop taking Gimmes. If you want a real obstacle. pic.twitter.com/fupell4byi
— Jayson Nickol, PGA (@nickolgolf) September 14, 2025
Instead, Hull left two feet of birdie putt to win his first LPGA Tour title since 2022.
“I thought I had to make the eagle fair,” Hull said after the victory. “I wasn’t really watching her putt for the birdie because I thought she was going to insert it. I thought I didn’t end until the Fat Lady sang, but I kept shaking the last putt because I just didn’t expect it. But, yeah, it felt great.”
Just six weeks ago, Hull had a chance to win the AIG Women’s Open, and then two key late bogeys gave her the chance to win the first major title. Then there was a torn ligament of her ankle, and she suffered after tripping over the curb in the parking lot. Hull laughed in his initial diagnosis and returned last week, where she tied for second in the Aranco Houston Championships of the Women’s European Tour.
“Obviously, I’ve completely ripped my ligaments into half the ankles, so it’s in the after-British Open golf game,” Hull said in Ohio earlier this week. “I had to pull [out]. They said it might be about nine weeks of recovery time, but I lowered it to three. After last week’s game, I had some pain this week. ”
Adding the torn ankle ligament to the virus forced her to quit the Amundi Evian championship and back injuries suffered before the AIG woman was revealed, while Hull had a roller coaster, full of illness-filled season. But she didn’t slow her down.
“Obviously, when I lifted the box to my car, then it hurt my back and then ripped the muscles,” Hull said. “And then obviously, tear the ligaments of my ankle, so it went one after another. Playing beautiful golf balls, touching the wood, it was like an awkward point, you just want to play a lot of golf balls. But, it was a lifetime, and by the end of the day, I was still breathing, so I was fine.
“When I was young, if I had fallen my dad, would you break anything? No? Then stand up. At that time, I thought, yes, yes,” Hull later added.
Charley Hull stands up and finds himself in the winner’s circle again with some unlikely help from the best players in the world



