Some Sundays are about numbers. Some are about nerves. Some are about history.
Brooke Henderson’s Sunday at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship may be about all three.
Henderson will begin the final round at Hazeltine National Golf Club at 10 under, one shot behind Haeran Ryu and one shot ahead of 36-hole leader Ina Yoon. That is the golf part of the story. It is strong enough by itself. Henderson is a past major champion, a proven winner and one of the most accomplished players in the women’s game.
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But this week has become something more personal.
Ten years after Henderson won the 2016 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Sahalee Country Club, her sister and caddie, Brittany, welcomed a baby girl named Sahalee. Now Henderson has a chance to win the same major championship again, one decade later, with her family’s story wrapped tightly around her final-round chase.
That is not just a leaderboard angle. That is the kind of story major championships occasionally hand us when golf, memory and timing all meet in one place.
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Brooke Henderson won in a playoff at the 2016 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Sahalee Country Club – South/North Course. June 12, 2016; Sammamish, WA. Credit: Kelvin Kuo-USA TODAY Sports
Henderson Is Not Just the Feel-Good Story
The emotion is real, but Henderson is not in this position because of sentiment.
She shot 69 on Saturday, backing up rounds of 69 and 68 to put herself in the final group. Through 54 holes, she has been steady enough to avoid the damaging stretches and aggressive enough to keep pace with the best players in the world on a major setup.
That matters.
At Hazeltine, players cannot fake their way into contention. The course has length, water, bunkering, rough and enough tiered greens to expose loose approach play. Henderson has handled it with the kind of calm that comes from having already won on this stage.
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She does not have to imagine what it feels like to win the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship. She has done it. She does not have to convince herself she belongs in a final group at a major. She has lived it.
That experience could be a major advantage Sunday.
Brooke Henderson
A Sahalee Story Comes Back Around
Then
2016
Henderson wins the KPMG Women’s PGA at Sahalee.
Now
2026
She is one shot back entering Sunday at Hazeltine.
Storyline
10
Years between potential KPMG Women’s PGA wins.
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Henderson’s final-round chase is both a major championship pursuit and one of the most emotional stories of the LPGA season.
One Decade After Sahalee, The Door Is Open Again
Henderson’s 2016 victory at Sahalee remains one of the defining moments of her career.
She was young, fearless and ready for the moment. That win helped announce her as one of the LPGA’s biggest stars and gave Canadian golf a major championship memory that still carries weight 10 years later.
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Now the story has circled back in a way no one could have scripted.
Her niece’s name, Sahalee, gives the week an emotional thread that is almost too perfect. But Henderson still has to play the golf. She still has to beat Ryu, who has been the best player in the field over the last two rounds. She still has to hold off Yoon, who already owns the lowest round of the week. She still has to account for Nelly Korda, who is four shots back but far too dangerous to dismiss.
The story is beautiful. The task is brutal.
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That is what makes Sunday so compelling.

Brooke Henderson putts on the 17th hole during the third round of the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Hazeltine National Golf Club on Saturday, June 27, 2026, in Chaska, Minnesota. Photo by Darren Carroll/PGA of America,
Ryu Is the Player Everyone Has to Catch
Haeran Ryu reads her putt with her caddie on the 18th hole during the third round of the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Hazeltine National Golf Club on Saturday, June 27, 2026 in Chaska, Minnesota. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/PGA of America.
For all the focus Henderson will receive, Ryu is the leader for a reason.
She followed a Friday 64 with a Saturday 68, moving from five shots back at the start of the third round to one shot ahead entering the final round. Ryu did not simply benefit from Yoon’s struggles. She forced the issue.
Her Saturday front nine was the kind that wins major championships. An eagle and three birdies gave her command of the round, and her ability to limit the damage on the tougher back nine showed composure.
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Ryu is still looking for her first major championship title. That could cut both ways Sunday. It could create pressure she has not yet felt at this level. It could also free her up to chase the biggest win of her career with nothing to protect except a one-shot lead.
Either way, Henderson will have to go through her.
Korda’s Major Chase Still Hovers Over Everything
Nelly Korda is not in the final group. She is not within one or two shots. She is tied for sixth at 7 under, four back.
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And yet, she still matters.
Korda has already won the first two major championships of 2026, which means every major leaderboard she appears on this year carries a different kind of weight. If she were to somehow come from four behind Sunday, it would be more than another trophy. It would become one of the defining runs in modern women’s golf.
That is why the players ahead of her cannot ignore her.
Korda likely needs something in the mid-60s and some help. But Hazeltine has already shown it can produce big swings. Yoon led by five after 36 holes. Ryu leads after 54. Henderson is one back. The par-4 16th produced five eagles Saturday. This golf course can change a championship quickly.
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Korda is still just close enough to make the leaders look over their shoulders.
Still Lurking
The Nelly Korda Factor
4
Back
Korda is tied for sixth at 7 under, which means she needs help. But with two 2026 major titles already, she remains the player every leader will notice if she starts fast Sunday.
Sunday Has More Than One Perfect Ending
A Ryu win would be a career-changing major breakthrough.
A Henderson win would be one of the most emotional LPGA stories of the year, connecting Sahalee in 2016 to Hazeltine in 2026 in a way that feels almost cinematic.
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A Yoon win would be a remarkable rebound after a difficult Saturday, proving that one rough round did not erase two days of dominance.
A Korda charge would turn the final round into another chapter in a historic major season.
That is the beauty of this leaderboard. It has star power, sentiment, redemption, pressure and a golf course capable of forcing every player to earn it.
Henderson may be the best story. Ryu has the lead. Yoon has the chance to answer. Korda has the aura. Hazeltine has the final say.
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For Athlon readers, that is a perfect major championship Sunday.
Sunday at Hazeltine
Final Group Stakes
Haeran Ryu: Leads by one and is chasing her first major championship.
Brooke Henderson: One back, already knows what it takes to win this championship.
Ina Yoon: Two back after a difficult Saturday, but still close enough to flip the story again.
PGA of America Golf Professional Brendon Elliott is an award-winning coach and golf writer who serves as Athlon Sports Senior Golf Writer. Read his recent “The Starter” on R.org, where he is their Lead Golf Writer. To stay updated on all of his latest work, sign up for his newsletter or visit his MuckRack Profile.
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Related: Ryu Takes Slim Lead Into KPMG Women’s PGA Championship Final Round
Related: Ina Yoon Creates Separation as KPMG Women’s PGA Championship Weekend Takes Shape
Related: Ina Yoon Turns Hazeltine Into History While Nelly Korda Stays Alive at KPMG Women’s PGA
This story was originally published by Athlon Sports on Jun 28, 2026, where it first appeared in the Golf section. Add Athlon Sports as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
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