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BANDON, Ore. – Allie Knight spends her days teaching golf to others in her hometown of Knoxville, Tennessee. She often holds camps for youngsters in the mornings and gives lessons in the afternoon. But in between the time spent working on other people’s games, she works on her own.

“Usually I try to get out on the course in the morning, try to be the first one off at 7:30 if I can,” Knight said. “I play really quick and then I’ll be at work giving lessons at noon or 1 until the evening, a lot of times till 8 at night.”

Allie Knight of Knoxville, Tennessee, hits her tee shot on the 17th hole of Pacific Dunes golf course during the 2026 PGA Professional Championship at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort.

Through two days of the 2026 PGA Professional Championship, that work is paying off. Knight is one of nine women in the field of 312 PGA professionals competing at the scenic and pristine Bandon Dunes Golf Resort this week, and she’s not simply in the field — she’s contending.

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Knight fired a 67 on the Bandon Dunes course Sunday and followed it with a 73 Monday on the Pacific Dunes course to finish her first 36 holes in 3 under, comfortably inside the cutline and just five shots off the lead, sitting in a tie for 13th.

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Photos: Bandon Dunes hosts the PGA Professional Championship in April

Bandon Dunes, the original course at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort, will be used for three of the four rounds of the PGA Professional Championship on April 26-29 in Oregon.

“I’ve just been hitting the ball really well,” Knight told Golfweek on Monday. “[On Sunday] I made a bunch of putts and that’s how I got under par. Today, my putter just kind of struggled. I think I had like four or five three-putts out there. I mean the greens are big and it’s going to happen. As long as I keep hitting the ball like I am and just get my putter going . . . I know it’s going to get windy. I think it’s going to get tougher, so just trying to keep my mindset to know that when it gets windy, it’s going to be hard and it’s okay.”

Difficult conditions don’t seem to worry Knight, who won the PGA Women’s Stroke Play Championship in February to punch her ticket to the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship for the sixth straight year. She’s never made the cut there, but she also had never made the cut at the PGA Professional Championship in two tries before this year at Bandon Dunes.

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