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Davies gains wire to
wire win
Laura Davies hit the right
shot at the right time, and it made her a winner for the first time in more than
a year.
Under a steady rain, Davies
chipped in from 40 feet on the 17th hole for birdie and won the $750,000 LPGA
Los Angeles Women's Championship by three strokes today with a 1-over 73 for
a 5-under 211 total.
Davies joined Karrie Webb
as the LPGA's second wire-to-wire winner this season. The Englishwoman shot a
67 on Friday - one day after having laser eye surgery - and a 71 on Saturday
in the rain-plagued tournament at the 6,222-yard Wood Ranch Golf Club.
She credited her improved
eye sight for helping her see the undulation in the greens, something she couldn't
detect while wearing glasses for 12 years.
"My putting has been great
and I really believe it's because I can see the hole now, where before I was
just seeing a fuzzy area," she said. "I could focus in on the trophy on the 18th
green, which was the main thing. It's the first time I've seen one."
Davies, a former U.S. Open
champion who finished second three times last year without winning in 24 tournaments,
had never before won an LPGA tournament with a final round over par. Her victory,
worth $112,500, was her first on the LPGA Tour before March.
"This is massive," she
said. "Not winning last year, I try and talk it down. It really hurts not to
win. I was panicking out there today because every time you let one go, you know
it makes it harder and harder to win one, so I got this one in the bank early."
Swede Carin Koch, who had
the day's second-best round of 70, Michele Redman and Janice Moodie tied for
second at 2-under 216. Redman and Moodie shot 72s.
"I missed a few fairways
that I usually wouldn't, but it was tough today out there," Koch said. "I had
some tough 8 to 10 footers. I made a couple of good birdies and making the pars
on the tough par-4s was good."
Leta Lindley, who had a
72, and Sherri Steinhauer with a 74 tied for fifth at 1-under 215.
Davies found herself in
trouble on the 1st hole, a 402-yard par-4 that tripped up most of the field.
She hit a 3-iron into the bunker and wound up three-putting for a double-bogey
that cost her two shots.
"I hit an appalling tee
shot," she said. "You've got to put those bad shots behind you. That's why people
win a lot more than others because it's the ability to forget about a bad swing
and think about good stuff."
Moodie got her hopes up
when she saw Davies stumble at the start in the overcast, cold conditions.
"Her starting with a double-bogey
brings everybody back into the hunt," she said, "but she's just such a powerful
lady."
More bad stuff was ahead
for Davies, including a bogey on the 160-yard, par-3 3rd, where she landed in
the bunker. But she rebounded with birdies at Nos. 5 and 11, and survived bogeys
at Nos. 12 and 14 when none of the rest of the field could manage a serious run.
"We never saw the course
when it was playing dry," Moodie said. "If the weather had gone good again, the
winner might have been 12-under."
Famous for her length off
the tees, Davies kept her driver in the bag because of the soggy conditions and
elected to hit 3-irons on every hole but the par-3s.
"My game plan was to hit
fairways. We were sacrificing about 40 yards of distance just so we'd be able
to pick the ball up and clean it and place it," she said.
Divots: Davies said
she'll play 28 tournaments this year, mostly in the United States, in order to
chase her goals of being the LPGA's top money winner and player of the year.
She led the money list in 1994 with $687,201 and was player of the year in 1996,
but has never achieved both in the same season. ... Allison Nicholas had the
day's best round at 3-under 69 and wound up tied for 11th. ... Defending champion
Catrin Nilsmark tied for 49th with a final-round 77. ... It wasn't a good tournament
for Hall of Fame members Beth Daniel, Betsy King and Patty Sheehan. Daniel tied
for 37th, King tied for 43rd and Sheehan tied for 64th in her first tournament
in 11 months. ... Mi Hyun Kim, last year's LPGA rookie of the year, had the best
finish of the so-called "Seoul Sisters." Kim tied for seventh with a final round
75, while South Korean countrywomen Grace Park tied for 20th after a 75 and Se
Ri Pak tied for 27th after a 72. Those three drew some of the week's largest
galleries and the media attention of nearly 60 Korean journalists.
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