| Sorenstam
finishes season with 13th win She
was emotionally spent from being in contention in almost every tournament she
played. She was physically tired from working harder than anyone in the game.
What kept her
going Sunday was a one-shot lead, knowing she had only three holes left and a
chance to win her 13th tournament worldwide. "I
could almost taste the trophy," Sorenstam said. "I gave it all I had."
The result was
some of her best golf of an amazing year, which carried her to a three-stroke
victory over Rachel Teske in the season-ending ADT Championship, a fitting finish
to the best LPGA Tour season in 38 years. With
a risky shot on the toughest hole at Trump International and a clutch swing on
the decisive 17th, Sorenstam closed with a 4-under 68 and won for the 11th time
this year on the LPGA Tour. She
smiled and lightly pumped her fist several times when her final putt of the year
fell for par. She finished at 13-under 275, leading to some of the 20 records
she set this year. Her
scoring average was 68.70, shattering the mark she set last year (69.42) and finishing
more than a full stroke ahead of Se Ri Pak. She
earned $215,000, giving her more than $2.8 million. A year ago, she became the
first woman in LPGA Tour history to go over $2 million in one season. Now it seems
routine. Sorenstam
also became the first player since Mickey Wright in 1964 to win 11 times in one
season. Wright, widely regarded as the best female golfer ever, set the record
of 13 victories in 1963. The
32-year-old Swede can claim part of that. She
also won the Australian Ladies Masters and the Compaq Swedish Open, giving her
13 victories worldwide in just 25 tournaments. The winning rate of 52 percent
is topped only by Wright (10-of-17 for 59 percent) in 1961. "It
won't say in the LPGA history books that I won 13, it will say 11," Sorenstam
said. "But I don't know if they had an international tour when Mickey played.
So there's some things I don't think you can compare." Right
now, no one compares to Sorenstam. Last
year, Sorenstam won eight times, became the first woman to shoot 59 and the first
on the LPGA Tour to earn more than $2 million in a season. What
an encore! "I
was determined to prove I could do it again, or even better," Sorenstam said.
It began eight
months ago in Hawaii when Sorenstam won the first tournament of the year in the
Takefuji Classic. It ended at Trump International, with Sorenstam rising to the
stop and failing to make and major mistakes when it mattered. "She
pushes herself and challenges herself so much that anything is possible,"
Teske said. Teske
made her work for this one. Despite
a couple of sloppy bogeys that left her two strokes behind at the turn, Teske
made that up with an 8-iron from 130 yards that rolled into the cup for eagle
on No. 10. She
had the lead briefly when Sorenstam chunked a chip on No. 12 and then missed a
4-foot par putt. "Would you make one, please?" Sorenstam said to herself,
constantly pushing to the very end. The
turning point came at No. 16, when Sorenstam drove into the left rough. She took
less club, a 7-iron, to hit a low liner that stayed under a tree and barely cleared
the water, rolling to the back of the peninsula green. "I
figured I came here to win," Sorenstam said. Teske
was playing in the group behind, so slowly that by the time she holed a 15-foot
birdie putt on the 16th, Sorenstam already had played the 17th - a birdie by hitting
7-iron to about 5 feet. Teske
wasn't up to the task. Her 5-iron sailed right into the hazard, and while she
could play the ball, her chip came up 40 feet short and she three-putted for double
bogey. The only
other contender Sunday was Karrie Webb, and that didn't last long. In
a three-way tie for the lead at 10 under through four holes, Webb flubbed a chip
on No. 5 and made bogey, then went for the green on the 335-yard sixth hole and
found the water, leading to a double bogey. Her
only consolation was making a birdie at the last for a 74, giving her sole possession
of third place and enough money to become the fifth LPGA Tour player to go over
$1 million on the year. The
rest of the honors belonged to Sorenstam. "I
feel like I'm walking on clouds," she said. "Here I am, winning again.
Life is nice. It's going my way." Email
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