| Mallon
claims title in windy conditions Puff!
That's all Meg Mallon needed. She
took advantage of a gust of wind that cost Scotland's Catriona Matthew the lead
on the back nine and won the Canadian Women's Open on Sunday by three strokes
despite a closing 73. It
was the 10th come-from-behind victory for Mallon, who finished at 4-under 284
and took home the winner's share of $180,000. "When
I woke up this morning, I saw the conditions, and I just knew it was going to
be a very difficult day," Mallon said after her 14th LPGA victory and first
since she won the du Maurier Classic two years ago. "I knew that nobody was
going to come from behind and shoot a low round to come back." Not
on this day. It only briefly sprinkled in late morning, but as predicted the nasty
wind returned with a vengeance, gusting over 30 mph all day, playing havoc with
every shot, and making the greens oh-so-fast. The top 10 players combined for
33 bogeys, four double bogeys and one triple bogey, and only Canadian Lorie Kane
broke par (71). Matthew,
who began the day with a one-shot lead over Mallon, was unable to recover from
a disastrous triple bogey at the 12th hole, even though Mallon gave her the opportunity
with three bogeys on her final seven holes. Matthew finished with a 79 and 1-under
287, tying Michelle Ellis of Australia and Michele Redman for second. Se
Ri Pak of South Korea was alone at even-par 288. Charlotta Sorenstam of Sweden
and Gloria Park of South Korea finished another stroke back. The
wind made every hole seem like Summerlea's signature hole. That distinction, however,
belongs to the 344-yard, par-4 12th, with its hard-sloping green and narrow fairway,
and it was Matthew's undoing. After going 1 under at 12 through the first three
rounds, she drove into the teeth of the wind, and it swept the ball out of sight.
"I was just
hitting a little 4-wood that I didn't hit that bad, got it turning left, and it
went with the wind and ended up in the bushes," said Matthew, who was forced
to take a drop that cost her a penalty stroke. "That 12th hole really threw
me, and the last few holes it was tough to try and make birdies. You were really
just trying to make pars." Matthew
managed to chip onto the fairway and put her fourth shot on the fringe. She chipped
to 5 feet but needed two putts to get down and dropped to 4 under. Mallon,
who had birdied 11 to move into a tie for the lead, had her problems at 12, too,
when her putt for birdie rolled well past the hole and the wind kept pushing it
farther away. When she went to mark it, it rolled some more, nearly costing her
a penalty, and she ended up with bogey. Mallon
bogeyed 13, too, but Matthew's tricky 5-foot putt for par on the hole rimmed the
cup and stayed out as she squatted and turned her head in frustration. Still,
Mallon refused to dream about winning. Not with that wind. "I
couldn't let myself think that way because I knew how difficult the holes were
coming up," said Mallon, whose drive at No. 14 clipped some trees on the
left side of the fairway and ricocheted off the forehead of a woman in the gallery.
She was dazed but unhurt. "It was a matter of not making anything bigger
than a bogey. Matthew
already had, and she never recovered, carding bogey at Nos. 15 and 18. "That
would have been a windy day at home as well," Matthew lamented. Matthew,
who ended the third round with two straight birdies, made it three in a row at
No. 1 to open a two-shot lead over Mallon, whose first drive of the day landed
in a fairway bunker. Matthew,
used to playing in the wind in her native Scotland, continued her steady play
with 10 straight pars. Mallon managed par at No. 1 and moved within one shot of
the lead with a birdie at the sixth hole. Email
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