|
Sorenstam coasts to 11
shot win
How good is Annika Sorenstam?
Ask Danielle Ammaccapane.
She was there for every powerful drive, every accurate chip, every sure putt as
Sorenstam matched the best 54-hole score in LPGA history Sunday in winning the
inaugural Kellogg-Keebler Classic.
``She's every bit as good
as you want to say she is,'' said Ammaccapane, paired with Sorenstam in the final
round. ``She leaves herself good angles onto the pins. She rolls the putter real
good. She has the length. She has everything.
``That's why she's so good.''
Good? As one of the tournament
mascots, Tony the Tiger, would say, Sorenstam was g-r-r-r-eat, fashioning a 21-under-par
195 with a sizzling finish to win by 11 strokes, the largest margin on the tour
this year.
``Obviously, I'm very pleased
with the way I have played this week,'' Sorenstam said. ``I could not have expected
21 under, especially when somebody asked what the winning score would be on Thursday
and I said double digits.
``I was right. But I didn't
know it was going to be 20-something.''
It was the fourth tour win
of the season and 35th overall for Sorenstam, who closed with a 7-under 65, and
it set her up for a strong run at the tour's second major, the LPGA Championship
starting Thursday at the DuPont Country Club in Wilmington, Del.
Sorenstam, who also opened
the season with a playoff victory in an international event in Australia, won
the first major, the Kraft Nabisco Championship in late March.
Sunday, she matched the
best 54-hole winning score in relation to par. Wendy Ward was 21 under in the
2001 Wendy's Championship in New Albany, Ohio. Had Sorenstam not lipped a couple
of putts that looked to be sure birdies early in her round, there's no telling
how low she might gone.
``To shoot 65 on Sunday,
I'll take that any day,'' said Sorenstam, who set or tied 30 LPGA records last
year. ``It would have been nice to shoot one or two better, but this was a sweet
win anyway.''
Sweet and dominating.
The largest victory margin
on the tour previously this year was Janice Moodie's seven-stroke win in the Ashai
Ryokuken International in May. The largest ever was 14 strokes by Cindy Mackey
in the 1986 MasterCard International.
Ammaccapane, Michele Redman
and Mhairi McKay finished 10 under. Redman closed with a 68, McKay a 70 and Ammaccapane
a 71, finishing with two birdies to pull into the tie. Kris Tschetter (68) and
Candie Kung (70) were 9 under.
``I really wasn't playing
to win this golf tournament, I was playing to finish second because I didn't see
her coming back,'' said Ammaccapane, who was paired with Sorenstam.
``Not on this golf course
and not the way that she's been playing. I was trying to stay close to her, but
at one point, she just pulled away.''
Sorenstam started her final
round slow, playing the first seven holes without a birdie. She finally broke
through after Ammaccapane had a near hole-in-one on the 130-yard eighth.
Ammaccapane's tee shot hit
the green in front of the pin and rolled toward the hole, stopping just short
of the cup. If the ball had turned one more time, it would have dropped.
Even Sorenstam smiled when
she reached the hole and looked down at how close her partner had come to an ace.
Ammaccapane tapped in for her birdie to get to within four strokes of Sorenstam
-- but only for about a minute.
Sorenstam promptly knocked
in a 20-footer to return the lead to five and that seemed to get her going, not
what Ammaccapane and the rest of her challengers needed. ``I hit a lot of lips
instead of the bottom of the cup,'' Sorenstam said. ``I think that was the difference
the first few. Then I rolled in that nice birdie putt on eight. After that, it
just turned.''
The 31-year-old Swede birdied
four of the next six holes, ending what little suspense remained in the tournament.
Sorenstam did it with the
type of shotmaking she had displayed in the first two rounds, dropping accurate
approach shots that left her birdie putts of 5 to 10 feet.
Her only semblance of trouble
Sunday came on No. 9, when her second shot landed in some rough sloping toward
a bunker. A problem? Hardly.
Sorenstam chipped within
4 feet and made the putt for birdie to go 16 under -- and just kept rolling from
there. She needed to make only a 2-foot putt for birdie on 13 to go 18 under and
sank a 10-footer on 16 to go 20 under. On 17, an 11-footer dropped her to 21 under.
With a chance to break the
54-hole record, Sorenstam barely missed a long putt for a birdie on 18, then tapped
in to finish, her name in the record book again.
Now there's already talk
of a Grand Slam for Sorenstam, even with three majors still to go.
``Of course I have thought
about a Grand Slam,'' she said. But next week is a new tournament. I've got to
play well there first. It's fun to have those thoughts, but you've got to go and
do it. If I don't do it next week, obviously it won't happen.'
Email
this page to a friend | Return
to top of page |