| Inkster
takes narrow advantage Patience
put Annika Sorenstam in position to do what seemingly does every week on the LPGA
tour -- win. All
she has to do now is catch Juli Inkster, whose temper put her on top of the leaderboard
after two rounds of the ShopRite LPGA Classic on Saturday. Inkster
birdied five of the last six holes after a blowup on the 13th tee and took a one-shot
edge over first-round leader Kate Golden heading into the final round on Sunday.
``Patience is
really not one of my best things and I was getting very impatient out there,''
said Inkster, who has a three-shot cushion over Sorenstam. ``I finished well which
helps.'' The
image that everyone will remember is Inkster spiking her wedge near the 13th tee
box after hitting her shot on the par-3 to 15 feet. As
she walked toward the green, her caddie, Greg Johnston, had to go back to fetch
the club. ``I
wasn't going to go back and get it,'' said Inkster who was really annoyed after
missing a 3-footer for par on the previous hole. It was just one of a number of
putts that didn't fall in the round. ``Sometimes
I just need to vent my frustrations,'' Inkster said. ``I usually do something
and get it over with and I get going.'' Planting
the club obviously helped. Inkster
sank the 15-footer. After a par at the 14th hole, Inkster rolled in birdies of
12, 5, 4 and 3 feet for finish the 36 holes on the Bay Course of the Marriott
Seaview Resort at 10-under-par 132. Golden
finished at 9-under par after blowing the lead with a double bogey at No. 17.
Pat Hurst was two shots back at a 65 and Sorenstam was in a threesome at 7 under
after a 4-under 67. Unlike
Inkster, the round was a tribute to Sorenstam's patience. After missing more than
a half dozen birdie putts on the first eight holes, she got going with a 10-footer
at No. 9. She played the back nine in 3 under. ``You
know eventually with every putt hitting the lip, it cannot hit the lip every time,''
said Sorenstam, who has won five times in 11 LPGA events this year. ``It has to
go in.'' Sunday
now shapes up to be a fun day in this final tuneup for the U.S. Women's Open.
Inkster, a Hall of Famer with a win and six Top 10 finishes this year, is in the
final group with Golden. Sorenstam and Hurst are in the next to last group. ``I
always want to be in contention on Sunday, to be in the last three groups,'' Sorenstam
said. ``I have a good feeling for it. This is where I want to be.'' Inkster
doesn't mind the company. ``I
can't control what she does,'' Inkster said. ``She probably feels she is right
there. I have to play my own game and make birdies.'' Golden,
who had a four-shot lead early in the second round, got in trouble at the 337-yard,
par-4 No. 17. The
wind seemed to shift on her second shot and her ball landed in a mound of dirt.
She advanced her third shot only a few feet and blew a chip about 20 feet past
the hole, settling for a double bogey. ``I was swinging well today but
the ones I missed really cost me,'' said Golden, whose only career win came last
year when she shot a final-round 63 to beat Sorenstam. ``She
owes me one,'' Sorenstam quipped. Hurst,
who has struggled with her swing this season, had seven birdies and one bogey
in shooting a 65 on a course she loves. She had a career-best 63 in last year's
first round. ``Once
I get back to hitting the ball the way I know how to hit it, my game will come
around,'' said Hurst, who had her second child in January. Dottie
Pepper shot her second straight 75 and missed the cut in her first tournament
of the season. She had surgery on her left shoulder in March. Email
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