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Gustafson leads rain
delayed day
Michelle Wie slept late, got in some practice, watched a little TV and ate
"half a dinner."
Finally, with the day perilously close to being over, the 13-year-old Hawaiian
made her way to the first tee.
The Chick-fil-A Charity Championship got off to a soggy start Friday, with
only half the players able to complete the first round because of rain.
Sophie Gustafson shot a 6-under-par 66 to claim the lead among those finished,
despite a delay of 4 1/2 hours.
Wie, playing in her fifth LPGA event, had to wait all day before teeing it
up at 6:20 p.m. in the final group to go off at No. 10.
She never felt comfortable enough to pull out her driver, which has been known
to produce shots of 300 yards. But Wie did birdie her final hole of the day to
get to 1-under, nearly holing out a 72-yard lob wedge.
"I kind of started to get the grip of it," she said. "But now
I have to wait again."
Wie is scheduled to return to the course early Saturday morning to complete
the opening round along with 71 other players who were stopped by darkness.
Wie played five holes after lounging around most of the day. She slept until
10:30 a.m., came to the course to work on the practice range, then went back to
the house to watch "S Club 7," the televised adventures of a British
pop band. She also managed to eat part of her dinner.
"I'm going to eat the other half now," she said with a smile.
Gustafson got rolling with an eagle at the par-5 second, sinking a 60-foot
putt after reaching the green with a driver and 3-wood. Her round was marred by
only one bogey, and the Swedish golfer surged to the lead with birdies on four
of the last seven holes.
"I hit almost every fairway and almost every green," she said. "I
don't think that I made too many mistakes."
Gustafson won this event in 2000 for the first of her three LPGA victories.
She had a chance to repeat the following year, but lost in a playoff to Annika
Sorenstam.
"I have some really good memories from here," said Gustafson, who
has been dating LPGA Tour commissioner Ty Votaw since last fall.
Sorenstam, the world's most dominant female player, is taking the week off
as she sets her schedule to play with the men at the Colonial next month.
Still, 92 of the top 100 players from the 2002 money list are at Eagles Landing.
Then there's Wie, the Hawaiian teenager who stunned the golfing world by finishing
ninth at the first major of the year, the Kraft Nabisco Championship.
The course was drenched with 1.72 inches of rain overnight, which cast doubt
on whether the first round would even be held Friday.
While some parts of the rough were still flooded, the fairways and greens were
in pretty good shape. The players were allowed to lift-and-clean their golf balls,
as well.
"They did the best they could do," said Cristie Kerr, who was two
shots off the lead after shooting 68. "The greens are fine, just a little
bumpy in spots."
Denise Killeen also shot 68, while 11 players were at 69. Of those who started
late, Karrie Webb and Deb Richard were both at 4-under. Webb had played 10 holes,
Richard nine.
Wie carried only two woods in her bag, but never pulled out the driver. She
even stuck with the 4-wood at the 515-yard 13th, the longest hole on the course.
"I just didn't feel comfortable with the driver on the range," Wie
said.
But she looked just fine on her next-to-last shot of the day at 14. After driving
about 270 yards with the 4-wood, she took a half-swing with the lob wedge from
the middle of the fairway.
The ball stuck within a foot of the cup. Wie didn't even need to mark it, tapping
in for her first birdie after beginning with four straight pars.
"I feel more comfortable now," she said.
Wie didn't get a chance to build on that momentum. The horn sounded, ending
play as darkness approached.
Divots: Defending champion Juli Inkster was struggling, standing 4-over through
12 holes when play was suspended. ... Barb Mucha struck a fan with her tee shot
at the par-3 11th, which kept the ball from sailing far over the green. "I'm
glad I hit you," Mucha quipped while handing the woman another ball to keep.
"I'm honored it was your ball," the fan replied. ... Inclement weather
is a tradition at the Chick-fil-A. Last year, the tournament was cut to 36 holes
after rain suspended play three times over two days.
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