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Pak snatches title
with closing 64
Se Ri Pak needed a big start to beat Annika Sorenstam, and she got it
with a pair of front nine eagles. On a course where birdies came in bunches,
though, it took a scrambling par to clinch her win.
Pak's long par putt after hitting it in the water on the 17th hole kept
her in the lead, and she finished with a tap-in birdie on the final hole
Sunday for an 8-under 64 to win the Safeway Ping by a shot over Grace Park.
Sorenstam, meanwhile, struggled with her wedges and putter all day and
was never in contention on the back nine. She finished with a 1-under 71,
four shots back.
"That's golf," Sorenstam said. "If you play golf long
enough you know these things happen."
The final round began with Pak making birdies on the first two holes,
setting up a showdown between the two best players on the LPGA tour. But
after Pak passed Sorenstam with two eagles on the front nine, Sorenstam
never threatened.
Park actually had an outside chance to tie if she could sink her second
shot on the par-4 18th hole and she nearly did, with the ball checking
up just three feet beneath the hole. She shot a final round 65.
"It looked really good in the air," Park said. "I was
hoping it would go in."
Pak, who had four straight rounds in the 60s, served notice to Sorenstam
that she faces an imposing task in trying to win 11 times again this year.
Pak won five times herself last year, four of those coming with Sorenstam
in the field.
"I'm really proud of myself," said Pak, who finished at 23
under. "I really wanted to win this tournament."
Surprisingly, Sorenstam played erratically, plodding along with pars
on the same course where she made nine birdies a day before.
The most dominant player in women's golf made only one birdie - two-putting
the par-5 10th hole - and parred the rest. It was the second straight year
she blew a final-round lead at the Moon Valley Country Club, where she
lost last year in a playoff to Rachel Teske.
Pak caught Sorenstam with a tap-in eagle after hitting a fairway wood
close on the fourth hole, added a second eagle with a 20-footer on the
eight hole, and had a three-shot lead at the turn after shooting 30 on
the front nine.
But she cooled off on the back nine and was only a shot ahead of Park
when she took out a fairway wood for her tee shot on the par-4 17th hole.
Pak was playing it safe, but she pulled the shot into the water down
the left side. She dropped in the light rough, hit an 8-iron to about 40
feet and then calmly rolled the ball in the cup for par.
"I was thinking if I could two-putt I could still get in a playoff,"
Pak said. "Then it went in."
Pak then played the 18th perfectly, hitting a drive down the right side
and an iron to about 18 inches for a final birdie.
It was Sorenstam's first competitive golf in five months, a time she
used to go to cooking school, make plans to play against the men at Colonial
and play a practice round with Tiger Woods.
The layoff didn't seem to affect her as she opened with a 67, then improved
a shot a day in the second and third rounds.
But in the final round Sorenstam grew increasingly frustrated as she
missed putt after putt in the opening holes. After hitting her drive into
a fairway bunker on the eighth hole, she flipped her driver in the air
in disgust.
Worse yet, the wedge play that had carried Sorenstam to nine birdies
the day before deserted her, and she missed the green on both the seventh
and eighth holes with a wedge in her hand.
Webb, who was tied with Sorenstam, Pak and Meunier-Lebouc after three
rounds, was never a factor in the final round. She started out three shots
back and shot a 2-over 38 on the front, including a bogey on the on the
par-5 fourth when she missed the green with a wedge and took three to get
down.
Divots: Before she bogeyed the sixth hole Sunday, Se Ri Pak had gone
43 holes without a bogey. ... First prize was $150,000, out of a total
purse of $1 million. ... Despite playing in twosomes on a relatively short
course with almost no rough, the leaders still took more than four hours
to finish. ... Rookie Lorena Ochoa had weekend rounds of 64 and 66 to finish
at 17-under-par.
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