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Doolan wins LPGA's
season opener
Wendy Doolan sports a golf bag emblazoned with the slogan, "Anything
Is Possible."
The 34-year-old Doolan, who waited tables and fixed poker machines in
her native Australia while working her way into professional golf, proved
it on Sunday.
Doolan shot a 5-under-par 65 in soggy conditions to win the LPGA Tour's
season opener by three strokes.
"I hadn't felt it until the last six months, but I've tried to believe
in that for quite a while," she said after capturing her second title,
the Welch's-Fry's Championship.
Doolan won $120,000 - nearly half of her 2002 earnings - with her score
of 21-under 259.
"I've seen the girls shoot 20-plus under par," she said. "I
never knew I was going to do it, but I did it today, and that's something
that I feel really good about."
Doolan held up under pressure. She ignored the leaderboard and responded
to a discouraging bogey with a birdie on the next hole to blunt charges
by Grace Park and Betsy King down the stretch.
On the 18th green, she asked her caddie if she needed a birdie to win.
He shook his head, and she made a routine par.
King carded a 65 to tie third-round leader Lorie Kane (70) at 262.
"On 17, I had a 12- or 15-footer that I wimped on," King said.
"I haven't been up there for a little while, so my putting stroke
today was not as fluid."
Park, derailed by a double bogey on the 17th hole, settled for a 67 and
a tie with Christina Kim (70) at 263.
Kim, trying to become the first rookie to win her LPGA debut since Beverly
Hanson in 1951, also had late bogey problems.
Meg Mallon fired a 70 for sole possession of sixth, five shots off the
lead.
Mallon had a 60 on Friday, the second-lowest round in LPGA play, to lead
at the midpoint. But she was only 6 under in the other 54 holes of the
tournament.
Doolan had a career-low 62 on Friday. And what has commonly happened
during her career, another player grabbed the spotlight.
But Doolan, whose breakthrough victory came two years ago in Dayton,
Ohio, in a five-hole playoff with Wendy Ward, was not to be denied this
time.
She overcame two bogeys with a seven-birdie effort, starting on the first
hole.
Doolan dipped to 20 under on No. 14, where her approach shot came up
short of the green after a brief pause to put on a sweater during a rain
squall. She chipped 5 feet past the flag and missed the comebacker.
Then she responded with a 12-foot, downhill birdie putt on the next hole
and parred out while the competition faltered.
Kane seemed poised to make a run when she birdied the 16th hole. Instead,
she gave Doolan the last bit of breathing room with a bogey on No. 17,
falling three shots back.
She said it was never that close.
"My game plan was to birdie the last five holes," Kane said.
"I knew I had to make at least three or four to have a chance. And
so, standing on 17, I was thinking I needed to make a 1."
Park, who got within one stroke at 19 under on No. 15, took a disastrous
double bogey-5 on the 137-yard 17th when her tee shot landed in a bunker
and she three-putted from 12 feet after blasting out of the sand.
The race was tight at the start, as Kim made up her one-shot deficit
on Kane with a birdie on the first hole.
By the fourth, though, Doolan got her third straight birdie and took
the lead. She also birdied No. 6 to go 20 under and went up by two shots.
That lasted long enough for Kim to reach the sixth green, where she rolled
in a birdie putt to reach 19 under.
Doolan gave back a shot with a bogey on No. 7, but Kim followed suit
when her putt from the fringe to save par rolled 3 feet past the cup, and
Doolan went two strokes ahead again with a 7-foot birdie putt on the eighth
hole.
On the pivotal 12th hole, Doolan got her sixth birdie of the round and
went up by three shots when Kim two-putted from 4 1/2 feet and bogeyed.
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