Victory
No. 2's in sight for Kiggens
Lisa Kiggens, winless since
her only tour victory in 1994, admits to feeling a little self-imposed pressure
after gaining the lead in the Michelob Light Classic on Friday.
"Hey, I'm just glad
to make the cut," Kiggens joked after a 6-under 66 on the par-72 course gave her
a 135 total.
Kiggens says she feels she
is due after several lackluster seasons.
"Things are going
well," she said. ``I've gone two days without a bogey. I'm just tickled. I've
been very patient. It's been five years since I won."
Kiggens finished
one stroke up on Tina Barrett, Thursday's leader, and Nancy Scranton.
Scranton, 5-under
after her first round, played consistently Friday and didn't let some bad breaks
rattle her.
"I'm really comfortable,"
the Centralia, Ill., native said after a workmanlike 3-under 69 second round of
the $800,000 tournament at Forest Hills Country Club.
"I made a lot of
really good swings and I was rolling them pretty good, too. Some of them just
didn't drop in."
Scranton parred
her first eight holes, birdied Nos. 9, 10 and 11 and parred out to finish the
day.
"I
didn't have any bogeys," she said, ``I played a little bit better today."
With a chance to
go 9-under on the par-4 17th hole, Scranton hit a slightly downhill putt that
ran to the lip of the cup and, somehow, stopped.
"That green slopes
so much," she said later, without complaint. ``I just didn't think it could just
hang there."
At the par-5 18th, Scranton
hit a 9-iron to what she hoped would be several paces past the hole. The ball
hit the pin a couple of feet above the ground and bounced 30 feet away.
"I hit such a good
shot there," Scranton said. ``I knew I had to get it past the hole because my
ball had been backing up all day. But it hit the pin and bounced."
Her birdie putt
just missed and she had to settle for a par to end the round.
Annika Sörenstam,
who has won this event three of the last four years, started the day 4-under and
got to 6-under before running into bogey trouble and settling for a 72.
Barrett played even
on the day, but seemed satisfied with that, noting that going into the weekend
a stroke back wasn't bad.
"I'm playing pretty
well," said Barrett, who shot a career-low 64 on Thursday. "Now if I can get that
putter working again.
"I didn't expect
to shoot a 64 again. It took me 33 years to do it the first time, so expecting
to repeat it the next day wouldn't be realistic.
"When a 64 happens,
a lot of really good things had to happen. In golf, it's hard to stay in that
same groove. But I guess I am a little disappointed with even. I had a lot of
chances."
Kristal Parker-Gregory and
Lorie Kane were at of 139, followed by Sörenstam, Julie Inkster and Stephanie
Lowe at 140.
Wire