| Pepper
holds off Kuehne to win by 2
Dottie Pepper said
she was just trying to get it close. She did better than that.
Pepper, who had struggled throughout the final round, rattled in a 35-foot birdie
putt from just off the green on the 72nd hole today to nail down a 2-stroke victory
over Kellie Kuehne in the Oldsmobile Classic. "I
was never completely comfortable," Pepper said after clinching the 16th victory
over her career and second this season. "My belly hurts."
Pepper, who earned her second major with a triumph at the Nabisco Dinah Shore
in March, shot a 2-under 70 for an 18-under 270 total at Walnut Hills Country
Club. Kuehne, a
22-year-old Texan seeking her second win of the year, started the day in a five-way
tie for second, five shots back, but finished second alone after shooting a 67.
Pepper, as she had done
so many times during the final two rounds, drove into the right rough on the final
hole. She hit her 7-iron approach shot from thick rough onto the green, but the
ball rolled just off the putting surface and into the first cut. "I
had such a good spot to aim at," Pepper said. "I saw this lighter shade of green.
All I had to do was hit that."
Because her ball was off the green, she was allowed to leave the pin in the cup,
which proved to be important. Pepper's putt came out a little hot, but the ball
hit the pin dead center and disappeared into the hole as Pepper jumped for joy
and the crowd cheered. "I'm
glad I left that pin in," Pepper said. "It was cruising pretty good. It got four
feet away from the hole and I thought, 'There's nowhere that ball is going but
in."' Even Kuehne
smiled, despite the realization that she wasn't going to force a playoff.
"It was a hell of a putt,"
Kuehne said. "There's no other way to say it. About five feet from the hole, I
knew it was in. I know I would have loved to have been in her shoes."
Kuehne let it be known the game was on right from the start with a trademark booming
drive, and the veteran Pepper helped open the door with a mistake off the first
tee, driving into a clump of trees. That set up a bogey for Pepper and when Kuehne
drained a 6-foot putt for birdie, it was a 2-stroke swing.
Pepper settled down with birdies on Nos. 3 and 4, but Kuehne responded with birdies
on Nos. 4, 5 and 6. "It
started to feel like match play out there," Pepper said. "We separated ourselves
from the field. And Kellie is a great match-play player. She didn't win two U.S.
Amateurs by accident."
Pepper birdied No. 7 from 5 feet for a 3-stroke lead at 18 under. Both birdied
the eighth and bogeyed the ninth, so Pepper turned at 18 under, three ahead of
Kuehne. But, just
as she did in the third round, Pepper started the final nine with a bogey, failing
to get out of greenside rough on her third shot. That cut her lead to two strokes,
her closest call in two days, and Kuehne slashed it to one shot with a 20-foot
birdie putt at No. 13.
Pepper missed an opportunity when her 10-footer for birdie burned the rim but
failed to drop on the 14th.
They swapped pars on the next two holes, then Kuehne drove under a tree and into
the rough on the right side of the 17th fairway. But she hit a wonderful punch
shot that released and rolled within 12 feet.
After watching Pepper miss from 15 feet, Kuehne knew the door was open. But her
downhill putt slid by on the low side and a look on Kuehne's face said she knew
she might have missed her last best chance. "I
had a blast," Kuehne said. "I shot 5 under and I couldn't have done a whole lot
better, all things considered. This is what it's all about. "I
wasn't expected to win. All the pressure was on Dottie."
Rosie Jones and Karrie Webb, the LPGA's leading money-winner, tied for third at
13-under 275. Each shot a 69 in strong cross winds over the final round.
DIVOTS: Tournament
officials are eager to push prize money over the $1 million mark, but Oldsmobile
appears unwilling to budget more than $750,000. As a result, other companies will
be sought as co-sponsors in coming years. Mel Kent, president of the Lansing Area
Regional Chamber of Commerce, which runs the tournament, said regional insurance
companies and grocery chains have expressed an interest. ... Kuehne, who is engaged
to be married to Minnesota Vikings rookie Jay Humphrey, is finding it isn't so
easy buying furniture for a football player. "Jay doesn't fit on many stools,"
Kuehne said. "So, we sit on the couch and eat on that table." AP |