No
longer under a spotlight so glaring it made her sick, Se Ri Pak quietly went about
her business today and wound up with a 6-under 66 for a one-stroke lead after
the first round of the LPGA Tour Championship.
On a still, sunny day just off the Las Vegas Strip, Pak birdied five of the first
seven holes on the back nine of the Desert Inn Golf Club, then capped her round
with a solid save of par on the 18th hole.
Janice Moodie of Scotland birdied three of the last four holes for a 67, while
six-time winner Karrie Webb got off to a solid start in her bid to clinch player
of the year and smash the LPGA Tour's season scoring average.
Webb struggled coming in but still managed a 68 and was tied with Kelly Robbins
and Lorie Kane. Juli Inkster, paired with Webb, bogeyed the final hole and was
at 70.
The year
has belonged almost exclusively to Webb and Inkster, who between them have won
11 tournaments and three of the four major championships. They also are the only
two players to surpass $1 million in earnings.
Pak remembers what it was like to have everyone watching her every move. Just
last year, she took the tour by storm as a 20-year-old by winning back-to-back
majors and four times during a season that left her physically and emotionally
spent.
She has
won three times this year, but has been somewhat lost amid the success of Webb
and Inkster.
"Did
they forget about me? Maybe," Pak said, flashing a smile that showed how much
control she has of her life. "This year, Julie and Karrie, it is their season.
They play so good and play so strong. I don't mind trying to follow them. Having
fun out there, all season. Feel more relaxed. Just enjoy it more."
When she's not overpowering a golf course, Pak has been making the transition
to freedom from parents who "keep looking at me like little baby" and a Korean
press that used to chronicle her every step.
She is cooking and doing her own laundry, making her own schedule and staying
out as late as she wants. She no longer has an entourage around her to tell her
what to do and when to do it.
Pak took control of her life by dumping swing coach David Leadbetter and firing
her Korean manager, turning over her affairs to IMG.
"Everything
is perfect. Better than last year," she said.
And, as she showed Thursday, she can still play.
None of her six birdie putts was longer than eight feet, and had nothing more
than a 9-iron for her approach shots on the back nine.
"Just
every hole, I do my best," she said. "Sometimes it works, sometimes it not work.
But today, I just feel so good."
Webb has felt good all year. Along with winning six times and getting her first
major championship in the du Maurier, she has only finished outside the top 10
in three out of 24 tournaments this year.
The result is a 69.45 scoring average, a mark so astounding that Webb could afford
four rounds at 81 and still beat the record of 69.99 that Annika Sorenstam set
last year.
"Now
I can shoot an 85 one day," she said. "I'm not really thinking about that. Obviously,
I want to play well this week, to have as low a scoring average as I possibly
can and set the record ... and see how long it takes for someone to break it."
Winning is still
a priority, the one way to assure the 24-year-old Australian her first player
of the year award. Inkster, having a historic season in her own right, would have
to win this week and Webb finish third or lower for the 39-year-old Californian
to win player of the year.
Inkster was right there, tied for the lead at 4-under, until a three-putt from
about 40 feet on the fringe at the 13th. She also botched a birdie chance on the
par-5 15th when her bunker shot just made the fringe, and she closed with a bogey
on the 18th.
Defending
champion Laura Davies put a shot into the water on the 15th for a bogey and was
at 71 and Kelli Kuehne was in the group at 72.
DIVOTS:
Juli Inkster had to wait about 30 minutes to sign her scorecard when questions
were raised about a tap-in for par on the 14th -- that she whiffed or had a foot
along her line. She said she would have known had either been the case, but looked
at videotape just to be sure. ... Karrie Webb spent one of her three weeks off
in Australia, working with swing coach Cal Haller. ... Janice Moodie claims four
residences during her worldwide travels - Spanish Bay in California for the West
Coast swing, Cleveland during the summer, Orlando, Fla., while on the East Coast,
and Glasgow.