| Inkster
moves out to 4-stroke lead Fearless,
aggressive golf is not the sole property of Generation X. Today, it belonged to
a 38-year-old mother of two who is running away with the U.S. Women's Open.
Juli Inkster has been preaching
all week that par will never be enough at Old Waverly Golf Club. She followed
her own advice in the third round for a 5-under 67 that shattered the 54-hole
record and gave her a four-stroke lead over Lorie Kane and Kelli Kuehne.
And Inkster is not about
to stop now. "I
can't see playing any other way," she said. "I don't think it's the
type of golf course where you can play conservative. I think you've got to attack
it and try to make birdies. I don't foresee myself throttling it back."
That certainly wasn't the
case on another sweltering day that topped out at 102 degrees. With
birdies on the first two holes and a relentless pursuit of more, Inkster finished
at 15-under 201 to break the Women's Open record of 203 set by Alison Nicholas
two years ago at Pumpkin Ridge. Her score in relation to par was five strokes
better than Nicholas's. "I
think it's my tournament," Inkster said. "All the pressure is going
to be on me. That's the toughest part of tomorrow. But I'm playing well, and I'm
playing relaxed." Don't
be misled by the appearance of the charming Californian whose schedule is built
around her 9- and 5-year-old daughters. Inkster is one of the best front-runners
in women's golf, which doesn't bode well for those trying to catch her.
"She's the kind of
player who doesn't feel bad drilling it to you," Dottie Pepper said.
The contenders in the final
round may have to drill awfully low if they want to catch Inkster. "I
know there's at least another 64 out there for us," Kane said. "I'm
going to be chasing tomorrow and we'll see what happens. But if I were a betting
person, I'd be betting on Juli Inkster." Kane,
a Canadian trying to win for the first time, recovered from two early bogeys for
a 71 that put her at 204. She was joined there by Kuehne, the two-time U.S. Women's
Amateur champion, who made a 35-foot birdie putt on the 18th for a 70.
Sherri Turner, who had broken
par just once in 44 Open rounds until this week, bogeyed two of the last three
holes for a 68 and was at 206. Unless
Inkster cracks on Sunday, everyone else will be playing for second. "The
thing is to get off to a good start and put some pressure on her," said Karrie
Webb, seven strokes back after a 68. "That's when she's going to feel the
pressure -- if she ever feels it. If she gets off to a good start, she's clear
sailing." In
what has been the lowest-scoring Women's Open in its 54-year history, Inkster
figured there was only one way to play. "Don't
back off," she said. A
birdie-birdie start showed she wasn't kidding. Kane,
who began the third round tied for the lead, was clearly rattled by Inkster's
fast start and made bogeys on Nos. 2 and 3. But she got a thumbs-up sign from
Nancy Lopez walking down the eighth fairway and turned it on. Kane
made four birdies to get within two strokes of the lead when Inkster decided she
had seen enough. She hit an 8-iron from 138 yards to 3 feet on the 15th for her
fifth birdie of the day, then picked up another stroke when Kane's 4-foot par
putt rimmed out on 17. Kuehne
also struggled from the start by making her first bogey of the tournament on the
opening hole of the third round. But
after hitting a 3-iron to 3 feet for birdie on the par-3 7th, she was solid the
rest of the way and closed out her round with a birdie that put her in the final
group on Sunday with Inkster. "There's
really not any pressure on me," Kuehne said. "I'll be curious how she's
doing. Instead of having to watch the leaderboard, I can just be watching her."
That could be a
scary sight. On
a day in which 21 of the 63 players broke par, no one had a better round than
Inkster. "I
can tell you that Juli Inkster is playing solid golf," Kane said. "She
is putting the ball extremely well. ... I guess all the things you need to do
to win a U.S. Open." A
victory Sunday would be some measure of redemption for 1992 Women's Open. Inkster
had a two-stroke lead walking up the 17th fairway when play was suspended by the
threat of storms. When it resumed, Patty Sheehan birdied the last two holes to
force a playoff, then defeated Inkster the next day. But
much has changed in seven years. Inkster once thought about early retirement so
she could be home when her kids got out of school. Instead, she decided to bring
them on the road with her as often as possible, and dedicated herself to getting
back on top. This
would be what she calls the "topster" to a career that has never been
fully appreciated. Before
anyone heard of Tiger Woods, Inkster was the first player to win three straight
U.S. Amateurs. Long before Se Ri Pak, Inkster won two majors as a rookie.
"To win the U.S. Open
would be the ultimate," she said. "I think I'm up to the task."
AP |