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Paula
Creamer clinches title in
a playoff
The crystal trophy was waiting for her as Paula
Creamer stood alone outside the clubhouse at Cedar Ridge, a pink
cell phone attached to her ear and a smile that was brighter
than the late afternoon sun in Oklahoma.
On the phone was Nancy Lopez, her mentor, former Solheim
Cup captain and new BFF.
Everything was so different from last week: the conversation,
the mood, and especially the outcome.
“This was my turn this time,” Creamer said.
Seven days after losing the lead and the playoff to Annika
Sorenstam, Creamer again had to go overtime Sunday in the
SemGroup Championship after a stunning turn of events.
With a two-shot lead over Juli Inkster and her ball in
the 18th fairway, Creamer blasted a 5-iron over the green
and made bogey, and Inkster hit an 8-iron to 18 feet and
watched her putt fall for birdie on the final turn.
But instead of getting nervous, as she did against Sorenstam
by making a bogey 6 in the playoff, Creamer got mad. She
fired at pins and cashed in on the second extra hole, No.
10, by holing an 8-foot birdie putt for a trophy she couldn’t
afford to lose.
Lopez was in south Florida last week to console her. This
time, she was on the phone to congratulate her.
“She has done so much for women’s golf and
she has influenced a lot of my golf, especially now,” Creamer
said.
She hasn’t entirely influenced Creamer or the 21-year-old
would have been crying after a hard-fought victory. Instead,
she was relieved at not letting another victory get away,
and proud of an effort that was nothing short of resilient.
Creamer closed with a 1-over 72, the first time in her
six LPGA Tour victories that she was over par in the final
round. She made three bogeys in regulation, one that cost
her the outright lead, and all three times bounced back
with a birdie.
“I was not going to lose this week,” Creamer
said. “I was going to win this golf tournament, and
I did in the playoff. Unfortunately, it had to go into
a playoff, but I can tell you I was 120 percent prepared
going into that from last week.”
Lost in a terrific duel was the bid by Lorena Ochoa to
win a record-tying fifth straight LPGA event, although
it wasn’t much of a bid. She didn’t break par
at Cedar Ridge until the final round, and her 2-under 69
wasn’t nearly enough.
Ochoa started eight shots behind on Sunday and wound up
in a tie for fifth, five shots out of the playoff.
“It’s done,” Ochoa said. “I tried
really hard and it didn’t work. Hopefully, I’ll
start a new streak next week.”
Inkster, who turns 48 next month, had a chance to become
the oldest winner in LPGA Tour history, and she hit the
ball well enough to win. But she missed five putts inside
10 feet on the first 11 holes, and after making the clutch
18-footer on the 18th for a 70 that got her into a playoff,
she didn’t give herself any good looks on the two
extra holes.
“I did want it bad, but I tried not to feel that
way out there,” Inkster said. “I was trying
to be patient. But when you just keep missing putt after
putt, it kind of wears on you. I putted so good for the
first three days, but it’s funny. You just wake up
and feel like you’ve got a 2-by-4 in your hand instead
of a putter.”
Each player could look at putts she could have made throughout
a relatively calm afternoon by Oklahoma standards.
Inkster missed a 4-foot birdie putt on the par-5 fifth
that would have given her a share of the lead. On the next
hole, Creamer had a putt from the same distance to build
a three-shot margin, but she missed.
Creamer three-putted from the seventh, bending over to
pluck her ball from the cup on her 2-foot par until it
swirled around the edge. That left them tied, but only
briefly, for Inkster pulled her tee shot on No. 8 into
a hazard and had to scramble for bogey.
For all her misses, though, Inkster came up big on the
18th with a birdie putt to give herself another chance
in Tulsa.
“Unbelievable,” Creamer said. “She wants
everything so badly.”
Perhaps it was only fitting that the tournament ended
on the 10th hole with Creamer’s 8-foot birdie putt.
Inkster was in about the same spot earlier in the round,
her shoulders slumped, when another putt turned away.
“I just knew it was a matter of time before she
made one,” Inkster said. “I had the exact same
putt for birdie on the 10th hole, and I just knew she would
roll that in. It’s disappointing, because I definitely
played good enough to win.”
Both finished at 2-under 282. Creamer earned $270,000,
joining Sorenstam and Ochoa as the only multiple winners
on the LPGA Tour this year. Then again, with Ochoa winning
five of her seven tournaments, she hasn’t left much
for anyone else.
Nor was she terribly disappointed to see the streak end.
“That’s a hard word,” she said. “I’m
not disappointed because I gave myself a chance and I tried
really hard. Sometimes it doesn’t happen for you.
I’m leaving with a smile on my face.”
It wasn’t quite as big as the smile Creamer had
stretched across her face.
“It feels so much better than last week, I can tell
you that,” Creamer said. |