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Suzann
Pettersen back to where career changed
A year ago when Suzann Pettersen came to Kingsmill for
the Michelob Ultra Open, she was known best for being the
player who gave away a major tournament only a few weeks
earlier, finishing 4 over for the last four holes at the
Kraft Nabisco.
Now, she’s one of the world’s top-ranked players,
a five-time winner with sweet memories of a putt that dropped
on the third hole of a playoff to finally get her over
the hump. When the winning putt disappeared, giving her
a victory over Jee Young Lee, she was on her way.
“Once the ball starts rolling, you play good, you
get good results, you get confidence,” Pettersen
said in looking back at the victory, which made her the
first Norwegian to win on the LPGA Tour. “When you
get confidence, it feels like you can do whatever, not
just in golf, in life in general, in whatever you do. If
you get good results, you start feeling good.”
That kind of feeling is one many expected Michelle Wie
to have by now, before her desire turned more to attempting
to compete against professional men, and before wrist injuries
put her on the shelf altogether.
Now a freshman at Stanford, Wie is making just her second
appearance on the LPGA Tour this season, and hoping to
improve on her first: in the Fields Open in her home state
of Hawaii in February, Wie tied for last among the 74 players
who made the cut.
For the past month, Wie has been in Orlando, Fla., working
with David Ledbetter on getting her game back into shape.
Before that, a broken wrist and then a sprained wrist left
her unable to do the things on a golf course that once
made her a phenomenon.
“It’s been a hard month,” Wie said after
a practice round Tuesday. “Practice, practice. You
know, finally, I just want to get out and play already
so I’m really excited.”
It have been several years since Wie played in the Michelob
Ultra Open, and while her appearance at women’s events
has always garnered a lot of attention, the setbacks that
find her still hoping to make a mark have tempered somewhat
the buzz her presence creates.
To hear Paula Creamer tell it, the tour has been doing
just fine without her.
“There’s a lot of good players that are playing
well. Juli Inkster, last week being right in contention
and going to a playoff,” she said. “I think
the tour is in a wonderful place and I think her playing
it helps, but at the same time, I think we’re doing
pretty good.”
While Wie’s star has not yet shone brightly, Lorena
Ochoa, Creamer and Pettersen have stepped forward, ending
Annika Sorenstam’s run as the game’s most indomitable
force.
After winning at Kingsmill, Pettersen quickly won the
LPGA Championship for her first career major last year,
and then won three of the four events she played in October.
Instead of being one of the best golfers never to win,
she’s one of the ones to beat in the event in Williamsburg
that has become one of the most popular on the LPGA circuit.
In the world rankings, she’s third behind Ochoa
and Sorenstam.
“You want to beat the best players out there. That’s
why you practice,” Pettersen said. “You want
to be there on Sundays, on the back nine when it all comes
together.”
Last October, Pettersen beat Ochoa on the second hole
of a playoff at the Longs Drugs Challenge, and later added
back-to-back wire-to-wire victories in two other events.
Pettersen is without a victory this season, but has finishes
of second and third in seven events and is fifth on the
money list. The players ahead of her— Ochoa, Sorenstam,
Creamer and Yani Tseng—will all be in the field this
week on the 6,315-yard River Course.
Creamer is coming off a playoff victory against Juli Inkster
last week, and looking forward to finishing a four-week
stretch of tournaments before taking a week off.
She arrives feeling like she’s on a roll, too, and
ready for more good things.
“I always felt when I play five, six tournaments
in a row, I’ve always played my best,” she
said. “I’m more of a person who needs to play
a lot rather than practice. And, for me, that’s just
kind of a blessing in disguise, going out and playing four
in a row.” |