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Michelle
Wie struggles on her return
The booming drives were there, but more often than not,
Michelle Wie didn’t know where they were going in
her first round on the LPGA Tour since February.
The best scores, as usual, belonged to just about everyone
else—a course record-tying 63 by Scotland’s
Mhairi McKay, and a potential battle looming between Lorena
Ochoa and Annika Sorenstam in the Michelob Ultra Open at
Kingsmill.
Once the most heralded young player in the women’s
game, Wie managed just one birdie in a zig-zagging 4-over
75 on a soggy day, even as the River Course yielded its
fourth 8-under 63 in six years, 64s to Sorenstam and Sun
Young Yoo, and 65s to Ochoa and Diana D’Alessio.
Six others were three off the pace, and there were eight
more four behind.
While 90 players in the field of 144 shot par or better,
Wie was lucky to get off as easily as she did. She pulled
her drive on the par-5 seventh, and only a tree kept it
from flying out of bounds. She hit into the greenside rough
on the par-3 13th, and it kicked onto the green. She hit
her drive way right on the wide open par-4 14th, and another
tree knocked it down.
Still, she took the half-full approach to her first round
on tour since the Fields Open in Hawaii, where she made
the cut but finished in a tie for last, 20 strokes off
the pace.
“I felt like I was hitting the ball pretty well,” she
said, considering the rust. “There were a couple
of shots here and there where I felt like if I play a couple
more tournaments or had more experience under my belt,
it would come out a little differently. But, like I said,
I’m hitting the ball solid. I just have to work out
a couple of other things for tomorrow.”
Wie could have at least been encouraged by her putting.
She had only two reasonable birdie putts all day, making
a 5-footer and missing from 15 feet, but several times
made par-saving putts from 3-5 feet. Without many birdie
chances, that was about as good as it got.
“I just think it’s going to come around anytime,” Wie
insisted. “I’m not far off.”
She’ll have to get there fast to stick around for
the weekend, especially with top-ranked Ochoa and No. 2
Sorenstam off to fast starts in a tournament neither has
won.
Sorenstam, coming off a playoff victory over Paula Creamer
two weeks ago in the Stanford International Pro-Am, had
seven birdies in a bogey-free round.
“I haven’t shot this low all year, so it feels
good to get off to a good start here, a place that I really
like a lot and haven’t played so well,” she
said.
“Very solid. Lots of fairways, lots of greens. Just
good golf.”
Sorenstam played with Ochoa and defending champion Suzann
Pettersen (71) and was 4 under through eight holes, the
kind of start that she hopes will lead to big things.
“I think my game fits this course,” she said
of the 6,315-yard layout, where her best finish is sixth. “Why
I haven’t played well here in the past, I’m
not really sure.”
Ochoa, a three-time runner-up here, had an eagle, six
birdies and two bogeys in her first event since her winning
streak was halted at four last weekend. She moved into
a tie for third with D’Alessio with three consecutive
birdies on the back nine, just before a par-par finish.
Early morning rain and intermittent drizzle made scoring
necessary, she said.
“You got to take advantage of that,” she said.
Playing with Sorenstam only highlighted the need to attack
flags, she said.
“It keeps you motivated to play good and make birdies,” she
said.
McKay avoided trouble all day in a bogey-free 63, and
even turned her only errant tee shot of the day into a
birdie. It came at the par-4 14th, where her drive came
to rest under a tree, but she hit a punch 6-iron that skidded
up onto the green, 20 feet from the cup.
She made that putt, and several others, thanks to a tip
from her brother, who caddied for her last weekend at the
Scottish Open and thought she was standing up too soon
on putts.
“Definitely helped me,” she said.
Yoo played in the afternoon, and closed with four consecutive
birdies.
“I didn’t realize I could be like this, so
I really feel good,” she said.
D’Alessio played with Wie, and came up with the
shot of the day—a 7-iron from 134 yards out on the
par-4 16th that landed about 5 feet short of the hole,
hopped and rolled in.
“My caddie yelled, `Go in’ and it did,” she
said. “She needs to do that more often.”
Besides the eagle, she had five birdies and two bogeys.
While she was celebrating the shot, Wie was walking toward
the green, where she followed a pulled drive with a shot
that went far right into greenside rough. From there, she
chipped across the green onto the fringe, pounding her
wedge in frustration, and then two-putted.
The 18-year-old got high marks for composure from her
playing partner.
“She kept herself very composed, which was good
to see,” D’Alessio said. |