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Annika
Sorenstam beats Paula Creamer in a playoff
On the green at the first playoff hole, Paula Creamer
and Annika Sorenstam couldn’t have had more varying
emotions.
A first-time playoff participant, Creamer said her hands
shook grasping her putter.
Sorenstam was the polar opposite, exuding nothing but
cool confidence. And it showed.
Sorenstam’s par on the lone extra hole Sunday was
good enough to beat Creamer and win the Stanford International
Pro-Am, the Swede’s 71st career victory on the LPGA
Tour and one where she rallied from a one-shot deficit
in the final two holes of regulation.
“That’s what I love. That’s why I do
this,” Sorenstam said. “Not to say I want to
have playoffs every week, but it’s a lot of drama
and you have to hit that certain shot when it counts.”
Alas, that was Creamer’s downfall.
After a wayward 9-iron off the tee—“a careless
shot,” she said— followed by a poor pitch,
Creamer made bogey at the par-3 17th to lose the outright
lead with a hole left in regulation. At the par-5 18th,
Creamer pulled her chip from just inside of 100 yards and
was left with a 25-foot birdie putt, which stayed out and
forced her to settle for par.
Both laid up at the 18th in the playoff, with Creamer
facing a tricky downhill birdie putt from just off the
fringe, and Sorenstam leaving herself a birdie try from
almost the same spot where she missed a potential winner
in regulation.
Sorenstam missed, but Creamer’s 6-foot comebacker
for par stopped short and gave the Swede the victory—her
16th in 22 career playoff appearances.
“It’s very disappointing,” Creamer said. “But
at the same time, I’m going against one of the best
players in the world ever to play golf. There’s a
lot to learn from that.”
Creamer closed with a 69, and Sorenstam shot a 70. They
finished at 8 under.
It was the first time in five weeks someone other than
Lorena Ochoa won on the LPGA Tour. The top-ranked Ochoa
skipped this event.
Young Kim (69) and Karrie Webb, who turned in the round
of the week with a 7-under 64, tied for third, one shot
behind Sorenstam and Creamer. Momeko Ueda (71) finished
alone in fifth at 5 under.
It was Webb’s best finish since placing second at
last year’s LPGA Championship, 17 events ago.
“It’s a good finish for me,” Webb said. “I
would have liked to made the one on the last, but I feel
great about things. As much as I’ve been down on
myself, I knew that if I could get my putter going, it
just sort of goes to the rest of your game. I know my swing’s
been close, but when you feel like you can’t make
putts, you can’t go at pins. It’s a good start.
Hopefully there’s more to come.”
Webb’s charge started early, with five consecutive
birdies on holes 2-6 vaulting her into serious contention.
Lindsey Wright was 6 under for the day through 12, but
that wasn’t enough nearly enough to close the gap.
Young Kim had consecutive double-bogeys late on her front
side, which proved quite costly.
By late afternoon, it was a two-woman race.
“I made more mistakes than she did,” Creamer
said. “Obviously, I made more birdies than her and
I knew going into it that I could make a lot of birdies
out there. It was just the mistakes. She always plots herself
around the golf course and that’s why she’s
as good as she is. She doesn’t make those bogeys.
I just made too many.”
Creamer made two birdies in her first three holes to take
the lead by one, until Sorenstam answered with a birdie
at the sixth—ending a run of 26 pars in a stretch
of 29 holes. Creamer blinked on the next hole, hitting
one into a hazard and needing to remove her right shoe
before splashing the ball out on the way to a bogey.
One hole later, Creamer rebounded with a birdie, tying
Sorenstam again at 8 under.
They were both 9 under when Sorenstam pushed a 4-foot
par try wide at the 13th, the mistake putting Creamer again
alone in front. She stayed there until the bogey at 17
and that set up the nailbiter of a finish.
“Even though I was trailing by one for the last
four or five holes, I knew anything could happen,” Sorenstam
said. |