Showing posts with label Paula Creamer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paula Creamer. Show all posts

Thursday, July 28, 2011

POND: SENTIMENTAL FAVORITE PETTERSEN WILL WIN FIRST MAJOR CROWN AT WOMEN'S BRITISH OPEN

SUZANN PETTERSEN

RICOH WOMEN'S BRITISH OPEN PREDICTED ORDER OF FINISH:

Winner: Suzann Pettersen
Runner-up: Paula Creamer
Third: Yani Tseng
Fourth: I.K. Kim
Fifth: Ai Miyazato

Next five finishers:
Anna Nordqvist
Momoko Ueda
Karen Stupples
Amy Yang
Christina Kim

- Jeremy Pond, LPGA Tour Live
- Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

POND: CREAMER HIGHLIGHTS OUR TEN BEST HEADING INTO RICOH WOMEN'S BRITISH OPEN AT CARNOUSTIE

PAULA CREAMER

Here are the 10 players who should be in contention Sunday during the RICOH Women's British Open at Carnoustie Golf Links in Carnoustie, Angus, Scotland:

PAULA CREAMER
* Last tournament: Tied for 14th at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Tied for 21st (+2)

I.K. KIM
* Last tournament: Tied for 3rd at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Tied for 3rd (-7)

KAREN STUPPLES
* Last tournament: Tied for 29th at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Missed cut

JIYAI SHIN
* Last tournament: Tied for 17th at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Tied for 14th (-1)

SUZANN PETTERSEN
* Last tournament: Tied for 6th at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Tied for 14th (-1)

YANI TSENG
* Last tournament: Tied for 12th at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Champion (-11)

CATRIONA MATTHEW
* Last tournament: Tied for 36th at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Missed cut

STACY LEWIS
* Last tournament: Second at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Tied for 31st (+4)

AI MIYAZATO
* Last tournament: Champion at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Tied for 9th (-2)

ANNA NORDQVIST
* Last tournament: Tied for 17th at the Evian Masters
* 2010 Women's British Open finish: Tied for 69th (+11)

- Jeremy Pond, LPGA Tour Live
- Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Sunday, July 24, 2011

POND: CHAMPION MIYAZATO HIGHLIGHTS STELLAR SHOWING FROM OUR TOP-10 TOURNEY SELECTIONS

AI MIYAZATO

Women of professional golf beware. Ai Miyazato is going to be tough to beat the remainder of the season.

The Japanese and world star played her best golf of the 2011 campaign this week, en route to her second Evian Masters crown over the past three years in picturesque southeastern France.

Miyazato paced our top-10 contenders in what turned out to be a superb showing from the group. Five finished ninth or better, including South Korean standout I.K. Kim earning a share of third place. American Morgan Pressel and Norway's Suzann Pettersen each took home a piece of sixth place.

Mika Miyazato, our pick to win the tournament, earned a tie for ninth place to close out another nice showing after her back-to-back, top-10 finishes at the U.S. Women's Open (fifth) and the Wegmans LPGA Championship (tied for eighth) at the previous two events.

South Korea's Hee Kyung Seo, runner-up at this year's U.S. Women's Open, was the lone player from our top-10 picks to miss the cut at the tournament.

Take a look at how the overall group fared this week at the Evian Masters:

AI MIYAZATO
Finish: Champion (-15, 273)
Scoring by rounds: 68-68-67-70
2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 19th (-5)

I.K. KIM
Finish: Tied for 3rd (-12, 276)
Scoring by rounds: 74-68-64-70
2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 43rd (Even)

MORGAN PRESSEL
Finish: Tied for 6th (-11, 277)
Scoring by rounds: 71-69-69-68
2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 2nd (-13)

SUZANN PETTERSEN
Finish: Tied for 6th (-11, 277)
Scoring by rounds: 73-67-69-68
2010 Evian Masters finish: Fifth (-12)

MIKA MIYAZATO
Finish: Tied for 9th (-10, 278)
Scoring by rounds: 71-68-68-71
2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 6th (-10)

YANI TSENG
Finish: Tied for 12th (-9, 279)
Scoring by rounds: 69-73-68-69
2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 11th (-7)

PAULA CREAMER
Finish: Tied for 14th (-8, 280)
Scoring by rounds: 70-67-72-71
2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 37th (-1)

JIYAI SHIN
Finish: Tied for 17th (-7, 281)
Scoring by rounds: 69-69-70-73
2010 Evian Masters finish: Champion (-14)

CRISTIE KERR
Finish: Tied for 21st (-6, 282)
Scoring by rounds: 73-73-71-73
2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 31st (-2)

HEE KYUNG SEO
Finish: Missed cut
Scoring by rounds: 73-75
2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 74th (+7)

- Jeremy Pond, LPGA Tour Live
- Photo courtesy of Getty Images

A. MIYAZATO IN CONTROL AT EVIAN MASTERS

AI MIYAZATO

EVIAN-LES-BAINS, France – Former champion Ai Miyazato of Japan shot a 5-under 67 on Saturday to take a two-shot lead after the third round at the Evian Masters.

Miyazato, who won her first LPGA title at the Evian Masters two years ago, made five birdies for a 13-under total of 203. She heads into Sunday's fourth round ahead of a group of four players, including Kraft Nabisco winner Stacy Lewis.

"I hit the ball really well today, and my putting was really good as well," the 26-year-old Miyazato said. "I was really calm out there, so that's why I didn't have a bogey."

With the course lending itself to aggressive golf and the pins made for attacking, Miyazato is expecting to come under heavy pressure on Sunday as she bids for her first title of the year, and her second Evian Masters trophy in three years.

She was sixth at the recent U.S. Open, but her best result this year was a tie for fifth at the Sybase Match Play Championship in May.

"Two shots leading is still nothing on this golf course, I think. Still so many players can shoot low score tomorrow," Miyazato said. "It's still wet on the fairway, but the greens are really receptive, you can still be aggressive."

Overnight leader Miki Saiki of Japan, Ran Hong of South Korea and Angela Stanford are also at 11 under.
I.K. Kim of South Korea moved into contention after shooting up the leaderboard with a brilliant round of 64 to sit three shots behind. Kim made six birdies on the first eight holes and had nine overall.

"I had a great round, I have to say. Everything was clicking," Kim said. "Once you get a good feeling out there it kind of builds up, you get a snowball (effect). I'm excited to see myself on the leaderboard going into tomorrow."

Kim's score would have been even more impressive if not for a bogey on the fifth hole, although she hit three straight birdies after that.

"I was on the fairway and just pulled it left," she said. "It could have been much better if I hit it five feet right ... I hope I can birdie (it) tomorrow."

Kim is looking for her first tournament win this year after third-place finishes at the Kia Classic and the LPGA Thailand – where she hit a round of 63, her best of the year.

Hong matched Miyazato's round, Stanford and Lewis had 69s and Saiki finished with a 70.
Lewis also expects to see some very low scores on Sunday.

"The course is so soft and so scoreable you know somebody's going to shoot 5 or 6 under," she said. "You just hope that it's you. You have to make birdies, go for some flags and try to make some shots that you normally wouldn't."

Lewis, however, felt she could have put herself in a far better position to challenge Miyazato.

"I'm a little bit frustrated with the way I played today," she said. "I hit a ton of good golf shots and just had, I mean, probably four or five putts lip out."

Defending champion Jiyai Shin of South Korea was undone by two early bogeys and is five shots back from Miyazato at 8 under, along with Sweden's Caroline Hedwall.

Despite the improved weather conditions, former U.S. Open champion Paula Creamer had a disappointing round under the sunshine with four bogeys and only made level par to stay 7 under.

- Story courtesy of The Associated Press/Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Friday, July 22, 2011

JAPAN'S SAIKI SURGES TO EVIAN MASTERS LEAD

MIKI SAIKI

EVIAN-LES-BAINS, France – Miki Saiki of Japan took a one-stroke lead at the Evian Masters on Friday, shooting a 5-under 67 in the second round to move to 9 under as the drenched course started to dry.

Saiki leads Americans Angela Stanford, whose 66 included seven birdies, and Kraft Nabisco winner Stacy Lewis (67). Also challenging at 8 under are former Evian champion Ai Miyazato of Japan, who finished with a 68, co-overnight leader Maria Hjorth of Sweden (69) and South Korea's Ahn Shin-ae (69).

"From yesterday, I was hitting the ball really well and it kind of continued today," Saiki said through a translator. "Yesterday there was a lot of rain and you didn't know what you were going to get. Today you had no wind, the greens were consistent."

Paula Creamer (67), Cristie Kerr (69) and Karren Stupples (70) were two shots behind the leader. Kerr had an eagle on the ninth and followed with a birdie on 10.

Stanford's plan was to attack from the outset.

"Before we went out (we) realized the course could be scoreable with some of the pin placements," Stanford said.

Players were relieved not to have the burden of the teeming rain to deal with, although more showers are forecast for Saturday.

"We didn't have our umbrella up the whole time, so that was nice," Stanford said.

Lewis picked up her form after going 3-over in the last four holes at the end of her rain-soaked first round Thursday. Starting the day at 3 under, the Lewis decided she would take a positive attitude and finished with seven birdies.

She wrote a single word on her glove to cheer herself up.

"I just wrote 'confident.' Just to trust what I'm doing," she said. "I just started making birdies and putts."
Ahn was pressuring for a share of the lead again until she hit a wild tee shot into the rough on the 18th, managing par.

Creamer was only 18 when she beat 15-year-old Michelle Wie to win at Evian in 2005. She has not won it since, and admits that early success resulted in unrealistic expectations.

"Every year I've come back and I've expected myself to do it over and over again," she said. "In reality, I put a little too much pressure on myself."

Meanwhile, Wie shot 73 and missed the cut at 5 over, despite birdies on the last two holes.

Seven-time major champion Juli Inkster also failed to make the cut, finishing 3 over.
Miyazato is looking forward to better conditions in the third round.

"The greens are still soft, so everyone's going to shoot a low score," she said.

- Story courtesy of The Associated Press/Photo courtesy of Getty Images

VETERAN STARS HJORTH, STUPPLES JOIN SHIN-AE ATOP LEADERBOARD AT SOGGY EVIAN MASTERS

MARIA HJORTH

EVIAN-LES-BAINS, France – Former British Open champion Karen Stupples of England shot a 5-under 67 for a share of the first-round lead with Sweden's Maria Hjorth and South Korea's Ahn Shin-ae at the Evian Masters on Thursday.

Stupples, who won her only major in 2004, recovered well from a double bogey on the ninth hole to make six birdies for a 30 on the back nine as heavy rain soaked the course at regular intervals during the day.

"Obviously the weather was pretty grim to start with. It's been a while since I've played in conditions like that," the 38-year-old Stupples said. "After I made that double bogey on (No. 9), it was almost like the kick I needed to get going."

Cristie Kerr, the 2007 U.S. Open champion, had a consistent day with six birdies and only two bogeys for a 68, tied with 2009 champion Ai Miyazato of Japan.

Defending champion Jiyai Shin of South Korea made a solid start with a 69, including three birdies in the first four holes, before bogeys on No. 6 and 8 slowed her down. The 23-year-old Shin is still looking for her first title of the year.

Stupples used the pace of the slick, rain-soaked greens to her advantage to shoot a brilliant 30 on the back nine, after going out in 37, where she had a bogey on the sixth hole.

"With the kind of rain we've had here, it's made the greens a bit like dart boards, so you can really fire at all the pins," she said. "I was hitting my irons well, confident with my putter, too. The greens are absolutely perfect, I've never seen them in as good a condition as they are now."

Kerr, who was third at the recent U.S. Open, has yet to win a tournament this season. She finished runner-up at three consecutive tournaments the Sybase Match Play Championship, ShopRite LPGA Classic and State Farm Classic.

Kerr believes a tournament win will come if she stays patient.

"Just trying not to put too much pressure on myself and execute well," she said.

While Stupples birdied the last three holes, Hjorth did the opposite, going from 8 under to 5 under with bogeys on the last three holes. Still, on a good day for veterans, the 37-year-old Hjorth was in an upbeat mood.

"I've been putting great today. The greens are the fastest they've ever been, and I've been playing here for 15 years," Hjorth said. "I played really solid, obviously not the finish that I would have liked. But you could have three bogeys anywhere. But I take 5 under any day."

Kraft Nabisco champion Stacy Lewis looked well set to take the lead at 6 under with four holes remaining, but a double bogey on the 15th meant she finished the day level with Shin and five others on 69.

"I played really well for 14 holes," Lewis said. "I just missed a couple of short putts and hit a bad chip and that kind of compounded my mistakes. The weather was all over the place: it was rainy, it was cold, it was hot."

Lewis lost balance as she was preparing to tee off on the 15th, and then lost more ground after a bogey on the 18th.

"Off the tee my foot slipped a bit and I pulled my tee shot," she said. "It was a bad chip. I chipped in earlier in the day so it wasn't like my chipping was bad today, I just hit a bad shot."

Michelle Wie struggled with a double bogey, three bogeys, and only one birdie in a 4-over round of 76.

Wie first played at the event in 2004 as an invited 14-year-old amateur, and she tied for second the following year behind winner Paula Creamer who ended the day with a 2-under 70.

Late in the afternoon, Wie was back out on the practice greens, where she chipped for several minutes, before taking her frustrations out on the driving range.

- Story courtesy of The Associated Press/Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

POND: SOUTH KOREAN STAR SEO HEADLINES OUR TEN BEST IN TOP-NOTCH EVIAN MASTERS FIELD

HEE KYUNG SEO

Here are the 10 players who should be in contention Sunday during the Evian Masters at Evian Masters Golf Club in Evian-les-Bains, France:

HEE KYUNG SEO
* Last tournament: Tied for 1st (lost in playoff) at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 74th (+7)

PAULA CREAMER
* Last tournament: Tied for 15th at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 37th (-1)

JIYAI SHIN
* Last tournament: Tied for 10th at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Champion (-14)

SUZANN PETTERSEN
* Last tournament: Tied for 15th at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Fifth (-12)

AI MIYAZATO
* Last tournament: Tied for 6th at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 19th (-5)

CRISTIE KERR
* Last tournament: Third at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 31st (-2)

YANI TSENG
* Last tournament: Tied for 15th at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 11th (-7)

MIKA MIYAZATO
* Last tournament: Fifth at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 6th (-10)

I.K. KIM
* Last tournament: Tied for 10th at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 43rd (Even)

MORGAN PRESSEL
* Last tournament: Tied for 21st at the U.S. Women's Open
* 2010 Evian Masters finish: Tied for 2nd (-13)

- Jeremy Pond, LPGA Tour Live
- Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Monday, July 11, 2011

POND: PREDICTION RECAP FROM U.S. WOMEN'S OPEN

U.S. WOMEN'S OPEN PREDICTED/ACTUAL ORDER OF FINISH:
Winner: Morgan Pressel ... Finish: Tied for 21st
Runner-up: Yani Tseng ... Finish: Tied for 15th
Third: Jiyai Shin ... Finish: Tied for 10th
Fourth: Paula Creamer ... Finish: Tied for 15th
Fifth: Suzann Pettersen ... Finish: Tied for 15th

Next five finishers:
Sixth: Cristie Kerr ... Finish: Third
Seventh: Shanshan Feng ... Finish: Tied for 42nd
Eighth: I.K. Kim ... Finish: Tied for 10th
Ninth: Christina Kim ... Finish: Missed cut
Tenth: Inbee Park ... Finish:: Tied for 6th

- Jeremy Pond, LPGA Tour Live

POND: KERR SHINES WITH THIRD-PLACE FINISH, LEADING SOLID SHOWINGS FROM OUR TOP-10 PICKS

CRISTIE KERR

Coming so close to victory happens from time to time when it comes to the best players in women's golf.

But for Cristie Kerr, the American star and world's second-ranked player has seen this result play out way too often this season on the LPGA Tour.

Kerr finished alone in third place at this year's U.S. Women's Open, which concluded Monday at The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs, Colo. For anyone else, this type of result would have been fantastic after what the field went through at the weather-plagued major championship. However, Kerr must be frustrated in what has become a season filled with "so close, yet so far away" finishes.

The two-time major champion has now wound up in the top four in seven of the past nine tournaments, including three second-place showings. She has yet to raise the tournament-winning hardware this season.

Former U.S. Women's Open champion Inbee Park picked up a share of sixth place after finishing in a tie for eighth in the 2010 edition. South Korean stars I.K. Kim and Jiyai Shin took home a piece of 10th place, while defending champion Paula Creamer, Yani Tseng and Suzann Pettersen were among a group of six players who shared 15th place.

Take a look at how the overall group fared throughout the tour's second major championship of the season:

CRISTIE KERR
Finish: Third (-1, 283)
Scoring by rounds: 71-72-69-71
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 17th (+9)
 
INBEE PARK
Finish: Tied for 6th (+2, 286)
Scoring by rounds: 71-73-70-72
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 8th (+5)
 
I.K. KIM
Finish: Tied for 10th (+4, 288)
Scoring by rounds: 70-69-76-73
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 4th (+2)
 
JIYAI SHIN
Finish: Tied for 10th (+4, 288)
Scoring by rounds: 73-72-73-70
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 5th (+3)
 
PAULA CREAMER
Finish: Tied for 15th (+6, 290)
Scoring by rounds: 72-70-73-75
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Champion (-3)
 
YANI TSENG
Finish: Tied for 15th (+6, 290)
Scoring by rounds: 73-73-71-73
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 10th (+6)
 
SUZANN PETTERSEN
Finish: Tied for 15th (+6, 290)
Scoring by rounds: 71-75-72-72
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 2nd (+1)
 
MORGAN PRESSEL
Finish: Tied for 21st (+7, 291)
Scoring by rounds: 75-72-71-73
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 34th (+14)
 
BRITTANY LINCICOME
Finish: Tied for 27th (+9, 293)
Scoring by rounds: 75-74-74-70
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 25th (+11)
 
NA YEON CHOI
Finish: Missed cut
Scoring by rounds: 78-74
2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 2nd (+1)

- Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Sunday, July 10, 2011

SOUTH KOREAN STANDOUT SEO STORMS TO LEAD, ON CUSP OF WINNING U.S. WOMEN'S OPEN CROWN

HEE KYUNG SEO

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Hee Kyung Seo has a chance to carve her own special place in history. Not simply as a U.S. Open winner – but as a U.S. Open winner who won it without hitting a single shot on the final day.

In a strange, storm-infested tournament that doesn't want to end, Seo did just about everything she could to win her first major except control the weather. She shot a pair of 3-under 68s on Sunday to finish at 3-under 281 for a one-shot lead over her South Korean rival, So Yeon Ryu, who had three holes left when darkness halted play.

Cristie Kerr was another shot back with two holes left.

Seo will sleep on the lead – though not as comfortably as she could have after missing a 3-foot par putt on No. 17 – and then has a chance to wake up Monday, come to the course, never touch a club and walk away with the trophy.

"I can sleep very well, so I don't worry about that," she said.

But she couldn't celebrate quite yet.

Rain delayed play for the fourth time in four days – this time for 2 hours, 37 minutes – and left 28 players still on the course, three of whom are still in range.

Coverage begins at 10 a.m. ET on ESPN2 and ESPN3.com.

There's Ryu, who shot 69 on her first trip around the course Sunday morning and has at least one decent birdie opportunity – the par-5 17th – awaiting Monday morning.

"Right now, it's kind of breezy out there," she said. "Tomorrow, it might be good weather and the greens might be soft. So, it's good for me, yeah."

There's Kerr, a two-time major winner who isn't conceding anything. She was getting ready to do an interview after darkness fell when she saw Seo hugging friends and family.

"The tournament is not decided yet," Kerr said. "I think she's over there celebrating. We all have a chance. I'm going to go out and swing for the fences and hopefully tie it up."

Also with an outside chance is Angela Stanford, who is at even par, three shots behind with four holes to play.

Seo, however, is in the best position because she played better than anyone over 36 grueling holes of golf on the 7,000-yard course, longest in U.S. Women's Open history. The highlights included four straight birdies on the front nine in her final round that boosted her from 1-under par into the lead – a lead she never lost.

She scrambled through the back nine, saving par with a tricky 5-foot putt on 11, again from an awkward stance above a greenside bunker on No. 13, then again after a drive into the deep rough on 15.

"I just trusted myself and just let it go, and I made lots of birdies," Seo said.

Stanford briefly pulled into a tie with Seo, but missed a three-foot putt for bogey on No. 11 to start a free-fall – 4-over par on holes 11 through 15.

By the time Seo reached No. 17, she was ahead by two, pointing and staring at a rainbow overhead.

But the moment didn't last long. First, after being asked by tournament officials to close the gap with the group in front, she started jogging up the fairway – not exactly what you'd expect from someone trying to close out a major. A few moments later, Seo missed a 3-footer for bogey that let Ryu creep to within one shot.

Par for the course on a difficult day where pars were hard to find.

Yani Tseng had no luck. The world No. 1 never figured out the breaks that run away from the mountains on the Broadmoor's greens and finished 6 over after four exhausting days.

"It's tough to play on and off," Tseng said. "Sometimes you just want to try to get rhythm, and it's really tough."

Paula Creamer didn't fare any better. The defending champion was 5 over through the first 14 holes of the last round and will play out the string Monday, starting at 7-over par.

- Story courtesy of ESPN.com and The Associated Press/Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Saturday, July 9, 2011

M. MIYAZATO ON TOP AT U.S. WOMEN'S OPEN

MIKA MIYAZATO

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – For months now, the battered country of Japan has been looking for a lift.

By using her blossoming golf game as a tool for charity, 21-year-old Mika Miyazato could turn the U.S. Women's Open into the feel-good story her country seeks – and back it with some cold, hard cash.

Miyazato shot 67 to grab the lead at 5-under-par 137 at the halfway point at the Broadmoor on Saturday, where rain once again stopped play early and brought up the prospect of a grueling, 36-hole Sunday.

She had a one-shot lead over Ai Miyazato – who is not related but is from the same city, Okinawa. When the Miyazatos return to the course, they will play in the final group together, each wearing red and white pins they created to raise awareness for the thousands of victims in a country ravaged by an earthquake, tsunami and the resulting nuclear catastrophe.

The pins have Japanese characters that translate to "Never Give Up Japan."

For Mika, it goes beyond mere symbols, though. She is donating all her winnings from the 2011 majors to the Red Cross for the recovery cause in her home country. That has already totaled more than $100,000 thanks to top-10 finishes at the first two majors. First place at the U.S. Open is worth around $600,000.

"Winning majors is what I strive for," she said. "And to donate all of my earnings from the majors, I hope to give positive things to the people who are around the disaster area."

What a way to make a name for herself – even though Mika has spent most of her young career being confused with Ai Miyazato. Ai has six LPGA Tour victories to none for Mika and she has spent a longer time on the radar as the best hope to become the next golf superstar in a country that loves the game.
Not that Mika has complained much when people get them mixed up.

"Everybody thinks we're sisters," she said. "That way, everybody can remember me, because Ai is playing great."

For the final 36 holes, the Miyazatos will also be grouped with South Korea's I.K. Kim, who returned early Saturday with the lead, played the last four holes of her second round, then finished the day two shots behind – in third place at 3 under.

In an attempt to bring a Sunday conclusion to a tournament that has fallen behind after three straight afternoons of rain, the USGA will send threesomes off from the 1 and 10 tees Sunday and will not re-pair the groups after the third round. It brings up the prospect, however slight, of having a victory celebration on the ninth green.

Almost certain, though, is that the final 36 holes will be as much a test of endurance as shot-making. Play is set to resume at 6:45 a.m. local time and if there are no interruptions, tournament director Ben Kimbal said the last putt will drop at 7:07 p.m.

"Oh, the USGA makes it really tough for all of us," said Kim, who has been passing the considerable down time playing games she loaded onto her new iPad. "It's already tough out there. But weather, I mean, you can't really control it. You've really got to play with what we get."

The only other players to reach the halfway point under par were Stacy Lewis and Ryann O'Toole, both at 1 under.

Lewis led for much of the second round before making bogey and double-bogey in the hour after play resumed following a rain delay Friday evening. She played the last two holes of the second round Saturday morning and finished with a 73.

"I felt awful last night," said Lewis, who won the year's first major, the Nabisco. "I didn't feel much better when I woke up. It was just really tiring to me. I've played 36 holes before, but not on a golf course like this."

Defending champion Paula Creamer was in a six-way tie at even.

"You're either above it and move on and you just kind of accept that this is what it is," Creamer said, "or you dwell about it and let it get to you, and affect your game out there."

Four-time major winner Yani Tseng, trying to complete the career Grand Slam, was 4 over, nine shots out of the lead. After finishing her frustrating round Saturday morning, she said she was having more trouble dealing with the Broadmoor's hard-to-read greens than the weather.

But make no mistake. The East Course is taking a hunk out of these players. It's a 7,000-yard monster at 6,400 feet in elevation – a long walk on a normal day, let alone a multiple-round grind under major-championship conditions. Rounds averaged about 5½ hours Saturday.

"You come to this Open, you have to really prepare," said Se Ri Pak, who will start the third round at 2 over. "Mentally stronger, physically stronger, your game has to always be strong enough to make sure you stay the whole week."

- Story courtesy of The Associated Press/Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Friday, July 8, 2011

I. KIM JETS IN FRONT AT U.S. WOMEN'S OPEN

I.K. KIM

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – When the rain stopped, Stacy Lewis got off a school bus wondering if she was in the U.S. Open or the twilight zone.

By the time the strange ordeal was over Friday, she had lost her lead and was barely hanging onto her cool.

Going for her second major of the year, Lewis made a bogey and double-bogey shortly after a 66-minute rain delay and the lead she held through almost the entire marathon day at the U.S. Women's Open turned into a two-shot deficit to I.K. Kim.

Kim was at 4-under par with four holes to play when the second round was suspended by darkness. Lewis, who had led by as many as four shots earlier in the day, was tied for second with Amy Anderson and Wendy Ward at 2 under with two holes left.

"We sat in a school bus," Lewis said of the way she spent the delay when the late-afternoon rain hit the Broadmoor. "It was 20 people in a little school bus. There was no place to go, you couldn't do anything, it was hard to get loose again. Just kind of unfortunate – unfortunate the way it all worked out, I guess."

But maybe to be expected during a week that has been interrupted by two afternoon thunderstorms, which has forced backup plans to be replaced by more backup plans.

Only 33 of the 156 players made it through their second round Friday and 66 never made it to their tee time.
Among those were Anderson, the amateur who played six holes early in the morning to close her first round and finished the day in the three-way tie for second.

Another shot back is Paula Creamer, along with Karrie Webb, who is in a group of four at 1 under who hadn't teed off.

Ryann O'Toole headed into the break one shot behind Lewis, but she also struggled on the restart. She made three bogeys over the next four holes to fall to even par with four holes left.

"I have a bit of a sour taste in my mouth," O'Toole said. "But I can always turn that around, reverse it tomorrow morning."

O'Toole was tied for 10th with Angela Stanford, who was one of the fortunate few. She finished her round moments before play was stopped. She completed all 36 holes on Friday and will be lucky to get through 18 on Saturday.

"I feel better than I thought I would right now, but that might still be some of the adrenaline," Stanford said. "I think I feel good because I'm finished."

Seeking to complete the career Grand Slam, Yani Tseng couldn't get much going during her day of start-and-stop golf. She was 3-over par with two holes to play.

"I think I was just trying too hard," Tseng said. "I'm trying to play well, trying to hit it close to the pin. Sometimes when you try harder, the worse you get."

The last hour of Friday's round felt more like a casual walk through the park at twilight than a major championship. The rain and lightning chased almost all the fans away and the players were playing in front of dozens of marshals, a few friends and family and the sounds of children playing on swing sets outside the fences at the Broadmoor.

Quite a different feel from earlier in the day, when some players figured they'd be grinding through 36 holes on a typically difficult U.S. Open setup made tougher by the long days and the long course – a record 7,034 yards.

Nobody was grinding better than Lewis, who became the first (and still only) player to reach 5 under this week with a birdie on the par-4 fifth hole. It seemed like days – not hours – had passed as she walked to the parking lot in the near darkness.

"It's hard to sit in a bus for an hour, then go right back out there and play and get the intensity back," Lewis said.

After a bogey on No. 14, Lewis fell out of the lead on 15 when she left a greenside bunker shot short of the putting surface, then needed three shots to get down from there. She pushed her tee shot on the par-3 16th short right into a bunker and pounded her club into the ground.

After saving par there in the dimming light, she and playing partners Brittany Lincicome and Na Yeon Choi walked off the course, even though the horn hadn't sounded.

One group in front of her was Betsy King, the 55-year-old six-time major winner, who will come back Saturday morning, putt out on No. 17, then play one final hole before she calls it a career. King was 18 over, three spots out of last place, with no chance of making the cut.

Does she wish it was over?

"In my position, certainly," she said. "Because I'm not going to make the cut and I have to come out and play in the morning again."

- Story courtesy of The Associated Press/Photo courtesy of Getty Images

KERR, ANDERSON TAKE EARLY OPEN LEAD

AMY ANDERSON

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Instead of teeing it up when she comes back to the Broadmoor, Cristie Kerr's next shot at the U.S. Women's Open will be a blast out of the bunker on the front, right side of the seventh green.

A difficult shot. It could be worse.

A quirky day of thunder and lightning – but only spits of rain – suspended play Thursday with 25 players making it through the first round. It was a bad break on the opening day of the toughest test in golf -- balky weather that figures to turn one of the most difficult weeks on the schedule into an even bigger grind.

"That's part of the gamble," said Christina Kim, who will try to squeeze in 36 holes on Friday.

The rain halted a mini streak for Kerr, who had made two straight birdies to get into a tie for the lead at 2-under par with amateur Amy Anderson. After her second birdie, Kerr, who opened her round on the back, teed off into the right rough on No. 7, then hit her approach into the sand. That's when the siren sounded and the players headed to the clubhouse.

"At least I'll get to practice some long bunker shots before we go out, so maybe it's a good thing for me," she said.

After halting play, the USGA kept the players in the clubhouse for 2½ hours, but with the thunder still rumbling and the radar blinking red, officials called play. There were 75 players on the course and 66 who hadn't hit a shot. That means nearly half the field, including defending champion Paula Creamer and Yani Tseng, trying to complete her career Grand Slam, could face 72 holes in three days.

The Broadmoor is the first U.S. Women's Open course to measure more than 7,000 yards – quite a haul, even at 6,700 feet in altitude.

"We were actually sitting here debating, what's the better draw?" Kim said. "Is it the one we have and we try to get 36 in in one day, or the one where you have 19 hours between shots in the same round?"

Sarah-Jane Smith of Australia falls into the latter category, but only barely. After hearing her name announced on the first tee box, Smith striped her first shot down the middle of the fairway and started walking. Suddenly, the sirens blared and she made a U-turn back to the clubhouse.

"I've not teed off at all before," she said. "But I've never hit one, then walked straight back in. I'm looking forward to it."

Then, pointing to her husband and caddie, Duane, she said, "He should have the yardage figured out by tomorrow morning."

For the record, Duane Smith says it will be a 150-yard shot when play resumes at 7:45 a.m. local time Friday.

And while Smith is sleeping on one good shot, Anderson will join Kerr in sleeping on the lead.

The second-team All-American from North Dakota State hit her approach on the par-5 ninth to tap-in range for her second birdie of the day. That put her at 2 under.

"The first-day leader," she said. "That's way more than I could have imagined."

She needs to hold onto the lead for six more holes to make it official.

The only other players under par when play was suspended were Inbee Park (through 17), Ai Miyazato (15) and Silvia Cavalleri, who birdied her first hole before play was halted. Karrie Webb was in a group of nine still on the course at even. Michelle Wie was 7 over through 17 holes.

The best score posted among the 25 players who had finished belonged to Kristy McPherson, who shot 2-over 73. That was one shot ahead of Aree Song and seven-time major winner Juli Inkster. Before the clouds rolled in, Inkster stood for about five minutes on the fairway of the par-5, 17th hole, waiting for the green to clear before she tried a 250-yard approach shot on a hole that had been unreachable during the practice rounds.

The shot came up about 20 yards short and Inkster settled for par.

"It's nice" to be done, Inkster said. "It's been a while since I've been on the good side of the switch. It's going to be a long day for them."

Typical of the U.S. Open, rounds were averaging more than five hours. Some of the players were surprised the USGA didn't wait a little longer before calling play, but the threat of rain and lightning never really abated. They'll need perfect weather the rest of the week to close out this tournament on Sunday.

- Story by The Associated Press/Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

POND: PRESSEL READY TO END TSENG'S DOMINANCE, BRING HOME U.S. WOMEN'S OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP

MORGAN PRESSEL

U.S. WOMEN'S OPEN PREDICTED ORDER OF FINISH:
Winner: Morgan Pressel
Runner-up: Yani Tseng
Third: Jiyai Shin
Fourth: Paula Creamer
Fifth: Suzann Pettersen

Next five finishers:
Cristie Kerr
Shanshan Feng
I.K. Kim
Christina Kim
Inbee Park
* Photo courtesy of Getty Images

POND: DEFENDING CHAMPION CREAMER HIGHLIGHTS SPECTACULAR FIELD AT U.S WOMEN'S OPEN

PAULA CREAMER

Here are the 10 players who should be in contention Sunday during the 2011 U.S. Women's Open at The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs, Colo., as they pursue the third major championship of the season:

PAULA CREAMER
* Last tournament: Tied for 3rd at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Champion (-3)

INBEE PARK
* Last tournament: Tied for 14th at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 8th (+5)

CRISTIE KERR
* Last tournament: Tied for 3rd at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 17th (+9)

JIYAI SHIN
* Last tournament: Tied for 34th at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 5th (+3)

I.K. KIM
* Last tournament: Tied for 12th at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 4th (+2)

SUZANN PETTERSEN
* Last tournament: Tied for 3rd at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 2nd (+1)

MORGAN PRESSEL
* Last tournament: Second at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied 34th (+14)

YANI TSENG
* Last tournament: First at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 10th (+6)

NA YEON CHOI
* Last tournament: Tied for 43rd at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 2nd (+1)

BRITTANY LINCICOME
* Last tournament: Tied for 20th at the Wegmans LPGA Championship
* 2010 U.S. Women's Open finish: Tied for 25th (+11)

* Photo courtesy of Getty Images

KERR LEADS PACK CHASING MIGHTY TSENG

CRISTIE KERR

Cristie Kerr and the rest of the LPGA are taking aim at Yani Tseng, who has established herself as the tour’s dominant player.

The last time Cristie Kerr played in the U.S. Women’s Open at the Broadmoor resort, she was a 16-year-old high school student who shot a pair of 75s and missed the cut. This week, she wants the outcome to be a little different.

“I’ve gotten a lot older and a lot wiser,” said Kerr, 33, the Miami native who is now No. 2 in the world rankings and coming off a third-place finish in the LPGA Championship two weeks ago. “I have the U.S. Open under my belt, so I kind of look at the course differently and pick it apart a little differently. When I was an amateur, I just sort of played.”

If Kerr and anyone else in the field of 156 expects to prevail by Sunday evening, they will have to play superior golf against the most dominant female player on the planet these days. That would be 22-year-old Yani Tseng of Taiwan, less than two weeks removed from her overwhelming 10-shot victory in the LPGA Championship.

Tseng will be aiming at her fifth major title, and no woman has ever gotten to four any faster. If she wins, she also will have the distinction of winning each of the four major championships at least once.

Tseng came to Colorado and said, “I feel very calm and I don’t feel any pressure.” That can hardly be reassuring for the rest of the field, though Kerr was not ready to concede anything.

“On a golf course like this, with all the rough and the greens and all the different factors, and you also have to consider the altitude,” she said. “You should expect to see some of those top players on the leaderboard. I’d like to think my experience (15 previous Opens) … knowing what it takes … that’s a good thing I’ve got under my belt.”

For inspiration, Tseng went over to Annika Sorenstam’s house near Orlando last week to share a few glasses of wine. Tseng, who lives in a home she purchased from Sorenstam two years ago, said she asked her friend, who won her first Open title at the Broadmoor in 1995, “am I putting too high of expectations to win this tournament?”

Tseng said Sorenstam told her, “If you just play the same as last week, you’re going to win.”

It took Sorenstam 15 years to win 10 major championships over her Hall of Fame career. She has already called Tseng the new “face of the game.”

On Wednesday, Sorenstam described her as “a young lady who … has just embraced the golf world. She’s doing so many great things. She’s really taken the No. 1 spot to another level. She’s learning English. She wants to be the best. She wants to be the face of the LPGA. I mean, she’s got the game. I think we all know that. Long hitter and good short game and all that.

“She’s very mentally strong. To come out and win four majors already at the age of 22, I think it’s impressive. What I saw many years ago was just that: I saw an impressive young lady with a lot of potential, a lot of will. She just has the pieces of the game that I thought would make it. And the pieces she didn’t have, she either went and found them or improved whatever she had. … This is just a beginning.”

Juli Inkster, who is in the field this week, also has been suitably impressed.

“You look at Yani and you never think there will be another Mickey Wright or another Annika Sorenstam or Lorena (Ochoa), and all of a sudden Yani comes along,” Inkster said. “Yani has Lorena’s power. I mean she can bomb the ball. She’s got a lot of passion for the game. She wants to be the best. She wants to get better. So she could be here for a while. If she stays healthy, she could probably break a lot of Annika’s records.”

Tseng and Paula Creamer, the defending champion, will be paired in the first two rounds on a course that is the longest in tournament history at 7,047 yards playing to a par 71. There will be typically thick Open-style rough, and the Broadmoor’s greens have been firm and quick in the practice rounds.

“In a normal tournament, I worry too much if I don’t make birdie and other people are going to make a bunch of birdies,” Tseng said. “I think I just focus more on majors. I love a tough course. I love the challenge. You’re not going to be shooting lots of low scores. You need to be patient.’’

- Story courtesy of the Miami Herald

Monday, July 4, 2011

HAWAIIAN TEEN GALDIANO YOUNGEST IN OPEN FIELD

MARIEL GALDIANO
 
It wasn't so long ago that Mariel Galdiano would wait patiently behind the rope to politely request an autograph from her favorite LPGA golfers at tour stops near her home in Hawaii.

Now, just a couple of weeks past her 13th birthday, the rope has been lifted. Mariel is having a hard time believing that she has the opportunity to be on the other side of that rope, and that the players she admired — well, still admires — will be her peers, and that girls might even ask for her autograph. She's been practicing her signature, just in case.

Mariel will be the youngest golfer in the 66th U.S. Women's Open, which tees off Thursday at The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs.

She qualified by winning a sectional qualifying tournament in May when she was 12 years old and finishing seventh grade. She will be one of the youngest golfers in the history of the tournament (LPGA star Morgan Pressel and Alexis Thompson, now 16, both played in the tournament at age 12), and the youngest ever from Hawaii — breaking the mark of 13 years, 9 months set by Michelle Wie.

"It still hasn't sunk in yet," Mariel said shortly after arriving in Colorado on Friday. "Maybe it will when everyone is staring at me."

Mariel qualified for the U.S. Women's Open when she sank a birdie putt on the final hole of the 36-hole qualifier to win that tournament by one stroke. She entered the qualifying tournament for the experience and never expected to win, yet that birdie putt set her off on a wild summer adventure.

A week after her school year ended, Mariel packed her large red suitcase and flew to the U.S. mainland with her father, Roger. Over the course of eight weeks, they will crisscross the country as Mariel plays in five tournaments, from Oregon to Rhode Island.

All this only eight years after Roger Galdiano first bought his daughter a set of golf clubs, so a 5-year-old Mariel could accompany him on his daily trips to the course and driving range.

It wasn't long before Mariel advanced from what she described as "just hacking away" to participating in the junior golf program at Ko Olina, the club in Hawaii that hosted the LPGA's Fields Open from 2006-08.

Mariel was competitive on the junior circuit and won her share of tournaments against girls her own age.

Roger, a construction foreman, quit playing the game himself so he could focus on his daughter's burgeoning career. Mariel had a coach several years ago, but now Roger handles the coaching and caddying duties as he and his wife, Marivic, dream of Mariel earning a college scholarship to play golf.

"For us, it was either golf all the way or no golf," Roger Galdiano said.

Still, for Mariel, golf is just plain fun. While she enjoys shopping and watching movies with her friends, nothing beats an afternoon on the course.

She seems more excited to meet some of her favorite players — such as Paula Creamer and Annika Sorenstam, who will conduct a clinic at The Broadmoor on Wednesday — than she is nervous about actually playing in the biggest tournament in women's golf.

"I don't really expect to make the cut. This is about playing with pros and really just learning how they play," Mariel said. "And I can never forget to have fun. That's pretty much what this whole summer is about. Who knows when I'll ever qualify for this again?"

Pressel, now 23 and the owner of one major title, would likely agree with that mind-set.

"My advice to her would be to just have fun. When I played (in the U.S. Women's Open at age 12 in 2001), it really solidified my decision that this is what I wanted to do with the rest of my life," Pressel told The Denver Post at a tournament in Illinois last month. "I remember Karrie Webb winning, and seeing Annika and all these great players that I looked up to forever. To play against them, on the same golf course, the same week, it was pretty special. I just hung out in the locker room. I thought it was the coolest place to be, because the players were all people I looked up to."

- Story courtesy of the Denver Post

Sunday, July 3, 2011

ALTITUDE COULD CUT INTO BROADMOOR'S LENGTH

THE BROADMOOR

A course that measures 7,047 yards will be a grind for the world’s best women’s golfers. Tackling it with the benefit of high altitude should at least give them a fighting chance.

That was the logic of U.S. Golf Association executive director Mike Davis in concocting the record layout for the U.S. Women’s Open, which begins Thursday (practices start Monday) on the East Course of The Broadmoor at an elevation of 6,230 feet, the highest among 27 LPGA Tour stops.

No other event on the 10-month circuit comes close to matching what players will face in Colorado Springs, which last hosted the U.S. Women’s Open in 1995. Most other LPGA Tour events are contested virtually at sea level, the exceptions being stops at 1,150 feet in Phoenix; at 1,368 feet in Rogers, Ark.; at 1,867 feet in Henderson, Nev.; and at 5,138 feet in Guadalajara, Mexico. The other three majors are played at less than 600 feet.

Davis estimates the altitude in the Springs should make balls travel as much as 12 percent farther on holes that are downhill, including No. 17, a 600-yard par-5. That means when defending U.S. Women’s Open champion Paula Creamer hammers a typical drive of 245 yards, she’ll get much-needed extra distance to give herself a manageable approach shot.

Creamer said she wants “to hit the ball higher. Take advantage of the altitude. Get more distance with my longer irons and with the driver. … Not every golf course you have to have a draw or a fade, but you do need that here. There are certain fairways that you want to take advantage of the slope of the fairway. You know it’s going to be much firmer, and the most distance and the roll that I can get is something I want to take advantage of.”

Capitalizing on the altitude will help negate difficulty on greens Davis dubbed “every bit as scary as what they were last year” at Oakmont (Pa.) Country Club, where Creamer was the only player below par at 3-under. Ditto for rough as thick as 4 inches, “so the farther you get off the beaten path,” Davis said, “the more severe the rough will be.” And same goes for sand traps that are “more like hazards,” Davis said, “like they’re designed to be.”

Players undoubtedly will rely on the altitude during an “incredibly difficult” stretch from No. 10 to No. 15, Davis said. “If you can play those holes anywhere close to par, maybe a few over,” he added, “you are absolutely going to pick up strokes on the field.” With the altitude, pars also are possible on No. 17, despite its length, and the other two par-5s, No. 3 at 560 yards and No. 9 at 535 yards, and Davis maintains they all “can be birdie holes.”

In surpassing Interlachen Country Club in Minneapolis, the previous longest course for a U.S. Women’s Open at 6,789 yards in 2008, the par-71 East Course is certainly “not all about power,” Davis said. “It’s about shot-making and thinking your way around the golf course. … Length is never the issue, and I don’t think it will be this year either.”

- Courtesy of The Gazette, Colorado Springs, Co.

Monday, June 27, 2011

POND: TSENG CRUSHES FIELD AT LOCUST HILL

YANI TSENG


Yani Tseng made two things perfectly clear Sunday after closing out the fourth major championship of her young career.

First, the 22-year-old Chinese Taipei star is the undeniable, new face of the LPGA Tour. And the second thing? Tseng's opponents better step up their respective games if they plan on contending with the sport's most dominant player since Annika Sorenstam.

Tseng wired the field, closing with a 6-under-par 66 on her way to an 11-stroke victory at Locust Hill Country Club. American standout Morgan Pressel was the next closest, finishing at 8 under for the event.

Defending champion Cristie Kerr, Paula Creamer and Suzann Pettersen - all among our top-10 contenders prior to the start of the tournament - finished in a tie for third place at 7 under par.

Jiyai Shin, our pick to win this week in suburban Rochester, N.Y., struggled with consistency and settled for a share of 34th place after finishing tied for third a year ago.

Here is a look at the 10 players we labeled contenders at the start of the event and how they have fared:

YANI TSENG
Finish: First (-19, 269)
Final round: -6, 66 ... Eight birdies/two bogeys
Third round: First (-5, 67) ... Six birdies/one bogey
Second round: First (-2, 70) ... Five birdies/one bogey/one double
First round: First (-6, 66) ... Eight birdies/two bogeys
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: Tied 19th (+1)
 
CRISTIE KERR
Finish: Tied for 3rd (-8, 280)
Final round: -3, 69 ... One eagle/three birdies/two bogeys
Third round: Tied for 5th (-5, 67) ... Five birdies/no bogeys
Second round: Tied for 38th (E, 72) ... Four birdies/four bogeys
First round: Tied for 33rd (E, 72) ... Four birdies/four bogeys
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: First (-19)
 
PAULA CREAMER
Finish: Tied for 3rd (-8, 280)
Final round: Tied for 5th (-1, 71) ... Four birdies/one bogey
Third round: Even, 72 ... No birdies/no bogeys
Second round: Tied for 6th (E, 72) ... Four birdies/four bogeys
First round: Second (-5, 67) ... Five birdies/no bogeys
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: Tied for 42nd (+4)
 
SUZANN PETTERSEN
Finish: Tied for 3rd  (-8, 267)
Final round: -5, 67 ... Six birdies/one bogey
Third round: Tied for 16th (-3, 69) ... Six birdies/three bogeys
Second round: Tied for 38th (E, 72) ... Three birdies/three bogeys
First round: Tied for 33rd (E, 72) ... One birdie/one bogey
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: Tied for 11th (-2)
 
STACY LEWIS
Finish: Tied for 6th (-6, 282)
Final round: -1, 71 ... Four birdies/three bogeys
Third round: Tied for 5th (-2, 70) ... Five birdies/one bogey/one double
Second round: Tied for 10th (E, 72) ... Four birdies/two bogeys/one double
First round: Tied for 7th (-3, 69) ... Five birdies/two bogeys
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: Tied for 14th (E)
 
I.K. KIM
Finish: Tied for 12th (-4, 282)
Final round: E, 72 ... Four birdies/four bogeys
Third round: Tied for 9th (-4, 68) ... Five birdies/two bogeys
Second round: Tied for 29th (-2, 70) ... Four birdies/two bogeys
First round: Tied for 55th (+1, 73) ... Four birdies/two bogeys
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: Tied for 5th (-4)
 
KARRIE WEBB
Finish: Tied for 20th (-2, 286)
Final round: E, 72 ... Two birdies/two bogeys
Third round: Tied for 21st (-1, 71) ... Three birdies/two bogeys
Second round: Tied for 29th (-3, 69) ... Five birdies/two bogeys
First round: Tied for 76th (+2, 74) ... Two birdies/two bogeys/one double
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: Tied for 5th (-4)
 
BRITTANY LINCICOME
Finish: Tied for 20th (-2, 286)
Final round: -3, 69 ... Six birdies/three bogeys
Third round: Tied for 41st (-1, 71) ... Five birdies/four bogeys
Second round: Tied for 65th (E, 72) ... Three birdies/three bogeys
First round: Tied for 76th (+2, 74) ... Three birdies/three bogeys
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: Tied for 14th (E)
 
JIYAI SHIN
Finish: Tied for 34th (+1, 289)
Final round: -2, 70 ... One eagle/two birdies/two bogeys
Third round: Tied for 54th (+1, 73) ... Two birdies/three bogeys
Second round: Tied for 65th (-1, 71) ... Four birdies/three bogeys
First round: Tied for 98th (+3, 75) ... One birdie/four bogeys
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: Tied for 3rd (-5)
 
SANDRA GAL
Position: Tied for 108th (+5, 149) ... Missed cut
Second round: +2, 74 ... One eagle/one birdie/two bogeys/one triple
First round: Tied for 98th (+3, 75) ... Two birdies/three bogeys/one double
2010 Wegmans LPGA Championship finish: Missed cut

* Photo courtesy of Getty Images