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Volume 5, Number 3, May 30, 2007 | ||||||||||||||
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2007 Michelob Ultra Open: Lee For All |
Pages 1,
2, 3,
Gallery1, Gallery2, Results |
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Things were not going so well for Mi Hyun Kim, however. After five great rounds of golf in a row, she finally hit the wall on this day. Her putts were not going in the hole, but what really sunk her was her tee shot on 18. This hole has a massive water carry and a dogleg left. For very long players, it is possible on some days to fly the doglegs and a set of bunkers on the left side of the fairway and gain significant distance. But most players need to go to the right to avoid the hazard entirely; Kimmie, being fairly short off the tee, is one such player. Alas, her tee shot went left and wound up in the rough perched on a treacherous hillside. She walked off the hole eventually with a double bogey en route to a 4 over par 75. Though she was still in the top 20 after this day, she would not seriously challenge for the title again. Birdie Kim, too, would not duplicate her success of day one, although she did decently enough on day two with a 72. She would eventually finish the event tied for 49th. A couple of players vaulted themselves into contention on this day. Jimin Kang has been having a solid season in 2007, and she added to that with a 6 under par 66 on Friday to move to 6 under total and a tie for 4th. Rookie In-Kyung Kim has been trying to emerge from the shadow of leading rookie Angela Park all season, and took a step in that direction with a 68 on day two and a 5 under par total. But halfway through the tournament, Sarah Lee was by far the dominant
Lee on the leaderboard. Meena Lee was playing well at 4 under, Jee Young
Lee had an even par round on Friday to remain at 3 under, and Seon Hwa
Lee was tied for 51st at even par total. But all the Lees would make a
lot of noise come the weekend.
It was not easy, for Sarah was having a decidedly weaker round on Saturday
than in her first two days. She started the day with a bogey, although
she neutralized that with a birdie soon after. But the rest of her front
nine was pars, so she finished that stretch still at 11 under. Two bogies
early on the back nine dropped her to nine under par and two shots behind
the recently finished Jee Young. Sarah made a birdie on the final par
5 to move back to 10 under, but was not able to catch Jee Young before
she ran out of holes. Thus, she finished the day at 10 under, all by herself
in second place. The two good friends and fellow Golf Maniac Group members
would be paired together in the final round on Sunday, both looking for
their first LPGA win on American soil (and for Sarah, first LPGA win period). But the success was not over for the GMG or its members with the name
of Lee. Meena Lee posted her third solid round of the event, a 3 under
par 68, to move to 7 under total and a tie for third. In fact, at one
point she even made it to 8 under before a late bogey knocked her back.
And then there was Seon Hwa Lee, who posted the second best round for
a Lee on this day: a 6 under par 66 that vaulted her into a tie for 8th
at 6 under total. So, at the end of the day on Saturday, the leaderboard
was truly incredible, with four players named Lee among the top ten in
the tournament. Truly, this was an unprecedented result on the LPGA tour.
And unfortunately, much like at the Safeway, both Lees struggled in the weather on this day, while a player charged from behind to give them grief. That player was Norwegian golfer Suzann Pettersen, who had almost won the Nabisco Championship in March before a late day meltdown cost her the crown. On this day, Pettersen, who plays well in windy conditions, moved up the leaderboard, dunking a long birdie on the 11th (?) hole to move to 10 under and right in the thick of things. Sarah Lee, meanwhile, was having all sorts of trouble. After her round on Saturday, she told the press that her problems stemmed from playing too conservatively, and that she intended to play much more aggressively on Sunday. However, the far trickier conditions forced her to change that plan, and as a result, she was tentative much of the day. Many of her putts stopped short of the hole, and she had nowhere near as many good looks at birdie as she had had the first three days. Sarah had pars on her first three holes, but bogies on four and five
knocked her back to 8 under par. She birdied the par 5 7th, but another
bogey on 9 meant she was two over on the front. In the same stretch, Meena
Lee had a meltdown. Starting the day just four shots back, she never was
able to get anything going on Sunday and wound up shooting a 9 over par
80 to finish in a tie for 29th. Seon Hwa Lee, the fourth Lee in the top
8 to start the day, also struggled, but to a far lesser degree. She shot
a 2 over par 73 and wound up tied for 8th.
Jee Young was starting to struggle a bit more, but she was hanging in there for pars. On 12 she scrambled to save par when she overshot the green. She also missed the green on 13 but again got it up and down, sinking a four foot par save in the process. On that same hole, Sarah had a fifteen footer for birdie, but missed. Pettersen, a hole ahead, then narrowly missed her own birdie try. She was having little problem making par, but the birdie putts were no longer falling for her. A key hole was the par 4 14th. Jee Young put her drive well to the right, into some very deep rough. She also had trees to worry about. Somehow she got her approach out of that mess, but missed the fairway in the process. Her third shot got to within fifteen feet of the flag, but from there she two putted for bogey. For the first time all week, a player named Lee was not at the top of the leaderboard. Sarah, meanwhile, had her chance for a two shot swing: her birdie try was only about eight feet long. But she missed it, again not hitting it with enough force, and a golden chance to tie Jee Young and move within one shot of Pettersen fell by the wayside. |
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