2014年3月5日星期三

Ai Miyazato wins Safeway Classic, leaps back to No. 1 in women's ranking

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Ai Miyazato closed with an even-par 72 to finish at 11 under, two strokes in front of Cristie Kerr and Na Yeon Choi.
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By 
Anne M. Peterson
Associated Press

Series:
Ai Miyazato was in uncharacteristic territory to start the final round of the LPGA Tour's Safeway Classic.
She was nervous.
While Miyazato normally appears composed, the jitters were evident when the Japanese star bogeyed the par-4 second hole on the Ghost Creek Course at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club. Then she bogeyed the par-4 seventh.
It wasn't until a birdie on the par-5 ninth hole that she steadied herself -- and cruised to her fifth victory of the year. Miyazato, who also led after the first two rounds, closed with an even-par 72 to finish at 11 under.
"Today was a really tough day," she said. "I was really nervous on the front nine. But after nine holes I made a birdie and it gave me a good kick."
With the win, Miyazato reclaimed the top spot in the women's world rankings, swiping that status from Cristie Kerr, who finished two strokes back along with Na Yeon Choi.
Kerr chased Miyazato throughout the final round until hitting into the water on the par-4 18th. The American finished with a 70, while Choi shot a 71.
Miyazato, ranked No. 1 for a week in June and again for a week in July, is among five players who have been jockeying for the top ranking, including Kerr, Jiyai Shin, Suzann Pettersen and Yani Tseng. The spot came up for grabs when Lorena Ochoa retired earlier this season.
"My goal at the start of this year was to become Player of the Year. So I'm aiming for that," she said. "Everybody is so close at the top, so I don't really know what is going to happen. But it's a good motivator for me.
The Safeway Classic, in its second year at Pumpkin Ridge about a 20-minute drive west of Portland, was marred Saturday when veteran Juli Inkster, in strong position to contend in the final round, was disqualified.
The 50-year-old Hall of Famer used a weighted training aid on her club to stay loose while waiting for 30 minutes to make the turn at the 10th hole. That broke rule 14-3, which meant disqualification.
Miyazato and Kim, playing in the final pairing of the day, battled on the back nine holes after Kim pulled even with Miyazato with a jaw-dropping chip from under a tree to birdie the par-3 11th. But Kim dropped two shots with bogeys on the 13th and 14th holes.
In the pairing in front of them, Kerr missed a chance to pull even with Miyazato by misjudging a 12-foot birdie putt on No. 17. Her chances slipped away with the shot into the water on the final hole.
"I just said to myself, `How could you do that?'" she said.
Kerr has won twice on the tour this season, at the LPGA Championship and the State Farm Classic. She won the Safeway Classic in 2008 when it was at Columbia Edgewater Country Club near Portland International Airport.
"I'm not going to be far off as far as points, so this was an important week for me to finish up there even if I didn't win," she said.
Pettersen (69) and Song-Hee Kim (72) finished at 8 under.
Tseng, who the Women's British Open on Aug. 1 for her second major victory of the season and third in three years, finished 2 over.
M.J. Hur, the defending champion, was 4 over and did not make the cut. The Safeway Classic is her first and only title to date. Paula Creamer, Morgan Pressel and Christina Kim were among those who also missed the cut.
Inkster was in a three-way tie for second at 8 under with Kim and Choi after two rounds. But that was erased when she used the "doughnut" training aid to practice her swing before making the backed-up turn, and the image flashed on television.
LPGA Director of Tournament Competitions Sue Witters said a viewer watching the broadcast brought the violation to the attention of tournament officials via email. By that time, Inkster was almost done with her round.
"I had a 30-minute wait and I needed to loosen up," Inkster said in a statement. "It had no effect on my game whatsoever, but it is what it is. I'm very disappointed."

Patrick Cantlay shoots 60, lowest PGA Tour round ever by an amateur, at Travelers

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One week after he was the low amateur at the U.S. Open, Patrick Cantlay went low again at the Travelers Championship.
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By 
Pat Eaton-Robb
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
Nineteen-year-old UCLA star Patrick Cantlay has insisted he has no intention of leaving school early to join the PGA Tour.
But the low amateur last week in the U.S. Open softened his stance just a little Friday after shooting a course-record 10-under 60 -- the lowest PGA Tour round ever by an amateur -- to take a four-stroke lead in the Travelers Championship.
"I'm going to stay amateur definitely for the Walker Cup (in September), and my plan is to stay amateur until I finish college," he said.
Taking advantage of preferred lies at soggy TPC River Highlands, Cantlay tied the tournament record set by Tommy Bolt when the event was played in Wethersfield in 1954.
Cantlay birdied the final two holes to reach 13 under. After shooting a 67 on Friday morning in the rain-delayed first round, he had eight birdies and an eagle in the afternoon. It was his second eagle of the day on the par-5 13th.
He said he had no idea that he was setting an amateur record.
"I knew where I was. I knew I needed to make eagle on 18 for 59," he said. "It's tough to hole it from 152."
But he came close. His approach landed just above the hole and rolled back to just over 2 feet below the pin.
"I thought it had a chance, it was covering the flag pretty good," he said. "It takes some luck."
D.J. Trahan (62), Webb Simpson (65) Alexandre Rocha (66) and Vaughn Taylor (66) were tied for second along with Andres Romero, who had completed five holes when play was suspended because of darkness just after 8:00 p.m. ET. Seventy-seven players are scheduled to complete the second round Saturday.
Players had perfect scoring conditions Friday with rain-softened greens and little wind. And because of the wet conditions, players were allowed to lift, clean and place their golf balls hit in the fairway, another big advantage. The projected cut line was 3 under par.
"A day like today, play good in the first round, you just kind of keep it going," Taylor said. Generally, your swing feels the same and your game feels the same, so you just kind of stay in it and just keep playing."
An amateur hasn't won a PGA Tour event since Phil Mickelson in the 1991 Northern Telecom Open in Arizona. If Cantlay wins, he would have 60 days to decide whether to accept a spot on the tour and the two-year exemption that goes with it.
Four players have shot 61s at the TPC River Highlands course. The last was Kenny Perry in 2009.
Tour rookie Jim Renner shot 29 on his first nine holes and finished his first round with a 63, good enough for a one-stroke lead heading into the afternoon. But he started his second round with a bogey, a par and a double bogey and finished the day at 3 under.
Renner had played in just one Tour event before this season and earned his card though qualifying school. He grew up in Plainville, Mass., and said this tournament was the first PGA Tour event he ever attended.
"I think I walked about four holes and realized I was ready to go home," he said. "I was 14."
The shot of the day came from Heath Slocum, who holed a 160-yard shot across the water to eagle the signature 17th hole. He finished his two rounds at 7 under.
But Cantlay stole the show, and received a standing ovation from the sparse crowd as he walked up the 18th fairway.
"It's just one round," he said. "It was a good round, and I played really well. Nothing bad happened. I'm really proud of it, but I've got a couple more rounds to play."