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No senior
moment for Inkster
Published Sunday, July 29, 2007
Juli Inkster had a 3-under 69 yesterday for a two-shot lead and Michelle Wie ballooned to an 84 after the third round of the Evian Masters in Evian-Les-Bains, France. The 47-year-old Inkster is vying to become the oldest player to win an LPGA Tour event. She finished at 6-under 210 on a tough day for scoring because of swirling winds, tricky flag positions and difficult greens. Only seven players broke par. "I played very well," said Inkster, who had five birdies and two bogeys. "I’m driving the ball well, I hit good irons and good wedges and I’m putting good." Jang Jeong of South Korea is second after a 72, followed another shot back by Sophie Gustafson of Sweden (72), Shin Ji-yai of South Korea (70) and Diana D’Alessio of the United States (76). The 17-year-old Wie had the worst round of the day, shooting 12-over par to languish in 69th place. She had four double bogeys, five bogeys and one birdie in her round. "It was frustrating," Wie said. "My body would not do what my mind was telling it to do. I felt a little out of whack." Two-time winner Annika Sorenstam (74), Natalie Gulbis (73) and Chung Il-mi (70) were four strokes behind the leader. Inkster, who won in 2003, needed only 26 putts and credited her confidence on the greens to a recent putting lesson. She laid up at the 18th hole with water in front of the green and hit a sand wedge to 3 feet for a birdie. "If it was Sunday and I was behind by one, I’d go for it, but it was too risky a shot for Saturday," Inkster said. If she wins today, she’ll top JoAnne Carner, who won the Safeco Classic at 46 in 1985. The Evian Masters became an official LPGA Tour event in 2000. Defending champion Karrie Webb (73) and Laura Davies (74) were among four players five strokes back. Lorena Ochoa (75) is seven shots behind Inkster. The 84th-ranked D’Alessio shared the second-round lead by three strokes with Jin-joo Hong, who struggled to an 80 yesterday. D’Alessio was leading the tournament at 8-under at the turn before she had a quadruple bogey at the 12th. ● PGA: In Markham, Ontario, Vijay Singh shot a 3-under 68 for a 12-under 201 total and a one-stroke lead after the third round of the Canadian Open. Steve Allan and John Mallinger, the second-round leaders, were second after a pair of 70s in windy and hot conditions at Angus Glen’s North Course. First-round leader Hunter Mahan (67) was 10-under, and Jim Furyk, the winner last year in Hamilton, had a 69 to join Pat Perez (66) at 9-under. Allan took a share of the lead to the par-4 18th, but closed with a bogey after his second shot bounced over the green. The 33-year-old Australian is seeking his first PGA Tour victory after winning the 1998 German Open and 2002 Australian Open. ● Champions: In Gullane, Scotland, Tom Watson showed flashes of his vintage links mastery with a 1-under 70 at Muirfield to put himself within one shot of leader Stewart Ginn after three rounds of the Senior British Open. A five-time British Open winner at Carnoustie, Turnberry, Royal Troon and Royal Birkdale and the famous Muirfield links, Watson is a contender to win the title for the third time. He also won in 2003 and ’05. Ginn shot a 69 and stands at 3-under 210. Ginn, an Australian, bogeyed the first two holes but then didn’t drop a shot in tricky wind. Ginn, whose accurate approaches gave him birdie chances on most holes between the third and the 17th, is the only player to post a sub-70 round in two days. Former British Open champion Mark O’Meara is three strokes off the lead after a 70. Nick Faldo, who is making his senior tour debut, slipped back for a share of 11th at 4 over after a 75. ● U.S. Junior Amateur: In Augusta, Mo., Cory Whitsett overcame an early two-hole deficit by winning five consecutive holes in an 8-and-7 victory over Anthony Paolucci to win the U.S. Junior Amateur Championship on Saturday. Whitsett had birdies at Nos. 7 and 9 and parred Nos. 8, 10 and 11 at Boone Valley Golf Club in the morning portion of the 36-hole match play final to flip a 2-up deficit to Paolucci to a 3-up advantage that was never in jeopardy. He finished with five birdies and just two bogeys in becoming only the second lefty to win the championship in its 60-year history. Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Copyright © 2007 The Columbia Daily Tribune. All Rights Reserved.
The Columbia Daily Tribune
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