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The Honolulu Advertiser

Posted on: Friday, March 18, 2005

Wie starts cold with a 1-over 73

By Mel Reisner
Associated Press

SUPERSTITION MOUNTAIN, Ariz. — Defending champion Annika Sorenstam loved her first round in the Safeway International. Honolulu's Michelle Wie wasn't nearly as optimistic — for good reason.

Michelle Wie struggled to a 1-over-par 73 in yesterday's first round of the LPGA's Safeway International at Superstition Mountain, Ariz.

Paul Connors • Associated Press

Sorenstam shot a 6-under 66 yesterday to finish a stroke behind first-round leaders Lorena Ochoa and Siew-Ai Lim, while Wie was in danger of missing the cut after a 73.

"That's the kind of start I wanted, and then we go from there," Sorenstam said.

Sorenstam won her 57th LPGA Tour title two weeks ago in Mexico in her season debut, her third straight victory dating to last year. The 15-year-old Wie is coming off a second-place tie in the season-opening SBS Open in Hawai'i.

Playing in the first group to tee off on the back nine, Wie lost her touch in the chilly morning air, dropping two strokes on the par-5 18th — the only hole on the course with a water hazard.

Already 1 over after eight holes, the Punahou School sophomore hooked her drive into the fairway-length pond, duplicated that with a 3-wood after a drop and had to get up and down from a bunker to salvage a double-bogey 7.

Hawai'i's Michelle Wie blasts out of a bunker onto the 18th green during the first round of the LPGA's Safeway International. Wie carded a double-bogey 7 and was tied for 63rd place with a 73.

Paul Connors • Associated Press

"It was super cold," Wie said. "I couldn't even feel my hands, so the first nine I had absolutely no feel of my putts."

Wie missed the cut in all three LPGA events she entered in 2002, but has made 14 of 15 since then, with the 2003 Jamie Farr Classic the only exception.

But things might not be too bleak for Wie. She opened with a 72 last year in this tournament, then recovered with a 67 and ended up tying for 19th.

"I'll try to make a lot of birdies tomorrow and try and make a lot more putts," she said. "Try to be more in the fairway."

Juli Inkster matched Sorenstam at 66, Karen Stupples had a 67 and Soo-Yun Kang, Sung Ah Yim and Moira Dunn shot 68s. Paula Creamer, Beth Daniel, Candie Kung, Natalie Gulbis, Marcy Hart, Dawn Coe-Jones, Karrie Webb and Kim Williams had 69s.

Lim parred five straight holes before going on an eight-birdie, one-bogey tear for her career-low score.

Lim, the only Malaysian on the LPGA Tour, three-putted the 14th hole from 80 feet for a bogey that set her back to 3 under. But she dug down for a four-birdie finish.

Ochoa, the young Mexican star who played at the University of Arizona, played the 6,229-yard Prospector Course at Superstition Mountain the opposite way, birdieing her first four holes for the first time in an event.

"We just kind of made fun of that," she said. "I said, 'Don't worry, I'm going to make birdie on No. 2.' So then I made birdie on No. 2. I said, 'Oh yeah, I can birdie 18 holes.' "

She recovered from a bogey on the seventh hole by birdieing the eighth and ninth, knocked a 3-wood within 25 feet for a two-putt birdie on the 11th and got a share of the lead with a 6-foot birdie putt on the 16th.

Sorenstam, who has had the four lowest scoring averages ever over the last four years, chipped in for one of her six birdies and sank putts of 17 and 25 feet for two others.

"I hit a lot of fairways, I hit a lot of greens," Sorenstam said. "I'm very, very pleased with the way I played today. I thought I hit a lot of good quality shots, good speed on the greens."

Inkster made the most spectacular charge of all, though.

The 44-year-old Hall of Famer was even after two birdies and two bogeys through 10 holes, and then had five consecutive birdies, sinking putts between 15 and 18 feet for three of them.

Then came the best. On the par-5 finishing hole, Inkster missed a 90-foot putt for eagle by inches and sank a 5-foot comebacker for her sixth birdie in eight holes.

"I just realized, 'OK, I'm even par,' " she said. "I'm not playing bad, not playing great. Just thinking, on 10 or 11, you're going to have short irons, get birdie there and keep my momentum going. It just seems like this year I make a birdie and make a bogey.

"I just couldn't get anything going, so I was very pleased with the way I finished."