Posted at 1:29 p.m., Sunday, April 1, 2007
Pressel, 18, becomes youngest to win LPGA major
By Doug Ferguson
Associated Press
Pressel played her final 24 holes over Mission Hills without a bogey, finishing the round with a 10-foot birdie putt that looked as though it would be only good enough for second place.
Then came a shocking collapse from Suzann Pettersen, the latest and most significant on a sun-baked afternoon in the desert.
Pettersen, a fiery 25-year-old from Norway, had a four-shot lead with four holes to play when she started hitting tee shots into the ankle deep rough and missing putts on the crusty greens. She went bogey-double bogey-bogey to fall one shot behind, and needing a birdie on the par-5 18th, she hit wedge some 25 feet beyond the hole and missed the putt.
''I said yesterday that a little help never hurts,'' Pressel said. ''That rang true today.''
Pressel, who finished at 3-under 285, was on the practice range when she entered the history books at 18 years, 11 months, 22 days.
Previously, the youngest major champion was Sandra Post, who was 20 years, 19 days when she won the 1968 LPGA Championship. On the men's tour, Young Tom Morris was 17 when he won the 1868 British Open.
The kid broke down in tears again, this time over the shock and euphoria of winning a major 10 months after graduating high school.
''Oh my God! Oh my God!'' was all she could manage.
Then came the sweetest pool party she ever attended. Keeping with tradition at the Kraft Nabisco, Pressel jumped into the pond surrounding the 18th green with her caddie and grandmother, Evelyn Krickstein.
Herb Krickstein, her grandfather and the father of former tennis player Aaron Krickstein, watched with a broad smile. Pressel came out of the water and slipped into a white robe that read, ''2007 Kraft Nabisco Champion'' on the back.
''This is a dream come true,'' Pressel said. ''I knew I had to play solid golf. I couldn't make mistakes, I had to stay cool and be ready for whatever came.''
It was hard to believe -- not only at that age, but how it all unfolded.
Se Ri Pak, needing to win this major to complete the career Grand Slam, had a three-shot lead on the front nine until Pettersen took charge with a four-shot swing over three holes. Pak bogeyed five of the last six holes for a 77.
Catriona Matthew of Scotland, playing only her second event since becoming a mother three months ago, had a 30-foot birdie putt to reach 4 under when she three-putted for a bogey that left her in a tie for second with Pettersen and Brittany Lincicome (72).
But no one threw this tournament away more than Pettersen.
''I said yesterday that the one who made the fewest mistakes would win,'' she said. ''I did a few too many.''
It started with a tee shot into the right rough on the 15th, keeping her from reaching the green and taking bogey. She went right again on the next hole, clipping a branch on her second shot that left her short of the green. Her wedge spun off the front of the green, and she used putter to ram it 8 feet by. The bogey putt caught the lip, and suddenly she was down to 3 under.
Pressel watched workers change Pettersen's score under par from a ''5'' to a ''3'' and couldn't believe it. Pettersen then came up short on the 17th, chipped to 10 feet and missed again, falling one shot behind.
A week ago, Pettersen was runner-up to Lorena Ochoa outside Phoenix.
''This time, I felt like I lost the tournament,'' she said. ''Last week, I felt like I won second place. Apparently, it wasn't my week. I just didn't finish it off. All credit to Pressel.''
Stacy Lewis was low amateur after a 71 that put her in tie for fifth.
Pressel became the first American to win this major since Dottie Pepper in 1999. And it atoned for Cherry Hills two years ago, when she was poised to win the U.S. Women's Open until Birdie Kim holed a bunker shot for birdie as Pressel watched in disbelief from the fairway.
The tears flowed when it ended, the first precipitation all week in the Coachella Valley -- joy for Pressel, despair for Pettersen.
Pressel has shown so much promise for so long.
She was a 12-year-old in pigtails when she was the youngest to qualify for the U.S. Women's Open in 2001 at Pine Needles, playing as a 13-year-old and missing the cut. Then came her runner-up finish at Cherry Hills, a major she thought belonged to her.
Pressel turned pro during her senior year in high school, earned her card at Q-school and the LPGA Tour eventually waived its minimum age requirement (18). Yesterday, she did something not even Ochoa has done. Pressel is a major champion.
Ochoa, who needed a victory to supplant Annika Sorenstam at No. 1 in the women's world ranking, tied for 10th after closing with a 72. Her hopes were ruined Saturday with a quadruple bogey on the 17th, and while she promised to attack in the final round, the 25-year-old Mexican star didn't make her first birdie until No. 11.
Sorenstam shot 75 and finished at 296, here highest 72-hole score in a major since the '98 U.S. Women's Open at Blackwolf Run.
Even some of those in contention going into the last day didn't have much of a chance.
Paula Creamer, one shot behind the leaders, was 3 over through five holes, shot 40 on the front and wound up with a 78. Her only other time in contention, at the U.S. Women's Open in 2005 when she was one shot behind, Creamer shot 79.
Meaghan Francella was tied for the lead after opening with a birdie, but came apart on the third when a chip from the rough moved about a yard into the bunker, and she sent the next one over the green on her way to double bogey.
Still, the most memorable collapses came at the end -- for everyone but Pressel.