LPGA: Sorenstam, Ochoa in final group at Kingsmill
By HANK KURZ Jr.
AP Sports Writer
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. — Lorena Ochoa started with a birdie, pulling her even with Annika Sorenstam, the playing partner she replaced as the No. 1 female golfer in the world.
Two holes later, Sorenstam answered. And then again at the par-4 16th, rolling in a birdie putt from about 8 feet away after Ochoa briefly drew even with a tap-in from an inch.
So it went today in the Michelob Ultra Open, where sometimes driving rain and two rain delays did little to put a damper on a friendly duel between the game's best players.
Sorenstam followed a 64 with a 66, leaving her at 12 under, three better than Ochoa, whose bogey at the last hole gave her 68, and Jeong Jang, who matched Sorenstam with her 66.
"I'm right there, so I'm excited," Ochoa said.
The day wasn't as good for Hawaii's Michelle Wie. Playing in her first tournament in 2› months, the Stanford freshman followed a 4-over 75 with a 71 and missed the cut by four strokes.
"I just feel really rusty," she said after making a birdie on the final hole to finish even on the day. "I feel like I just need to play more. ... I feel like I can get it back."
Twelve strokes off the pace at the start of the day, Wie took a backseat to the pairing that had Ochoa, Sorenstam and defending champion Suzann Pettersen playing together. Several thousand fans were waiting for them either at the 10th tee, where they started, or along the fairway, hoping to see the start of a battle classically reserved for weekends on the tour.
Ochoa, who has won half of the first 10 events so far this season, upped the ante when she rolled in a 15-foot birdie putt on the first hole, No. 10, celebrating with a fist pump.
But Sorenstam was better, again going bogey-free over the 6,315-yard River Course.
"I can't remember the last time that was but, you know, anything can really happen on this course," she said of one of the few courses where she hasn't won. "I'm just trying to play smart. I'm trying to play, you know, conservative at times and aggressive at other times."
And the fans were into it all the way, braving the often difficult conditions.
During their round, one woman shouted "Viva Mexico!" right before Ochoa backed away from a 5-foot birdie putt, then stepped up and missed it. When Sorenstam hit her 50-yard third shot on the par-4 ninth hole to 3 feet, a man called out "Nice shot, Annika. Welcome back."
Sorenstam, a two-time winner this season after a winless and injury-plagued 2007, didn't make a birdie putt of longer than 16 feet all day, but also largely avoided trouble.
"Overall, I would say I'm so happy with the way I'm striking my irons. I feel so good about hitting the target and the spots and the yardages that I'm planning, so I'm not going out there thinking about that," she said. "I'm trying to play the best I can."
Ochoa, who admits to watching Sorenstam play and learning from her, said up-and-down par saves at the last two holes highlighted how well her counterpart is hitting the ball.
"I was thinking she must practice a lot on the short game," Ochoa said.
Meena Lee shot 68 and was five shots behind Sorenstam, with Jimin Kang (69), Kristy McPherson (68), Meredith Duncan (68), Becky Morgan (69) and Karen Stupples (69) at 6 under.
Jang, who is battling a wrist injury that has caused her to limit her time on the driving range, had two three-putt bogeys and seven birdies, including her last four holes.
"I have really good feeling with my putter," she said.
She capped the run by making a 20-footer on the 18th green.
Mhairi McKay, who tied the tournament record with an opening 63, followed with a 77.