| |
| >> Back to the article | |
| Dec 5, 2008 | |
|
Wie shoots 65 in early lead
|
|
|
DAYTONA BEACH (Florida) - MICHELLE Wie hit a 7-under 65 which tied her for the lead with Shiho Oyama of Japan after the second of five rounds at the US LPGA Tour qualifying tournament on Thursday. Oyama shot 70 on the Legends course and joined Wie at 10-under 134. The top 20 players after the 90-hole tournament on Sunday earn their US LPGA Tour cards for next season. Through two rounds, Wie was eight shots clear of the cutoff. Stacy Lewis, who tied for third at the US Women's Open in her pro debut this summer, shot a 66 for the best score this week on the Legends course and one shot behind at 9-under 135. It was the first time since the second round of the 2006 Evian Masters that Wie had a share of the lead after any round, and the first time since the Ladies German Open in late May that she put together consecutive rounds in the 60s - at least officially. Wie had three straight scores in the 60s at the State Farm Classic in July when she was disqualified for leaving the scoring area without signing her card after the second round, so only the first round is in the books. Without that disqualification, Wie might have earned enough money to avoid Q-school. She also could have skipped the worst school in golf if she had showed this form earlier in the season. But she is here with no other choice but to get a card, and she's making the most of it. The first two rounds were strong indicators that a teenager who once had unlimited potential was closer than ever to recovering from injured wrists, shattered confidence and humbling performances. After hitting only four drivers on the Legends course on Wednesday - a tighter, more punishing track - Wie was far more aggressive on the more forgiving Champions course at LPGA International. Changing her tactics off the tee, the 19-year-old from Hawaii hit driver on all but two holes and ran off four straight birdies late for her lowest round on the tour since a 65 at the Samsung World International in 2005, the week of her pro debut (which also ended in disqualification). Swing coach David Leadbetter wasn't around, but Wie carried out his hopes - avoid mistakes and big numbers. There was nothing close to the quintuple-bogey 9 that knocked her out of the US Women's Open this year, and even the three fairways she missed in the second round were not far from her target. The longest putt she had for par came on No. 11, her second hole, when she ran a 25-foot birdie attempt 4 feet (1.3m) past the hole. Wie took only 24 putts, helped by three simple up-and-downs and a 40-foot chip she holed for birdie on No. 17. She missed birdie putts of 8 feet and 6 feet on consecutive holes early on her back nine, and while she continued to hit driver, Wie also stayed conservative on the par 5s by laying up three times when she could have reached the green. On the fifth, she had only 210 yards off a slight hill, but played a short iron and then stuffed a wedge to 3 feet. That began the late run of birdies. She hit her tee shot to 7 feet on the 145-yard sixth, holed another 7-foot birdie putt on the seventh hole and closed out her birdie string with an 8-foot putt. Through two days on each course, Wie's only mistake has been a three-putt bogey from 25 feet on Wednesday. -- AP | |
| Copyright © 2007 Singapore Press Holdings. All rights reserved. Privacy Statement & Condition of Access |
![]() |
|
|
|
$breakCalendarHTML
|
Best viewed at 1152x864 resolution with IE 6.0 or
FireFox 2.0 and above Copyright © 2008 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co.
Regn No. 198402868E | Privacy Statement
| Terms & Conditions
|