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"Creamer
hangs on to win Farr by 2 strokes"
SYLVANIA, Ohio (AP)—Just
like the last two weeks, Paula
Creamer didn’t play well
in the final round of a tournament.
This time, she didn’t
have to.
Creamer shot a 2-over 73 Sunday
and did just enough to make
a big lead stand, going wire-to-wire
to win the Jamie Farr Owens
Corning Classic by two strokes.
“I learned you have to
stay in your own world,”
Creamer said after capturing
her seventh career win and third
this year. “It doesn’t
matter what other people do
until you’re walking down
the 18th fairway.”
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Two weeks ago, while near the top
of the leaderboard at the U.S. Women’s
Open, she sagged to a 78 to finish
in a tie for sixth. Last week at the
tour stop in Arkansas, she had a 74
to fall out of contention.
Given another chance, she always seemed
to come up with a clutch shot when
most needed.
Asked what she was thinking as she
approached the final green to a huge
ovation, she said, “It’s
over!” Then she added, “You
try to soak it up because you never
know when the next one is going to
be.”
Creamer, who won $195,000, had worse
scores every day after breaking the
tournament record with an 11-under
60 in the first round. She followed
that with a 65 and a 70 to finish
at 16-under 268, two shots better
than Nicole Castrale who closed fast
with a 64.
The 21-year-old Californian said it
wasn’t easy.
“After you shoot 60, I swear,
it’s the hardest thing. Anything
over that and you feel like you’re
shooting 85,” she said, laughing.
“Everybody’s saying, congratulations,
congratulations. But you’ve
still got three days left.”
Creamer represents the tournament’s
title sponsor, which features a pink
panther in its advertising. Creamer,
who felt she let Owens Corning down
when she missed the cut at the Farr
in 2007, is known for her pink clothing
ensembles, not to mention using pink
golf balls, pink grips on her clubs,
a pink golf bag and a pink panther
club-head cover.
While laying claim to that color,
she didn’t put many red numbers
on the leaderboard in the final round.
Ahead by four shots at the start,
Creamer was fortunate to get away
with a bogey on the first hole after
chipping out of a bad lie with her
tee shot. She had seven pars in a
row until reaching the par-4 ninth,
where her approach flew over the green.
After getting a free drop so she wouldn’t
hit the grandstand on her backswing,
she hit a flop shot that stopped about
10 feet away. She pumped her right
fist—just as she had on the
long bogey putt at No. 1—after
rolling in the par-saving putt.
“That was huge,” she said.
“That was a great up-and-down.
That was probably the biggest moment
of the day.”
She saw her lead drop to a shot when
rookie Shanshan Feng—the first
exempt player from China to play on
the LPGA Tour—pushed her with
five birdies through her first 11
holes.
Feng said she wasn’t paying
any attention to Creamer.
“Just before the tournament,
my dad, he’s in China now, he
called me and he told me to keep calm
and just play my ball,” she
said. “(He said) ‘What
the others do, it doesn’t matter.’
So I didn’t let it bother me
at all.”
Feng, however, quickly fell back with
three straight bogeys down the stretch,
although she had her best finish of
the year. She said she might even
buy her father a new car with a portion
of the $66,000 she won for finishing
fourth.
Paula Creamer pumps her fist after
making par on the ninth hole in the
final round of the Jamie Farr Owens
Corning Classic at Highland Meadows
Golf Club Sunday, July 13, 2008 in
Sylvania, Ohio. Creamer won the tournament
at 16-under par.
South Korea’s Eun-Hee Ji, second
to Creamer after each of the first
three rounds, shot a 72 and was a
shot back of Castrale at 271. Feng
had a 69 for 272, followed by Karrie
Webb who shot a 70 and was at 273.
Castrale was 1 under on the windy
day through 10 holes but had a 6-under
31 on the back nine.
“When I got to 13 and I had
two par-5s left, my goal was to try
to birdie both and post a number and
let her (Creamer) see it and basically
see what happens,” said Castrale,
who has had three top 10s in her last
six tournaments.
She almost holed her third shot for
eagle on the 17th before settling
for birdie. But she never got closer
than two shots.
Creamer played the last six holes
in even-par, good enough to hold off
all the threats. She had 21 birdies
and three bogeys the first 54 holes—and
one birdie and the same number of
bogeys in the final round.
When the heat was on, she remembered
to forget about missing that Farr
cut a year ago, or her recent final-round
failures.
“It was a struggle,” she
said. “I learned a lot about
perseverance and staying in the moment
and forgetting what happened in the
past.”
Then she packed up her stuff and headed
for a week of vacation, putting a
pink bow on any lingering doubts.
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