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Pak wins LPGA Championship in a playoff

Wie, 16, fades at the end, finishes tied for fifth

Image: Pak
Tim Shaffer / Reuters
Se Ri Pak holds the trophy after winning the LPGA Championship on Sunday.
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updated 10:17 p.m. ET June 11, 2006

HAVRE DE GRACE, Md. - Burned out, injured and all but forgotten for two years, Se Ri Pak returned to the spotlight in stunning fashion Sunday when her utility club from 201 yards stopped 3 inches from the hole for a sudden-death playoff victory over Karrie Webb in the LPGA Championship.

Pak atoned for a three-putt bogey on the 18th hole that kept her from winning in regulation, delivering a spectacular finish to a tournament that was up for grabs over the final two hours at Bulle Rock.

“I’m very happy to be back again,” Pak said. “I’m a very lucky person. I’m as happy a person has ever been.”

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It all must have looked familiar to Webb, who was trying to capture the second leg of the Grand Slam.

Just two months ago, Webb holed a pitching wedge from 116 yards on the 18th hole at the Kraft Nabisco Championship for an eagle that got her into a playoff, and her first major in four years.

“I thought I was getting my own medicine,” Webb said.

Webb also had gone through some struggles while retooling her swing, and after winning the Kraft Nabisco, Pak saw her a few weeks later and gave her a big hug.

“She told me, ’Now it’s my turn. I’ll win the next one,”’ Webb recalled.

Michelle Wie was among six players who had a chance to either win or get into a playoff on the final hole, but the 16-year-old from Hawaii wasted too many chances.

Pak’s last victory was two years ago at the Michelob Ultra Open, which gave her enough points for the World Golf Hall of Fame. Then, the 28-year-old South Korean and her electric smile all but vanished from the LPGA Tour, and she sat out the last three months of the 2005 season to get healthy and get happy.

She acknowledged being burned out, and considered her injury a gift because it forced her to stop playing. She was never more happy on the golf course Sunday, especially after watching her utility club — the equivalent of a 4-iron — headed for the hole.

Image: Wie
Chris Gardner / AP
Michelle Wie watches her ball after hitting out of the rough along the 18th fairway on Sunday.

It looked like it might go in, much like Shaun Micheel’s 7-iron at Oak Hill when he won the 2003 PGA Championship. This one stopped a few turns short, all but clinching victory. Pak raised both arms in victory, then delivered a massive uppercut to signal her return, and jumped into the arms of her caddie.

“First time I jumped on the golf course,” Pak said.

Webb, who missed birdie putts of 4 and 10 feet on the last two holes in regulation, hit her approach in the playoff to about 20 feet, but the putt to force another hole veered well to the left.

Pak won her fifth major, and joined Mickey Wright, Kathy Whitworth, Patty Sheehan and Annika Sorenstam as the only three-time winners of the LPGA Championship.
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Wie’s third birdie in a five-hole stretch brought her within one of the lead, but she missed the 16th green with a wedge and watched her 4-foot par putt spin 270 degrees out of the cup. She narrowly missed an 8-foot birdie on the 171-yard 17th, then had to make a 50-foot birdie on the 18th to join the playoff. It looked good until the final few feet, then ran 8 feet by and she wound up three-putting for bogey and a 72 to tie for fifth.

“I feel like I’m getting closer and closer,” she said. “It shows a lot that I played my ‘B’ game and I’m still in the top five.”


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