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The San Diego Union-Tribune

 
Emotions have to wait until Sunday

Sorenstam ready for final U.S. Open

ASSOCIATED PRESS

June 26, 2008

EDINA, Minn. – The practice range at Interlachen was filled with young players hitting balls under the late afternoon sun yesterday, many of them playing in the U.S. Women's Open for the first time and soaking up all it offers.

In the middle of this activity was Annika Sorenstam, without any fanfare, longtime Swedish coach Henri Reis at her side.

She was trying not to soak up the memories.

Not yet.

“I can be an emotional player,” Sorenstam said. “But I can also be a very cold player. And I try to just stay cold about my emotions and focus on what I have to do. But I do know in the back of my mind that when Sunday comes, I will not be playing here anymore.”

Sorenstam, 37, announced six weeks ago that she is retiring from competition at the end of the year. She does not want this to be a farewell tour, concentrating instead on piling up as many victories as she can, determined to add at least one more major to her collection.

But this week is different.

The U.S. Women's Open, which starts today at Interlachen, means more to her than any other major. She captured the first of her 72 victories on the LPGA Tour in the 1995 Women's Open at the Broadmoor, made it two in a row the next year at Pine Needles, then went an entire decade before adding her third title in 2006 at Newport.

It means so much that she refers to it simply as “The Open,” rare words coming from a European.

“I care a lot about this championship, and I'm going to do the best I can to be up there on Sunday,” she said.

But she realizes it will be hard work.

Part of the challenge comes from those around her, particularly Lorena Ochoa, who has replaced as her as the dominant player in women's golf. Ochoa won the first major of the year at the Kraft Nabisco Championship, and like Sorenstam, finished one shot out of the playoff this month at the McDonald's LPGA Championship.

Sorenstam will be playing with Paula Creamer, one of only three players with multiple victories on the LPGA Tour this year, and Suzann Pettersen, who turned in a dazzling performance six years ago at Interlachen by rallying from five holes down with five to play to earn a halve against Michele Redman in the Solheim Cup.

The greatest test could be Interlachen, designed by Donald Ross, touched up by Robert Trent Jones, at 6,789 yards the longest golf course in Women's Open history.

Some of that length is negated by the course playing as a par-73 with five par-5s, and by the elevated greens with undulations so severe that the USGA has gone conservative with some of the hole locations.

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