Sports NewsCalendar

Mayfield's Mutterings -- Current posting:  Sports update: The weekend that almost was

Sports News Elsewhere (fresh daily from the Web)

Friday, September 14, 2007

Americans off to fast start at Solheim          Send a link to a friend

[September 14, 2007]  HALMSTAD, Sweden (AP) -- Sherri Steinhauer knew the putt was going in well before it reached the hole. She started walking away, and when the ball dropped as expected, she jumped for joy, knowing she was on her way toward knocking off Annika Sorenstam in the Solheim Cup.

Steinhauer and Laura Diaz combined for a 4-and-2 upset over Sorenstam and Catriona Matthew to help the Americans to a 2 1/2-1 1/2 lead after the alternate-shot matches Friday morning.

Juli Inkster and Paula Creamer defeated Laura Davies and Becky Brewerton 2 and 1 for America's other victory.

Gwladys Nocera and Maria Hjorth defeated Natalie Gulbis and Morgan Pressel 3 and 2 for Europe's lone victory.

Suzann Pettersen and Sophie Gustafson salvaged a tie for Europe against Cristie Kerr and Pat Hurst -- something of a victory, really, considering the Europeans played most of their match from behind trees and in the rough.

The Americans are seeking to win the cup in Europe for the first time since 1996 and they were off to a promising start. This marked the first time the United States had won the first session of matches since 1998.

Players took a short break, then went back out for best-ball matches in the afternoon at Halmstad Golf Club, where the weather was miserable -- with wind, heavy rain and temperatures in the 50s that had the players reaching for both their umbrellas and their stocking caps.

None of that seemed to bother Steinhauer, who missed a 3-foot putt on No. 10 to bring a match the Americans had led by two back to all-square.

From there, she was simply terrific. After the Americans regained the lead on No. 11, Steinhauer saved par from 8 feet to halve No. 12, then hit her tee shot on the par-3 13th to near tap-in range to go 2 up.

On No. 14, Matthew hit her approach shot to 6 inches, putting herself and Sorenstam in line to trim the lead. That's when Steinhauer, who works with a long putter, knocked in a 20 footer to halve the hole and suck away whatever momentum the Europeans may have felt moments earlier.

[to top of second column]

In the match behind them, Inkster and Creamer were leaking oil, having blown a 2-up lead and looking like their match might be settled on the 18th. But Davies hit her tee shot on the par-3 16th into the water, then hit a bad approach on 17 that forced Brewerton to simply punch out from behind a walking path. The Euros conceded the match on the 17th green.

Europe's half-point from Pettersen and Gustafson was something of a bonus considering they found basically every patch of trouble on this long, but not overly narrow, Swedish golf course.

Trouble began on the first tee box when Pettersen, the reigning McDonalds LPGA champion, yanked her shot behind a tree on the left side.

The scrambling began and didn't end until the very end, when Gustafson, playing from a thin lie in some trampled-down rough, got the ball to about 15 feet on No. 18. Kerr played her approach from the fairway, but yanked it left.

Pettersen had a chance to win, but left her putt a tad short. Hurst, meanwhile, chipped to about 8 feet, and Kerr actually had to make a tester to salvage the tie -- the first time the Americans weren't in control of the match all day.

In the final match, Nocera and Hjorth were in command pretty much from the beginning as the two young Americans had trouble harnessing their game. Pressel lipped out a short putt on No. 4 that would've won the hole. Gulbis missed a 6-footer on No. 6, then another on No. 12, as the Americans finished 16 holes in 4-over par.

[Associated Press; by Eddie Pells]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

< Sports index

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law & Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health & Fitness | Teen Scene
Calendar | Letters to the Editor