Annika, Tiger add spice to annual Skins Game



She holed one of the event's greatest shots, while Woods has struggled.
LA QUINTA, Calif. (AP) -- Annika Sorenstam is mixing it up with the men again, and this time the competition includes Tiger Woods.
Sorenstam and Woods will play against each other for the first time when they tee off today in the Skins Game at the Trilogy Golf Club in the middle of the desert.
Woods, who has a miserable Skins Game record, wasn't in the foursome last year when Sorenstam made a sensational debut by winning five skins and $225,000. She finished second to Fred Couples, who rounds out the field with Aussie Adam Scott.
"I've been fortunate to practice with Tiger a few times," Sorenstam said Friday. "He's taught me a few shots, and hopefully I can give it back to him this week. I've got one of his wedges and it's working better than ever, so we'll see what happens."
Woods gave Sorenstam that club in the spring of 2003.
"I've got a driver out in the trunk," Woods joked.
Annika's held her own
Even though the men had more power off the tee, Sorenstam, the first woman to compete in the Skins Game, held her own last year at the same course.
The LPGA star made one of the most spectacular shots in Skins Game history, a 39-yard bunker shot for eagle on the par-5, 524-yard ninth hole to win four skins and $175,000 to take the first-day lead.
"I have to play my best to have a chance to win some skins," said Sorenstam, who already is in the World Golf Hall of Fame. "That's what happened last year. I holed a shot, really, from an unpredictable place, and that's what makes you win skins."
Sorenstam earned a great deal of respect with her finish here last year. Six months earlier, she became the first woman to compete in a PGA event in 58 years at the Colonial, but missed the cut.
Woods, who lost the No. 1 ranking in the world earlier this year to Vijay Singh, would be happy just to win some skins.
Poor timing for Tiger
Sorenstam won as much money last year as Woods has in his four previous appearances in the Merrill Lynch Skins Game. He's won only nine skins total.
"This format is all about timing, and hopefully I can do a little better in this one," Woods said. "I'll never forget my first one. I shot a 31 on the front nine and didn't get any skins.
"That was a lot of fun," he said facetiously.
Holes one through six are worth $25,000 each; Nos. 7-12, $50,000 apiece; 13 through 17, $70,000 each; and the 18th is a "Super Skin" worth $200,000. If no one wins a skin on a hole, the money is added to the following hole. Each player will give 20 percent of his or her earnings to charity.
The first nine holes will be played today and the final nine Sunday at the par-72, 7,038-yard Trilogy.
Couples will be playing in his 11th Skins Game. A four-time winner, he's pocketed a record $2,875,000 and won 66 skins.
"Golf is all about opportunity and this is about as opportunistic as it gets," said Couples, who won $605,000 last year. "I've got the flair for hitting a good shot and I've got a superior flair for hitting some wild ones, too."
Scott, 24, is ranked 11th in the world. He has three career PGA Tour victories, including The Players Championship in March, when he became the youngest champion in golf's richest tournament.