Lang gets to 2-under at Open
Associated Press
Oakmont, Pa.
Temperatures were in the 90s. Michelle Wie was in the 80s. On a demanding day when tough old Oakmont Country Club illustrated again that playing par golf can be an achievement, only Brittany Lang was in the 60s.
Lang withstood Oakmont’s slick, sun-browned greens and the unrelenting heat to shoot a 2-under 69 on Thursday and take a one-shot lead over 2008 champion Inbee Park, amateur Kelli Shean and three others in the first round of the U.S. Women’s Open.
“You said it couldn’t be done, but on any golf course you can shoot a low number,” Lang said. “If you’re hitting the ball good, you can for sure shoot a low score out here. But if you’re not on your game you can shoot a big one.”
Rolling in a 40-foot putt on the 442-yard No. 15 to seize a two-shot lead before giving up a stroke at difficult No. 18, Lang managed to shoot the round of the day at a time of the day — late afternoon and early evening — when Oakmont’s greens were chewed up and as unpredictable than ever.
Shean, a South Africa native who was pushed to become a world-class golfer by idol Ernie Els, and South Korea’s Park were joined at 1-under 70 by two other Korean golfers, M.J. Hur and Amy Yang.
Sakura Yokomine of Japan and Scotland’s Mhairi McKay, who teed off at 7 a.m. as part of the first threesome on the course, were alone at even-par 71.
Cristie Kerr, America’s first world No. 1-ranked golfer following her monumental 12-shot win at the LPGA Championship two weeks ago, was among a more-than-crowded group of 14 at 1-over 72. She was glad to be there, too.
“I think that’s a pretty good start for me,” said Kerr, who bogeyed the first two holes but came back almost immediately with two birdies.
Kerr, the first American to be top-ranked since the world rankings were adopted, admittedly spent nearly a week settling down emotionally following one of the most dominating performances in women’s golf history.
Lang hasn’t needed five years to convince herself she could contend again at the Women’s Open, which she threatened to win as an amateur in 2005. She wound up tied for second with fellow amateur-at-the-time Morgan Pressel, two shots behind winner Birdie Kim.
Lang has twice been a runner-up on the LPGA Tour and has more than $2 million in winnings. What she wants is a win, and what better tournament than this one?
“But I know that if I think about winning the tournament, I probably will not win it,” the former Duke student said.
Shean, a University of Arkansas golfer, might be drawing some inspiration from Lang’s 2005 near-miss as an amateur.
The 22-year-old’s career developed after she enrolled in a junior program sponsored by Els, who has repeatedly encouraged her during her career and watched Thursday’s round on TV.
She’s already been alerted to this: Els won his first major, the 1994 U.S. Open, on this very same Oakmont course.
“He taught me all the things I needed to know,” Shean said. “Being able to interact with him and have any kind of relationship with Ernie Els is unbelievable,” Shean said.
Shean gripped hands with her caddie, Chandler Rackley, several times before difficult shots, and it’s because the two have more than a working relationship. They’re boyfriend and girlfriend, and Shean said having him nearby means she’s “having the best time of my life out there.”
She also loved shooting a 70 at Oakmont, even if she lost the lead that Lang would soon take with a bogey 6 on the par-5 No. 9, her finishing hole.