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19-year-old wins U.S. Open June 29: Inbee Park becomes the youngest U.S. Open winner ever (-9), beating out her idol Se Ri Pak by a year. |
EDINA, Minn. - Inbee Park woke up in the middle of the night 10 years ago when she heard cheering from the living room of her tiny apartment outside Seoul.
Her parents were up at 3 a.m. to watch Se Ri Pak become the first South Korean and the youngest winner of the U.S. Women’s Open. The 9-year-old girl sat down with them to watch, half asleep, but definitely paying attention.
“When she made a putt, they were screaming,” Park said. “So I really could not sleep.”
Two days later, she placed her tiny hands around a golf club for the first time.
On Sunday, Park wrapped hands around the biggest trophy in women’s golf, capturing the U.S. Women’s Open at Interlachen with nearly flawless golf over the final 10 holes as everyone else melted away.
“I didn’t know anything about golf back then, but I was watching her,” Park said. “It was very impressive for a little girl. I just thought that I could do it, too.”
Two weeks shy of her 20th birthday, Park replaced Pak as the youngest Women’s Open champion. She pulled away with crucial putts on three straight holes — two birdies and one par — early on the back nine and added a final birdie for a 2-under 71 and a four-shot victory over Helen Alfredsson.
Park was the only player in the final nine groups to break par. She finished at 9-under 283 and earned $585,000, then got soaked at the end of a sunny afternoon when Jeong Jang and I.K. Kim rushed onto the green and doused her with beer.
“Really, I can’t believe I just did this, especially with all these big names on the trophy that have been very, very successful with the golf,” Park said, gazing at the silver championship trophy. “Hopefully, I’ll put a couple of my names on there. It will be great.”
It was a shocker for everyone else, but for different reasons.
Alfredsson began the final round tied with Park, two shots out of the lead and hopeful she could finally atone for her collapse 14 years ago in the Women’s Open, took 35 putts in her final round of 75.
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Stacy Lewis, trying to become the first player to win a major in her professional debut, made double bogey from 80 yards in front of the green on the par-5 second hole and staggered home to a 78 to tie for third at 288.
“I finished third at the U.S. Open, my first pro event,” Lewis said. “It’s kind of hard to be upset.”
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Creamer’s final round scoring average in the U.S. Women’s Open is 75.2.
“It’s probably the most disappointed I’ve been in a very long time,” she said.
No one imagined the only drama on the back nine would come from Annika Sorenstam, who was never in contention competing in her final Women’s Open before retirement at the end of the season.
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