Moodie knows Inkster's within striking distance
Associated Press
Saturday, July 1
ABSECON, N.J. -- Juli Inkster has Janice Moodie's attention
heading into the final round of the ShopRite LPGA Classic.
Inkster, who has won twice and finished in the top three in
seven of 11 events this year, birdied five of the final seven holes
for a 66 on Saturday to move within two shots of Moodie.
"I'm not hitting it that great, but I hit my short irons good
when I needed to and I made some putts when I needed to," said the
41-year-old Inkster, who won the LPGA Championship last weekend for
her 24th career title.
Moodie, the 27-year-old Scot seeking her first tour title, and
Inkster will have plenty of competition with nine players within
three shots of the lead.
Maria Hjorth (63), Jackie Gallagher-Smith (70), Dina Ammaccapane
(66) and Vickie Odegard (67) also were two shots behind Moodie,
whose 68 gave her an 8-under-par 134 total on the Bay Course at the
Seaview Marriott Resort.
Moodie had six birdies and three bogeys to finish at 8-under
134.
"I've been out here three years and chopping on the door a long
time now, and having some really good finishes," said Moodie, who
tied for second this year in Los Angeles. "So I just want to wait
and see what happens."
If Moodie wants to win, she will probably have to go low because
the course is giving up some great scores.
Hjorth, who was seven shots behind the leaders after the first
round, tied the tournament record set by Se Ri Pak last year with
her 63 that featured six birdies and an eagle.
Pak missed the cut at 2 over by shooting a 75 on Saturday.
Inkster posted her 5-under round playing in the final group of
the day. She got her round going by hitting a pitching wedge to 2
feet on the 12th hole and added birdie putts of 12, 15, 5 and 4
feet down the stretch. She saved par on the 18th, making a
12-footer.
"You can look at the scoreboard all you want but when you are
trying as hard as you can, sometimes it just doesn't do what you
want it to," Inkster said. "I was just trying to keep grinding
and have some putts at a birdie, which I finally did on the back
side."
Gallagher Smith, who shared the first-round lead with Moodie and
Michelle Estill, had five birdies and four bogeys.
Odegard, who had missed 14 of 15 cuts coming into this event,
birdied the final three holes en route to a 67.
Ammaccapane had a bogey and six birdies, the last three coming
on the final three holes.
Moodie has led once before. She held a two-shot lead going into
the final round of the State Farm Rail Classic in September, but
shot a 73 and tied for second, a shot behind Mi Hyun Kim.
Being in the lead didn't effect Moodie's dry sense of humor when
she was asked if she would be able to relax on Saturday night.
"Being blonde, I'll just go back and think about nothing," she
deadpanned.
Hjorth's 63 was 10 shots better than her first round.
"Yesterday I was really struggling," Hjorth said. "My swing
was getting flat and I was hooking shots all day."
So Hjorth spent between 90 minutes and two hours at the range,
and it worked wonders.
The Swede made a 7-foot eagle putt on the par-5 third hole. None
of her birdies putts was longer than 12 feet.
Estill, who is looking for her first win since her rookie season
in 1991, held the lead at 7 under after 11 holes, but she played
the last five holes in 4 over.
Jean Zedlitz, who has missed the cut in eight of 13 events and
finished no better than a tie for 57th in the other five, won a
Subaru Legacy Outback Wagon by making a hole-in-one on the 170-yard
seventh hole. She used a 7-iron.