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Antiquated rule hurts golfer's card hopes

Finishing tied for third at U.S. Open does little to help Lewis

GOLF NOTES
updated 7:53 p.m. ET July 1, 2008

BETHESDA, Md. - Stacy Lewis got her professional career off to an amazing start.

Now she gets to start over.

In a policy that no longer makes sense, Lewis will not get credit for her tie for third in the U.S. Women’s Open as she tries to earn enough money to get her LPGA Tour card without going to Q-school.

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“The only thing that could have helped me was to win,” Lewis said at Interlachen, where she had a one-shot lead going into the final round and closed with a 78 to finish five shots behind Inbee Park.

Lewis earned $162,487, which would have been enough to finish the year equal to 80th on the LPGA Tour money list. She is playing in the Northwest Arkansas Championship this week, one of a maximum six events she can play to earn enough money.

She also will play the Jamie Farr Classic next week, and on Tuesday received a sponsor’s exemption to the LPGA Kapalua Classic on Maui. Her agent, Jeff Chilcoat of Sterling Sports Management, said he is working on three other tournaments.

“I think it should be revisited,” he said of the policy. “And frankly, I’d love to have it revisited retroactively. But I don’t anticipate it being changed for her.”

Starting in 2003, the LPGA expanded the maximum number of sponsor exemptions for non-members from four to six tournaments, and counted only domestic tournaments with at least 75 players in the field toward the money list. The U.S. Women’s Open didn’t count, because it is not co-sponsored by the LPGA.

The policy favors rank-and-file LPGA members, noting that non-members who want to earn a card without going to Q-school should have to compete in fields comprised almost entirely of LPGA members.

The fear was that someone could have one big week at the richest event in women’s golf and get a card, for prize money at the Women’s Open used to dwarf everything else. While the Women’s Open purse of $3.1 million remains the largest, there are a dozen other LPGA events with at least $2 million in prize money.

Lewis doesn’t fit the profile of a fluke.

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She has a trophy from the Northwest Arkansas Championship, where she shot 65 last year before the tournament was washed out by rain and erased from the records. She tied for fifth in the Kraft Nabisco Championship last year as a junior at Arkansas, where she later won an NCAA title.

Now, she can only hope three more tournaments have room for her to compete.

Tiger's test run
Tiger Woods is still a candidate for drug testing, even though he will not be competing the rest of the year. But he already knows what to expect, having gone through private testing.

“I’ve done it twice, actually,” Woods said.

Why did he require two tests?

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Woods didn’t say when the tests were conducted, but both came back negative. After the first test was clean, he said he changed the brand of amino acid as part of his nutrition program, and wanted to make sure the change didn’t alter the results. He said the second test came back negative, too.

Grand stage
Jessica Korda found herself in quite the arena Sunday at Interlachen, where the 15-year-old had the low round of the final round at 4-under 69 and tied for 19th. Later that afternoon, she stood along the ropes with her younger sister to watch the last group.

She has seen big crowds at a Grand Slam event before.

Korda was 5 when her father, Petr Korda, beat Marcel Rios to win the 1998 Australian Open in tennis.

“I just remember I was coloring when he came into the stands and got us,” she said.

Petr Korda was her caddie last week, and could not have been more proud. He tried his three children in tennis, but Jessica liked golf.

“She never wanted to play tennis. She never wanted to sweat,” he said. “And that was good, because she would not have to carry the name. Now she can set her own goals.”

And what was it like going from center court to being a caddie?

“My stage is over,” Korda said. “I’m very happy to be supporting her now.”


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