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Rosales gets first LPGA Tour win

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Posted 5:19AM on Monday 3rd May 2004 ( 21 years ago )
STOCKBRIDGE - Jennifer Rosales couldn&#39;t stand to watch.<br> <br> She paced behind the scoring tent sneaking in a cigarette, chatting on her cell phone, making small talk with her caddie, scribbling out a few autographs for fans lining the ropes.<br> <br> ``I was so nervous, I couldn&#39;t even sign my name. My hands were shaking,&#39;&#39; Rosales said. ``I never felt like that before in my life.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Not to worry.<br> <br> Rosales won for the first time on the LPGA Tour, shooting a 7-under-par 65 Sunday to overcome all the big names ahead of her at the Chick-fil-A Charity Championship.<br> <br> The 25-year-old Filipino overcame Annika Sorenstam, the world&#39;s greatest player. And Grace Park, who won the first major of the year. And Aree Song, who hoped to become the tour&#39;s youngest winner.<br> <br> ``It&#39;s great to win when all the top players are playing,&#39;&#39; Rosales said after her one-stroke win at Eagle&#39;s Landing Country Club in suburban Atlanta.<br> <br> She began the day four shots behind Song, who celebrated her 18th birthday Saturday with the third-round lead. But the talented teenager fell apart on the final day, soaring to a 78 that left her nine strokes behind the winner.<br> <br> ``If I keep putting myself in positions like this, hopefully it will happen soon,&#39;&#39; Song said. ``I was a little tight at the start.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Rosales, playing four threesomes ahead of the final group, saved par at the par-5 final hole despite knocking her second shot into the temporary clubs seats lining the left side of the green.<br> <br> She was allowed to drop next to the stands, winding up with a terrible lie in the thick rough. She blasted out to the green, missed a long putt, then tapped in for par and a 14-under 274.<br> <br> That was good enough.<br> <br> Rosie Jones, who lives in Atlanta, laid up 70 yards from the pin but knocked a sand wedge to the back fringe. The 13-time tour winner had already chipped in for one birdie, but this one curled a few inches wide of the cup to leave her one stroke behind.<br> <br> There was more agony to come at 18.<br> <br> Also trailing by a stroke, Becky Morgan of Wales stuck her third shot just 6 feet from the flag. But she pulled the birdie putt badly, costing her a chance to go for her first tour victory in a playoff.<br> <br> ``I was more nervous than I had been all week,&#39;&#39; Morgan conceded.<br> <br> Park, who won the first major of the year at the Kraft Nabisco Championship, birdied 18 to wind up in a four-way tie for second.<br> <br> Jung Yeon Lee of South Korea was the other runner-up, her closing-round 65 barely noticed because she finished more than hour before the last group.<br> <br> Sorenstam couldn&#39;t make any putts and settled for a 71, failing to win for only the second time in five tournaments worldwide this year. She was four shots behind Rosales.<br> <br> ``There were a lot of birdies to be made out there, but you&#39;ve got to make them,&#39;&#39; Sorenstam said. ``It was the same thing for four days. I was hitting the ball really well. I&#39;m happy with the way I&#39;m playing. It&#39;s just a matter of time.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Her frustration boiled over when she lipped out a short eagle putt at 13 to end any hopes of making a charge. Sorenstam flipped her putter in the air and caught it on the way down.<br> <br> She might as well have thrown it away.<br> <br> Rosales&#39; putter worked just fine in a bogey-free round. Her confidence soared when she rolled in a 12-footer for birdie on the very first hole. She followed with a 20-footer at 3.<br> <br> After making birdie on 14, Rosales noticed her name atop the leaderboard. She struggled to keep her emotions in check.<br> <br> ``I started taking deep breaths,&#39;&#39; Rosales said. ``That helped me a lot.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> But her adrenaline was clearly pumping at 18, when she unloaded a 3-wood from 215 yards. The ball might still be rolling if the club seats had not gotten in the way.<br> <br> ``I hit a home run there,&#39;&#39; Rosales said with a smile. ``I&#39;m so glad no one got hurt. Too much adrenaline. Thank God the grandstand was there.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> She also was glad to avoid a playoff. Last year, Rosales lost to Rachel Teske in a four-way, sudden-death shootout at the Giant Eagle LPGA Classic the Filipino&#39;s best career finish until Sunday.<br> <br> Mi Hyun Kim got her score to 14 under with a birdie at No. 11, but bogeys at 15 and 17 ended the Korean&#39;s hopes. She wound alone in sixth with a 276.<br> <br> Song came into the final round with a one-stroke lead. While the Korean teenager has contended at major championships, this was her first time going into Sunday with a lead.<br> <br> It showed. After extending her streak without a bogey to 44 holes, Song fell apart on the back nine. She took double-bogeys at 13 and 17, shooting 41 after the turn to go from the lead to a tie for 23rd.<br> <br> ``My swing never really felt comfortable. It felt weird,&#39;&#39; Song said. ``I felt like I was going to pull everything. It&#39;s tough when you feel like that.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> NOTES: Rosales earned $240,000 for win. ``I&#39;m going to shop till I drop,&#39;&#39; she announced. ... Kate Golden had the best round of the week, closing with a 64 that bumped her up to a tie for 10th. ... Song has one more chance to surpass Marlene Hagge&#39;s record of being the youngest winner next weekend&#39;s Michelob ULTRA Open at Kingsmill. The Hall of Famer was 18 years, 14 days when she won the 1952 Sarasota Open. ... Another Hall of Famer, 65-year-old JoAnne Carner, finished last among the 90 golfers who made the cut with a 12-over 300.

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