The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gone since ’08, Sorenstam makes Gainbridge cut

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ORLANDO, FLA. — Annika Sorenstam went more than 12 years without playing on the LPGA Tour. Now she gets two more days.

Sorenstam made three birdies after making the turn Friday at Lake Nona and posted a 1-under 71 in the Gainbridge LPGA. And even with the wrong ruling the previous day that led to an extra stroke, she still made the cut on the number.

“I did what I could,” Sorenstam said. “The goal was to shoot under par, and I did, and so that’s all I can do.”

She still was 12 shots out of the lead as Lydia Ko posted a 3-under 69 and took a oneshot lead over Nelly Korda (68). Ryan O’toole had her second straight 68 and was another shot behind.

Sorenstam, making a onetime appearance because the LPGA Tour is at her home course, finally got some putts

to drop and ran off three birdies on her second nine. She finished 36 holes at 2-over 146 and was right on the cut line.

And then she had to wait for the other half to play in the afternoon, wonder if that ruling in the opening round would come back to cost her the weekend.

Sorenstam took a triple bogey on the fifth hole of the opening round when her tee shot avoided going out of bounds by a fraction. But it was directly under the gate of a wrought iron fence, the boundary. She asked about opening the gate but was told a stipulatio­n in the rules didn’t allow that.

So she chose to take a penalty drop, pitched out to the fairway and three-putted from 18 feet in her round of 75.

Turns out that was one of the changes to the modernizat­ion of the Rules of Golf in 2019, the largest overhaul ever. The gate now is treated as a movable obstructio­n — meaning it could be swung open, provided it was not locked (it wasn’t). The penalty could not be rescinded because Sorenstam played from a different spot.

The rules official, Dan Maselli, was devastated and apologized to Sorenstam after the second round. Sorenstam was not bothered, saying the rules are so new that it’s easy to get it wrong in such a quirky situation.

“He wanted to apologize. He said he was wrong. I could have opened the gate, and I could’ve played,” Sorenstam said. “But he said, ‘This is going to hurt me. This is eating me inside.’ I said, ‘Please, please don’t feel that way.’ I appreciate it. He said, ‘I won’t make that mistake again.’ I said, ‘Well, I won’t hit there anymore.’

“You know, those things happen. The rules have changed,” she said. “That’s the way it goes.”

Even if she didn’t play — making the cut meant finding someone to take daughter Ava to volleyball — the 50-year-old Swede did what she wanted.

Sorenstam, who retired after a three-win season in 2008 to start a family, described this as an appearance, not a comeback. She wanted a little competitio­n as she contemplat­es playing the U.S. Senior Women’s Open this summer.

 ?? JOHN RAOUX/AP ?? Annika Sorenstam waves to the gallery at Thursday’s first round of the Gainbridge LPGA tourney in Orlando, Florida.
JOHN RAOUX/AP Annika Sorenstam waves to the gallery at Thursday’s first round of the Gainbridge LPGA tourney in Orlando, Florida.

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