Saturday, April 19, 2003
It's Cink or swim at Heritage
2000 champion leads by stroke over Hal Sutton
The Associated Press
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. - Stewart Cink stood tall and strong. His shots at Harbour Town Golf Links were graceful and on target, the picture of a PGA Tour pro at the top of his game.
Don't be fooled, Cink says. The confidence you see out front can mask the worries inside.
"You guys don't have time for me to sit here and tell you everything," Cink said, laughing.
Cink, the 2000 champion, moved to 10-under-par with a 65 in the second round Friday. His two-round total of 132 was a stroke ahead of Hal Sutton (66), and two in front of Chad Campbell (67) and 1997 winner Nick Price (66) at Harbour Town Golf Links. Four-time Heritage champ Davis Love III (69) and Ernie Els (66) are in a group three shots behind.
But the 29-year-old Cink says for two dismal seasons he was held back by fears that left him scared to play a game that had come so naturally.
"I would come to golf tournaments and I would actually dread Thursdays," Cink said. "Now, it's just a night-and-day difference."
Three years ago, Cink was among the game's rising stars when he made the MCI Heritage his second - and most recent - PGA Tour victory. But as the 1997 PGA Tour Rookie of the Year moved up in stature, he built an image of golf perfection he says he could not live up to.
"I was struggling with being in front of everybody and making mistakes and just feeling like a vulnerable, weak player," Cink said.
His worries were realized in 2001 when Cink failed at the U.S. Open, missing an 18-inch putt to join a playoff eventually won by Retief Goosen.
"I can handle this," Cink said then. "This is golf. This is a game."
But Cink knew his golf game was a growing problem.
"Screwing up there in the middle of all the limelight, that was more a result of the fears I was having then," he said.
Another test came soon after, when Cink qualified for his first Ryder Cup team but waited nearly a year to play because the matches were postponed after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11.
As Cink's game faltered, his fears of what awaited increased.
"That's the ultimate stage in golf," he said. "To be honest, I was kind of scared playing it."
Cink had fallen from 10th on the money list in 2000 to 73rd last year. If he didn't gain control, Cink knew his career was at risk.
Cink says he's talked with several people, including psychoanalyst Preston Waddington, to find perspective. An awakening came last month in Tucson at the Chrysler Classic, Cink said. He shot 66 on the final day, realizing he could thrive with everyone watching.
"I've really relied on that," he said.
The improvement is evident. Cink tied for second two weeks ago at the BellSouth Classic, his third top-10 finish of the season. He's 31st on the money list and played the kind of opportunistic golf necessary at Harbour Town.
Cink made three straight birdies on Nos. 5-7 to move in front. Then, after temporarily falling behind Sutton with a bogey on the par-3 14th, he closed with birdies on the difficult 17th and 18th holes to retake the lead.
"Not hanging on the result of every shot so much, it just makes me so much more comfortable," Cink said. "I realize now that 73 or 74 is not the end of my world."
Els, ranked No. 2 in the world, had the day's most entertaining shot. His drive on No. 9 found an empty lawn chair on the right side. After a drop, he chipped to about a foot away and made birdie.
Sutton, the Ryder Cup captain who missed cuts at The Players Championship and the BellSouth, said a tip from good friend Price to keep his wrist cocked has proved productive.
Price came to Sutton this week and said he wouldn't mention the tip if it might mess up his friend.
"I thought, 'How can you mess me up?' " Sutton said.
LPGA TOUR: Candie Kung needs to get better at finishing rounds if she has any hopes of winning her first LPGA tournament.
For the second day in a row, Kung botched her closing hole Friday, dropping her into a tie for the lead with Catriona Matthew through two rounds of the 54-hole Takefuji Classic in Las Vegas.
Kung and Matthew were at 10-under, a shot ahead of Christie Kerr. Annika Sorenstam was five shots back after a 5-under 67.
Kung shanked a lob wedge on the final hole and had to work hard just to salvage a bogey, leaving her at 10-under and tied with Matthew going into today's final round.
"I don't know what happened there," said Kung, who took up golf when her family moved to the United States from Taiwan when she was 13. "I just shanked it."
The closing bogey came after a storm delay that interrupted 17 holes of bogey-free golf for Kung, who shot her second straight 67.
She stood on the final tee for about 20 minutes waiting to hit, then put her drive into the left rough on the 460-yard par-5 and had to lay up before her shank.
"If we didn't have that suspension, I probably would have hit it in the fairway, because I was hitting it real well," Kung said.
Sorenstam gave herself some hope for the final round with a bogey-free round that put her five shots back. Sorenstam, who won 11 times on the LPGA Tour last year, will not play in the final group in the last round for the first time in four events this year.
Sorenstam began her round making pars the first four holes before making birdies on five of the next nine holes to move closer to the leaders.
CHAMPIONS TOUR: Leonard Thompson and Gil Morgan each shot 7-under-par 63 to share the lead at the Emerald Coast Classic in Milton, Fla., as the field turned in the lowest scoring average for a first round in tour history.
The leaders are a stroke ahead of Tom Watson and Bruce Fleisher, who shot 64. Vicente Fernandez and Jim Holtgrieve are two strokes back. Seven golfers shot 66.
The field of 81 shot a 69 average to break the previous opening-round low of 69.39 at last year's RJR Championship outside Winston-Salem, N.C., on what then was known as the Senior PGA Tour.
ALGARVE OPEN: Greg Owen of England took a three-stroke lead after 36 holes with a 2-under 70 in Faro, Portugal.