KirkwoodGolf: STACY LEWIS WINS HSBC CHAMPIONS' TOURNAMENT IN SINGAPORE

Sunday, March 03, 2013

STACY LEWIS WINS HSBC CHAMPIONS' TOURNAMENT IN SINGAPORE

 NEWS RELEASE
Stacy Lewis said at the start of the week in Singapore that the player with the best caddie would win and that is as it worked out. With Travis Wilson, the newly-crowned 'Caddie of the Year' at her side, Stacy Lewis captured the HSBC Women's Champions by a shot from Na Yeon Choi and by two from Paula Creamer.
Lewis's closing round was a 71 in which she made her score with an outward 33 before shrugging off a spot of trouble - she was in the water at the 15th - on the homeward half.
One shot stood out above the rest for this six-time winner on the LPGA Tour. At a time when the morning wind was still in full cry, she hit a hybrid to the green of the 493 yards seventh which landed on the green's apron before bouncing gently towards the hole. It left her with little more than a tap-in for the eagle which took her a shot ahead of Choi, her co-leader at the start of the day, and two clear of Paula Creamer.
"That hybrid was probably the best shot I've ever hit," said the 28-year-old Lewis. I held it up against the wind just perfectly."
When Lewis's followed her watery bogey at the 15th with a bunkered four at the short 17th , she had nothing more substantial than a one shot lead over Choi as they mounted the 18th tee.
Spectators were discussing the possibility of a play-off but Lewis put an end to such chat when she alone caught the green of this 498 yards par-five in two.
"All week," she said, "I had played to get on the green in three but, with the wind the way it was, my caddie and both said 'Driver!' at the one time.
With neither Choi nor Creamer matching her feat of reaching the putting surface, Lewis should have been home and dry. As it was, her three putts left Choi with a birdie putt to force a play-off which the South Korean star just missed.
"I played with Na Yeon for three days and she made putt after putt after putt. I fully expected her ball to go in," said Lewis.
Afterwards, Lewis admitted that nerves had played their part amid the mounting pressure. Here again, her caddie came up trumps. "Travis," she said, "really helped. He doesn't get either up or down and he's the same on the 18th hole as he is on the first tee."
Wilson refused to take any credit for Lewis's shot to the seventh. But there were a couple of occasions on Friday when this shy soul felt that he had made a difference. In particular at the 15th where his player was in a fairway bunker. They were between clubs and eventually Wilson decreed that a nine-iron was the right club.
"It flew like a nine-iron and went forever," he recalled. "It was absolutely the right club and it finished just six feet from the hole." Lewis made the putt for a birdie.
Lewis who has a rod and five screws in her back as a legacy of condition called scoliosis which was diagnosed when she was 11, explained how it is in working at her fitness that she keeps further problems at bay.
If anything, she feels that she has benefited from having a real appreciation of being able to play at all: "It's made me work harder while everything's in good working order."
The champion has now moved up to No 3 in the world behind Yani Tseng and Choi.
"Ultimately," she said, I'd like to get to No. 1 and wins are the way to get there."
Text from www.hsbcgolf.com

Catriona Matthew finished joint 10th with a 70 for 281.
Jodi Ewart Shadoff finished T18 on 284 with a closing 70.



LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72)
273 Stacy Lewis (US) 67 66 69 71
274 Na Yeon Choi (S Korea) 68 67 69 71
278 Ariya Jutanugarn (Thailand) 69 66 72 71

SELECTED TOTALS
281 Catriona Matthew (Scotland) 70 69 72 70 (T10)

284 Jodi Ewart Shadloff (England) 69 71 74 70 (T18)

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