Originally created 06/04/02

Annika looks awesome heading into summer



AURORA, Ill. -- Annika Sorenstam flashes a smile so photogenic you want to frame it.

And why shouldn't she be smiling? Look at how she's playing.

After winning eight tournaments in 2001, she already has four wins this year. Last year, Sorenstam became the first on the LPGA Tour to win $2 million. She's almost halfway to that figure now - $940,000 - and there's still two-thirds of the schedule to be played.

Sorenstam won the year's first major, the Kraft Nabisco Championship in March, and is on a big-time roll going into the second, this week's LPGA Championship in Wilmington, Del.

The 31-year-old Swede is coming off an 11-stroke victory in the inaugural Kellogg-Keebler Classic outside Chicago, shooting a 21-under 195 that matched the best 54-hole score in LPGA history.

"I've been hitting the ball really well," Sorenstam said. "My distance control is back. I think I putted excellent. It seems like all parts of my game have come together."

They came together so well last weekend that no one else in a field that included most of this year's top-20 money winners had a chance.

Karrie Webb? She got within three strokes of Sorenstam early in the final round but finished 14 back. Se Ri Pak? Also 14 back. Juli Inkster? Try 17 back. The tour's No. 2 money winner, Laura Diaz? Didn't make the cut.

To put Sorenstam's 11-stroke margin in perspective, consider this: the combined margin in the eight previous tournaments decided in regulation was 16.

"She's on top of the world right now," said Webb, the defending champion in this week's event. "It's great for her."

But tough on everyone else. The same golfers Sorenstam beat so handily over the weekend will try to make things more competitive this time.

"If you're going to win, she's going to be the one to beat," said Danielle Ammaccapane, who was paired with Sorenstam on Sunday and finished 10 under to tie for second. "I'm not doubting myself. I believe I can beat her. But when she gets on a roll like that, it's hard to play."

Sorenstam has won this year in a variety of ways.

She took the year's first event, the Takefuji Classic, on the first hole of a playoff with Lorie Kane. At the Kraft Nabisco, Sorenstam edged Liselotte Nuemann by one stroke, and she came from behind to win the Aerus Electrolux by one stroke over Pat Hurst.

No such dramatics were needed at the Kellogg-Keebler, which Sorenstam led from the start. She opened with a 63 after shooting a 29 on the front nine, sparking visions of matching the record 59 she shot last year, then finished with rounds of 67 and 65.

Sorenstam was so far ahead that she started practicing shots she feels she'll need this week at the DuPont Country Club.

"I've got to stay very focused," she said. "Hopefully I can hit the ball like I did here. That course depends on a lot of precise shots, especially some good driving. That's the key on that course, I think."

There never has been a Grand Slam on the LPGA Tour. Sorenstam certainly seems capable of becoming the first to do it, though Ammaccapane isn't ready to concede the four majors to her just yet.

The two others are the U.S. Women's Open in July and the Women's British Open in August.

"Wait 'til she wins two," Ammaccapane said. "Then we'll talk."

Sorenstam seems just as interested in another goal: shooting a 54. " Vision 54," she calls it. A perfect round. A birdie on every hole.

"I think I'm more in control of that than winning a tournament," Sorenstam said. "Winning a tournament depends on how somebody else plays. If somebody would have shot really low, they would have beat me, but I still would have shot 21 under and I would have been happy about that.

"There's certain things that you can control, certain things you can't. But I do think a Grand Slam is very possible."