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Ochoa and Sorenstam trail at U.S. Open

  • Story Highlights
  • South Korea's Oh Ji-young and Pat Hurst share first round lead at U.S. Open
  • Annika Sorenstam cards a 75 and world number one Lorena Ochoa has a 73
  • However, American teenager Michelle Wie struggles to an eight-over-par 81
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EDINA, Minnesota (AP) -- South Korea's Oh Ji-young and Pat Hurst shot six-under 67s on Thursday to shared the first round lead at the U.S. Women's Open, while Annika Sorenstam staggered to a 75, her highest opening round at the championship since 1992.

American veteran Hurst shares the opening day lead wth Korean Ji-young.

American veteran Hurst shares the opening day lead wth Korean Ji-young.

Oh started on the back nine with a pair of birdies and finished her round with another, while Hurst had three birdies on her final four holes to join her atop the leaderboard.

Sorenstam, played before the largest galleries of a sunshine-filled afternoon, but the three-time champion who is retiring at the end of the year, made four bogeys in a six-hole stretch and had her worst first round since she played the U.S. Open as an amateur.

Lorena Ochoa, the world number one in women's golf who has won two of the last three majors, didn't make a birdie until the 14th hole in the morning, when the conditions were soft. She rallied with three birdies on her last five holes for a 73.

American teen Michelle Wie, hoping to build on recent momentum, took a quintuple-bogey nine on the ninth hole and shot 81.

Hurst figured she was headed in a similar direction until one putt changed everything. She missed the cut in her last two events, including the McDonald's LPGA Championship, which she blamed on her putting.

On greens that became firmer in the afternoon sun, she stubbed a chip on the 13th for bogey and followed that by missing a four-foot par putt.

That is when Hurst started moaning to her caddie about a vicious cycle she could not shake. "I was whining," she said. "I was being a golfer."

Then came a 35-foot birdie putt down the hill that disappeared into the cup, and Hurst looked up at her caddie in mock disgust. "It just turned it all around right there," she said.

Kim Song-hee was another shot back after a 68, while Louise Friberg and U.S. Women's Amateur champion Maria Jose Uribe of Colombia were at 69.

Laura Davies, who won the U.S. Women's Open in 1987 and needs one more major to get into the World Golf Hall of Fame, was among those at 70.

Thirty-two players broke par, the most for an opening round of the U.S. Women's Open since 43 players shot under par in 1999 at Old Waverly in Mississippi.

The Donald Ross design has five par 5s, which helps. The greens received a good dose of water overnight, and the overcast skies made them even more receptive to approach shots.

Oh was in the morning group and didn't have to work terribly hard on the greens. All seven of her birdies were inside 10 feet, and four of them were inside two feet. "I love hitting my drivers and short irons," Oh said. "And for that, I think this golf course suits my game pretty well."

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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