Samsung World Championship

Creamer Plays Mistake Free And Wins

With another bogey-free round, Paula Creamer held off some big name challengers to nab her fourth win of the year and biggest title of her career

Photo By Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images October 5, 2008

HALF MOON BAY, Calif. (AP) -- Paula Creamer could finally look to all those supporters who have seen her through every stage of her young golf career and know she'd made them proud while playing right in her backyard.

Creamer calmly won her biggest LPGA Tour title yet, holding off a large pack to win the Samsung World Championship on Sunday about 1½ hours west of where she grew up in Pleasanton.

"This really does mean a lot. I put so much pressure on myself every time I come here," said Creamer, dressed in one of her custom pink outfits. "It's hard coming to your hometown. People watch you play all the time, but it's a different feeling when you're at home. You are constantly hearing, 'Go Pleasanton!' I want to win so badly, especially for everybody."

The 22-year-old Creamer beat Song-Hee Kim by a stroke, closing with a bogey-free 3-under 69 for a 9-under 279 total. Creamer earned $250,000 for her fourth title of the year and eighth overall, going the final 37 holes without a bogey.

On No. 18, Creamer holed a 5-foot par putt that rolled around the right lip of the cup and in. She dropped her putter, and raised both arms with a huge smile across her face as Kim waited nearby for a possible playoff. Creamer then jumped into a warm embrace with caddie Colin Cann.

"Honestly, I didn't see it go in. I heard the people," Creamer said. "It was like the longest two seconds of my life having it roll into the hole."

Kim finished with a 68 for her fifth top-five finish of the year. She was busy signing autographs near the scoring tent when her coach told her there might be a playoff.

"I didn't know that," Kim said. "I was hoping for that."

Top-ranked Lorena Ochoa, the 2006 and 2007 winner, shot a 69 to tie for third at 7 under with Juli Inkster (68), Suzann Pettersen (68) and Angela Stanford (70).

After Kim moved into a share of the lead by chipping in from 20 feet for birdie on No. 14 -- the first time all day Creamer wasn't alone out front -- Creamer made a 25-foot birdie putt on 15 to retake control.

"I tried just saying, 'Come on, keep playing your own game,'" Creamer said. "Today I knew going into it I couldn't be too aggressive, but I needed to shoot 3 or 4 under and everybody else would have to shoot 6 or 7 under to beat me."

Creamer became the first American to win at least four times in a single season since Inkster had five victories in 1999. Six times out of 10 Creamer has gone on to win after leading entering the final day, including three times this year.

Creamer won with another consistent performance in the elite 20-player field on a spectacular day on the Ocean Course at Half Moon Bay Golf Links. Crashing waves served as background noise and provided quite a scenic view along the back nine. But more than anything, the sunny last day by the Pacific lacked the tricky elements of the previous three rounds: fog, changing wind, rain and cold.

"To play bogey-free on the weekend on this golf course and in these conditions, people don't realize how incredibly difficult that is," said Creamer's father, Paul. "That's how she won."

Creamer's parents and dozens of supporters cheered her from the large gallery following her all week. She has said she feels added pressure playing back home, but also was committed to keeping her cool and not letting one or two bad holes affect her day or her focus after she struggled to control her emotions Friday.

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