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GOLF ROUNDUP : Daniel Gets Her First Major Title

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From Associated Press

Beth Daniel watched intently as Rosie Jones lined up a 50-foot putt that would have forced a playoff in the LPGA Championship at Bethesda, Md.

Daniel, equipped with the TV microphone, breathed a sigh of relief as Jones’ putt, heading straight for the hole, lipped out to give Daniel a one-stroke victory.

“I thought for sure it was going in,” Daniel said.

Jones, who entered the final round with a two-shot lead, said: “I’ll remember that putt for the rest of my life. Twelve feet from the hole, it was right on target. Six inches from the hole, I’m starting my victory lap.”

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Daniel, despite 21 tournament victories in 12 years on the LPGA Tour and more than $2 million in prize money, had never won a major title until Sunday, when she shot a 66 to overcome a five-shot deficit.

Daniel, 33, finished at four-under 280 and earned $150,000, the largest paycheck in LPGA Tour history. She started the final round with three consecutive birdies, birdied Nos. 12 and 13, and then missed a six-footer for par on No. 18.

Chip Beck, rallying from an eight-shot deficit, shot a 65 and won the Buick Open at Grand Blanc, Mich., when Hale Irwin missed a putt on the 72nd hole.

Beck’s 72-hole score was 272, 16-under for four rounds over the 7,014-yard Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club course. Irwin, who hadn’t made a bogey in three rounds, made six on Sunday, shooting a 74 for 273.

Gary Player battled strong winds and a driving rain at Turnberry, Scotland, to win the Seniors British Open by one shot despite double-bogeying the final hole and dropping five shots on the last six holes.

Player managed only a five-over par 75 in the final round, but still had the second-best score on a day on which organizers moved tees forward yet still watched helplessly as scores skyrocketed.

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PGA Tour commissioner Deane Beman shot a final-round 81, missing an eight-foot putt on the final hole that would have forced a playoff with Player. And Arnold Palmer almost holed a chip shot on the 18th that also would have forced a playoff.

In a senior tournament at Newport, R.I., Al Kelley shot a final-round 68 to win by two strokes, Jim Dent and John Paul Cain tied for second, and Lee Trevino finished three strokes back.

Kelley broke away from a three-way tie for the lead with birdie putts of 20 and five feet at Nos. 13 and 15. He finished 36 holes at 134, 10-under par, for two rounds. The tournament was shortened after rain washed out Friday’s round.

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