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Tamulis takes Yokohama Tire for 1st LPGA Tour win

PRATTVILLE, Ala. -- Kris Tamulis counted down from 29 to 1 during her final-day trek at the
Yokohama Tire LPGA Classic.
One was definitely the most important number for her.
Tamulis, 34, played 29 holes Sunday in the twice-delayed tournament before securing victory No. 1
in the 186th attempt of her LPGA Tour career. She finished a third-round 67 and closed with a 65 to
beat Yani Tseng and Austin Ernst by a stroke.
Kris Tamulis finished the weekend with a 67-65 to win the Yokohama Tire Classic -- her first LPGA
Tour win in 186 career starts.Todd Warshaw/Getty Images
A former Florida State player, Tamulis had a 17-under 271 total on The Senator Course and didn't
show the strain of being in contention with so little margin for error.
"It was amazing," Tamulis said. "I was definitely not expecting this today."
Tseng had rounds of 71 and 67, and Ernst shot 68-69 with the weather clearing up after delays
totaling nearly 7 hours the previous two days. Both parred the final hole with a chance to force a
playoff.
Tamulis birdied four of the first six holes in the final round before finally making her only bogey of
the last three rounds. She hadn't finished better than fourth on the tour.
Tamulis was all smiles at the end. She made a short birdie putt on the 17th hole, cheerfully telling
two fans "28 of 29 completed today." Then, a long birdie putt, hit seemingly perfectly on line,
stopped inches shy of the final hole. Still smiling, she told her caddie, Thomas Frank, the ball needed
just "a little more oomph," then chatted with the teenager carrying the score placard.
Tamulis had about 45 minutes to sweat the win out. Tseng and Ernst both had makeable birdie putts
on 18, on opposite sides of the pin. Ernst's attempt went to the left. Tseng came closer, falling to her
knees when her putt lipped out.
"When they both missed I was just shocked," said Tamulis, who chatted with volunteers and had a
snack in air-conditioned comfort instead of watching or practicing for a possible playoff. A friend
kept her updated.
Tamulis had been fourth last year in Prattville and earlier this year at the Meijer LPGA Classic. She
didn't make the cut at last week's Canadian Pacific Women's Open after posting two 73 rounds. Her
rounds in Alabama steadily improved from 71 to 68 to 67 to 65.
It was her first win since Florida State, but she had a pair of runners-up finishes in 2004 on the
Symetra Tour.
Tamulis said she was trying to ignore the leaderboard, focusing instead on that countdown from 29
holes with playing partners Sei Young Kim and Wei-Ling Hsu.

"The last time I actually saw where it was at was by accident on No. 9," she said. "Then I felt really
good, and I was just out there trying to have a good time. My goal was to come in here have a decent
week, play well and secure my spots in Asia."
She also wanted to ensure she made the field in her hometown of Naples, Florida, for the season
finale, the CME Group Tour Championship. Her expression matched the smiley face magnet affixed
to her visor, given to her a couple of years ago by an elderly scorekeeper in Phoenix.
Tseng is a 26-year-old Taiwanese player who ranked No. 1 for 109 weeks early in her career. She
came close to snapping an 85-event winless streak dating to the 2012 Kia Classic, making a long
birdie putt on No. 16.
This was Tseng's second runner-up finish of the year.
"I don't know where that emotion came from," she said. "I just feel that I'm so ready to win."
Tseng said she enjoyed feeling "that pressure, that nerves on the last few holes or on the last group."
Ernst was seeking her second tour win. Sydnee Michaels finished with a 67, finishing in a fourthplace tie with 2011 winner Lexi Thompson. Thompson closed with a 69 and was in the 60s all four
rounds.
http://espn.go.com/golf/story/_/id/13547057/kris-tamulis-takes-yokohama-tire-lpga-classic-first-lpga-t
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