Golf changes on Sunday at the U.S. Open, and so do most golfers. Pulses quicken, grips tighten, and a game that is unforgiving by nature turns punitive.
On this Sunday at the U.S. Women's Open, Paula Creamer and Stacy Lewis played together in the last pairing at Interlachen Country Club. Creamer, 21, has won six LPGA events. Lewis, 23, went 5-0 in the Curtis Cup and won an NCAA championship at Arkansas after overcoming scoliosis.
At precocious ages, both can already be called winners, both are among the brightest young American players, and yet Interlachen's swirling winds and tricky greens turned them into weekend hackers on Sunday.
With a chance to win the most coveted trophy in women's golf, Creamer and Lewis both shot 78s. Lewis finished in a tie for third, Creamer in a tie for sixth.
"It's probably the most frustrated I've ever been," said Creamer. "You play so well to get to today and then you don't have a good Sunday. That's frustrating. I haven't felt this bad in a long time."
Lewis, playing in her first event as a professional, has not dealt with the weighty expectations Creamer faces in every major. "It's hard to be upset," Lewis said. "I finished third in the U.S. Open."
At the end of a round in which they took turns looking devastated, misery found company on the 18th tee. "We were like, man, this is ugly, this round of golf in the last pairing," Lewis said with a laugh.
Ugly, it was. Both opened with pars; both made double bogey on the par-5 second, which had played as the easiest hole on the course all week. Both misjudged the wind, hit the ball over the green and required five shots just to hit the green.