An interview with:
JULI INKSTER
Q. Ladies and gentlemen, this
is, I think, my 16th Women's Open. I've never seen putting like
that by a winner. It was wonderful to watch, Juli. In your heart, how
does it feel compared to the first win?
JULI INKSTER: Well, this is, I think -- i mean, winning
your first win is really hard. And I was fortunate I had a pretty big lead.
This one was a lot tougher, but I think a lot more satisfying. Playing on the
golf course that I won the Amateur on, and coming back here and
having an awesome Sunday round with the crowd -- the crowd was phenomenal.
It was great. And I fed off that, and I played better today, hit the ball better
today, you know, and to beat the best player in the world, you don't get an
opportunity to do that often. So, I mean, I think this is pretty sweet right
now.
Q. You were so tenacious in
the third round, holding it together, managing a good score. Despite the fact
that you were not hitting the ball to your own standards, did you feel as if
it all came together today?
JULI INKSTER: Basically, Friday and Saturday won me the golf
tournament. It's really hard to do, in an Open, when things aren't
going your way, is to hang in there. My putting hung me in there. I made a lot
of good 5 -, 6 -, 7-footers for par.
Today, like 15 minutes, I started out hitting balls, and I
was hitting them bad, and I didn't feel anything, and 15 minutes before I got
ahead of the tee, I finally found something that clicked, and my last dozen
balls, I hit well, and my first iron shot into 1 -- I hit a great
shot into 1 and great shot into 2, and I felt a lot better.
Q. You said yesterday you
promised you would chip in today, which you did.
JULI INKSTER: That's right.
Q. Juli, when you saw
the pairings, did you like the pairings, or would you have preferred it to have
been --
JULI INKSTER: I loved where I was at. I was playing with Shani,
who I'm good friends with.
And I felt like all the pressure was on Annika.
She's the No. 1 player in the world; she had the two-shot lead. I just felt
like if I could get off to a reasonable start, that I would have a shot, so,
I mean, I loved my pairing.
Q. There seems to be some
sense that maybe not everybody liked the pairing, that some people would have
preferred to have you paired with Annika.
Do you think pairing should be done that way, where you put
the marquee players together, or should the chips fall?
JULI INKSTER: I think the LPGA does it a great
way. Low score goes out first, low score of the day goes out
last -- first in, last out. I think that's -- i think you
should have it that way instead of having, you know -- because everybody is
a marquee player if you win a tournament.
You can't tell somebody, a Shani or Jill
McGill that they are not marquee players. They have just as good a game
and just a good an opportunity to win the tournament as we did. You have to
go by your standard structure and go from there.
Q. Double question: When you
mentioned that this is the most satisfying of your career, does it make that
so because of where you were in your career or because of who you beat today?
A. I think both. Being 42 and having the chance to win a U.S.
Open -- you don't get that many opportunities to win a U.S.
Open -- and then to come out play the way I played today
was great, and I don't know how many more Opens I'm going to be
able to compete in, so to be able to be close and come away the winner makes
it all the more satisfying to me.
Q. Where do you rank this
round?
JULI INKSTER: As far as overall, I would say it's up there.
As far as the pressure and the conditions and what was at stake, I would say
it's probably No. 1. It is right now.
Q. I was wondering where you
were, where Annika was, and what she was doing. Shani said she
saw her birdie 14. Did you see it?
JULI INKSTER: No, I didn't see her birdie 14. I thought I
did a really good job at that -- not really -- i mean, I glanced at the
leader board, saw where I was at, but I didn't really fix on the leader board.
I mean, I didn't really want to concentrate on the leader board and how I was
doing. I just felt like my swing was starting to click, I was going to have
some birdie opportunities. When I made the turn, I had a two-shot lead. If I
could make a couple more birdies come in, that's going to win the tournament.
I had a great save on 15.
That was just -- first of all, to read that putt right
and then to hit it hard enough to get it up that hill, and then for it to go
in, it was great.
Q. Juli, before the
tournament began, you said you were kind of at the place in your life where
winning wasn't as important, playing well was important. Did you surprise yourself
today how much you wanted to win?
JULI INKSTER: Every time I win a tournament I surprise myself.
I'm 42 years old, I'm already in the Hall of Fame, I don't really
-- i don't know -- you know, everybody asks me where why I play. I play
because I love to play, and how can you not love to do what I did today?
I mean, the crowds were great. When I made that putt on 16,
my heart was pumping so hard. It was fantastic. And that's why I work hard at
my game, so I can come out here and stay competitive and play with the Annikas
and Karries.
I'm not going to win every tournament. They are going to win
more than I win, but if I can stay competitive and win my fair share and raise
my family, I'm ecstatic.
Q. Juli, you're 42
now. I was just wondering, how long do you think you're going to be out there
on the Tour and how long do you want to be out there?
JULI INKSTER: Well, you know, I really don't put a timetable
on it. I'm going to play -- i'm going to play until I stay competitive.
I like to play this year because it's a Solheim Cup year, and
see how I do at the end of the year. I'm going to definitely play next year
because of my contracts, and probably play the same amount, 18 tournaments,
and then I'm going to reevaluate.
I feel like I'm in the best shape of my life. My kids know
what I do, they are able to travel with me, so I'm just -- i just play
it one year at a time.
Q. Juli, after the
round yesterday it seemed like you had battled it so much. How much of a chance
did you really think you had to pull your swing together and play as well as
you did today?
JULI INKSTER: I talked to my coach last night and he watched
my swing on TV, he gave me some keys. I didn't hit any balls yesterday. The
way I was putting, I felt like I still had a good chance. Putting can make up
for a lot of mistakes, and I putted great all week, and today I hit the ball
better and had a few more opportunities for birdies.
Q. As I recall, you were born
and raised in the San Francisco area?
JULI INKSTER: Santa Cruz.
Q. Close enough.
JULI INKSTER: Yeah, close.
Q. You have won now two U.S.
Opens in rather rural parts of America. I wonder if there is any significance
or if you have an explanation for that.
JULI INKSTER: This golf course, the undulations in the fairways
and greens are a lot like a golf course I grew up on in Santa Cruz, Pasatiempo,
an old Allister McKenzie golf course, and they have the rolling
hills, and you don't ever really get a flat lie.
Mississippi, I was playing so well at that time, I mean I
was hitting the ball well, I was putting well. That golf course just suited
my game to the tee, and this golf course, you had to work the ball a little
more, a little more strategizing, but this golf course without the wind is a
lot like the golf course I grew up on.
Q. If you could talk a little
bit about 15 and how fortunate were you to get the relief after your tee shot.
JULI INKSTER: I mean, whether it was there or 2 yards down,
I still had a barren lie, and I still had a tough chip shot. I was surprised
it rolled out so much. I thought I hit a pretty good chip, but, you know, there
you were just trying to get it close.
And the way I was putting, I felt like if I could get it somewhere
on the green, I had a chance to make it. It was fortunate it went past the hole,
because my next one was straight up the hole, and I played it by the cup on
the edge and it went over the heart.
Those are the putts -- like the putt on 9 I made, it
keeps your momentum going in the right direction instead of saying, "Oh, oh,
no, here we go."
And then I hit two really good shots on 16, and hit a great
putt there. I hit three good shots on 17; just spun back and I ended up making
bogey there.
Q. What club did you hit on
15?
JULI INKSTER: 15, I hit a 5-iron.
Q. Juli, considering
where you're at in your career, being a mom, do you think maybe you had a little
deeper well to draw on today? Is that one of the benefits of age, maybe?
JULI INKSTER: Yeah, it's like I was saying, I don't take these
days for granted. I try to enjoy them, I appreciate where I'm at. I don't know
how many times I'm going to get here so it was -- i think I do. I think
I appreciate what I have.
Q. Juli, can you describe
the shot on 6 and what was your thought process there as far as what shape of
shot you had, and how big was that?
JULI INKSTER: Well, I mean, it's a short hole that you're
thinking you don't get too many chances for birdie, so you're thinking birdie,
and when I hit it in the rough, now I'm thinking par.
The pin was on the back right ledge, and I was just directly
below it, but it kind of went to the right starting out, and came back to the
left, and went back more to the left, so I played it about a yard out there
on the right-hand side, and I had perfect speed because it just went up the
hill, and I thought it was going to be just short, and at the last moment it
trickled in.
Q. How big was that?
JULI INKSTER: It was huge. Anytime you make birdie, it's huge,
but to make birdie from the rough, it was huge.
Q. Juli, some of the
boys on the PGA are taking a beating right now and being criticized for
not being able to stand up to Tiger. What could they learn from you today?
JULI INKSTER: Tiger is human and Annika
is human. I just think you've got to play your own game and you can't
-- you can't worry about what Tiger is doing -- or Annika
is doing. You know, to me, I thought she'd come out here and shoot under par.
That's just the way I felt.
And I just felt that when I'm playing well, I can --
i can play with her. I don't do that every week, she wins almost every other
week, but given the right situation, you know, I feel like I can play with her,
and I just played my own game today. I didn't try to do anything that I wasn't
capable of doing and it worked out.
Q. I wondered if you've talked
to Hayley and Cori yet and if Cori still likes the big trophies?
JULI INKSTER: I haven't got a hold of them. They are probably
at the movies. They probably don't even know. But that's great. That's the way
I like it. I like them to do their own thing. Golf is great for me, but it's
not their life. And I want them to do what they want to do, so it's fine with
me.
Q. As usual, Michelle almost
asked my question, but this kind of relates to that. At this point in many athletes
careers they get to sit on the couch and tell their kids how good they were,
show videos; you get it show them. Is that fun.
JULI INKSTER: It's great, awesome. I really think they do
get what I do and they -- hayley wrote me a little E-mail today, she said
"Good luck, Mom, you can do it," and then she put, "You can beat Annika.
Go for it."
So, I mean, it's great. It's great having their support and
you know what? If I would have shot 76 today, Hayley would have said, "Mom,
you had a great tournament." They are happy just me being a mom.
Q. Juli, talk about
how much the crowd kept --
JULI INKSTER: The crowd was awesome, they were awesome. I
mean, they were -- i mean, I know the PGA plays in that
every week, but if we could do that every week, it would be -- i really
felt them and, you know, 15, 16, 11, made a good par putt on 9, my chip-ins,
every time I walked off the green, "Go Juli, go Juli,
go Juli," and to be able to play and actually play well for them
was -- made it more special.
Q. Did you wear that lavender
outfit for the Kansas City fans?
JULI INKSTER: It was my last clean outfit.
Q. You didn't want to go Monday?
JULI INKSTER: I didn't want to go Monday, no.
Q. How would you describe
your putting, especially on the weekend, 50 putts? And can you recall having
a better run on the greens?
JULI INKSTER: No, these greens are not like right edge, left
edge. My putt on 2 probably broke a foot, and it was probably only an 8-foot
putt. It went straight down, right in the hole. It's not only my putting, the
speed was great. All my putts were right around the hole. The only putt I ran
past probably 4 feet was the putt on number 5 today. I hit a good shot in there
and I didn't hit a very good putt, and ran it by 3 and a half feet past.
The speed was very good. That's what helped me. When your
speed is good, it makes the hole bigger.
Q. In other words, letting
the putts die in the hole?
JULI INKSTER: (Nodding.)
Q. Going back to how much
longer do you want to play, the Open is booked through 2008, do you want
to come back in 2009?
JULI INKSTER: I don't know. I don't even know how old I'll
be then. I'll be 51, I don't know. You know what? I'm just hoping to be back
in Pumpkin Ridge in 2003, so I'm taking it one year at a time.
Q. Since the last time you
were here, this has been talked about before, the Hall of Fame and everything
that has happened, can you try and reflect on the time that's passed since then,
since 1980?
JULI INKSTER: It's hard to. It's hard to believe 22 years
has passed, but I would still say probably my greatest accomplishment is winning
those three U.S. Amateurs in a row because it's so hard to do.
Three different golf courses, three different venues, match play, where if someone
gets hot, you're out of there. That -- winning the first one, you know,
just kind of got my career going.
And looking back, you know, the ups and downs I've had in
my golf game, I played well early, and I had the kids' era, I didn't play well
at all, and I'm playing well again, I think, makes it more satisfying to me.
Q. Juli, you were here
last year for, I believe, the ticket kickoff. You mentioned that you almost
didn't come to the '80 Amateur. Do you ever think about how your career
might have turned out if you didn't show up?
JULI INKSTER: I'd probably have ten kids, I don't know. I
really didn't want to come. I hadn't played, and Brian, my husband, said "Juli,
your parents will kill me if you don't go to the U.S. Amateur.
Just go, do the best you can, and go from there."
I came in here and I didn't care if I shot 90, you know. I
was just very happy to be married. And I ended up, you know, every day playing
a little bit better, just like this week, and come Sunday I beat Patty
Rizzo who then was the best amateur golfer in the world.
So, I mean, it was pretty special. Brian flew in for the last
round.
Q. Juli, could you
reflect a little on the year that Patty Sheehan caught you at the U.S.
Open, and was there ever a point where you had your doubts about this particular
championship?
JULI INKSTER: Yeah, I mean, it was 1992 when Patty
birdied the last two holes and beat me in a playoff. You know, I -- you
just don't know how many more chances you're going to get. I was struggling
-- '92 I had a good year, I was still struggling with my game.
This is one tournament that I always wanted to win. If there
is any tournament to play, I would take one U.S. Open over
any other tournament. And -- just because it's the U.S. Open,
it's our Open, I'm an American. It's always on a great golf course,
the pressure, the media hype, everything is there. And if you can accomplish
winning a U.S. Open, you've -- you have accomplished
a great deal. You can go anywhere in the world and say "I won the U.S.
Open," and "Oh, U.S. Open," they know it, they know
the U.S. Open.
That's the tournament I always wanted to win, and when I didn't
win in '92, I was devastated. I couldn't believe I lost that tournament.
And, you know, that's why '99 was so tough mentally. Even
though I had the big lead and I was playing well, I just didn't want to
-- didn't want to let that one go.
And so it made this one , even though it was difficult,
a lot easier.
Q. Let's do the card now,
if we could, please.
JULI INKSTER: Number 2, I hit 7-iron about, you know, 12 feet,
made that for birdie.
Let's see, number 6, I chipped in -- you guys all know that
-- a 9-iron.
Q. How long was that chip,
would you say?
JULI INKSTER: I don't know, probably.
Q. 35, 40 feet?
JULI INKSTER: No, it was probably 60, 50 -- 65 feet.
7, I was just off the fringe, and I putted, so I sunk probably
about a 20-footer -- 25-footer there.
11, I hit a 9-iron about 10 feet, made that for birdie. 17,
I hit -- i mean 16, I hit a 7-iron about 20 feet, made that for birdie.
17, my wedge spun off the green, chipped up, missed about
a 10-footer, made bogey there.
That's it, parred 18.
Q. During the championship,
I don't know if I mentioned this, she had the equivalent of 39 one-putt greens.
If you figure you have 144 putts, allowing two per hole, she was 39-under. That's
not bad.
JULI INKSTER: That's not bad.
Q. See you at Media Day at Pumpkin Ridge. Congratulations,
Juli.