Flash Area interview with:
ROSIE JONES
Q. Got off to quite a start.
ROSIE JONES: Yeah. Three quick birdies on 10, 11 and 12. And then
another one on 14. And I just was hitting really good, solid irons and
some -- I knocked it to about 6 inches on 11. So -- and then about a
16, 17 footer on 12 to get my third birdie. So I was cruising right
along. I thought, well this is going to be easy. When is the golf course
going to hit me? So what I finally did up on 17, I kind of had a silly
3-putt. And then one really bad swing on number 3 today.
Q. A lot of lip-outs too?
ROSIE JONES: Yeah, I did. I hit really good putts. I felt like
on 18 and 1, on 2, and even further on into the front nine, my second
nine, but finally I got one crazy putt to go in on number 8. And I had
another chance at number 9.
Q. How far was that one on number 8?
ROSIE JONES: It was actually only about 17, 18 feet. But it traveled
about 23 feet.
Q. As the crow flies?
ROSIE JONES: Yeah, and it probably could have gone all the way
down to the front of the green. If it didn't go in the hole. But I had
all the confidence in the world it was going in.
Q. Seemed like there have been a number of players that get
up to 3-under, 4-under, and then something comes up and bites them.
ROSIE JONES: Yeah, the course kind of bites you back. I think
the back nine, if you're starting back there and you're hitting it fairly
good, you have some opportunities to make some birdies. And then you
get into some tougher holes. I tell you that 7, 8 and 9 are probably
the toughest three holes I have seen together in a long time. Par-5
is probably the toughest par-5 I've played ever. And it's just, you've
got to be careful on every single shot there. And then 8 is really good
pin placement back on top there today. And then number 9 is just a really
good driving hole.
Q. What is it about 7 that makes it as tough as it is?
ROSIE JONES: You can really go for it from anywhere in the second
shot, it's so important to set up for the third. And they have such
a tight pin up on top, behind the bunker there. I hooked my 5-wood just
a little bit and I was in that first cut. I really couldn't go for the
green, the pin at all. So I played out to the right. I thought I would
take a little extra club because the ball was in some thick rough and
it ran almost all the way to the back middle or the dugouts back there
in the back. But I just miscalculated the speed on the putt. It was
just about three feet off the green. I just miscalculated that and made
a 3-putt.
Q. You and Laura both went out in 32, were you able to capitalize
on each other's momentum at all?
ROSIE JONES: I think when -- any time you're playing with somebody
that's making some birdies and playing good shots and hitting solid
shots you're always going to capitalize on that. It's easy to settle
in to seeing how it's supposed to be done. We both had our mishaps today.
I on 3 and her on 7. So it's hard to keep the momentum going. That's
why I think you can see a couple birdies and make a couple birdies and
then you go for a dry spell for a little while and maybe have a wreck.
But there's lots of places to wreck out there. If you can just avoid
those, you're doing all right.
Q. Talk about the teenagers. You don't have to be a teenager
to score well?
ROSIE JONES: That's right. You can be an old lady like me.
(Laughter.) Working on being the oldest player ever to win. That
would be nice.
Q. How far out were you on number 3 when the ball went in the
water? Was it 160? 150?
ROSIE JONES: Yeah I was only about 163 to the pin. It plays a
little bit uphill and into the wind. So I got this nifty little 9-wood
that I love to hit. And for some reason or other I think I was trying
to get it -- trying to do something with my club and it just backfired
on me. And I just hit probably the worst shot I've hit in several weeks.
So just bad timing on that. It was just unfortunate. I think I could
have got it -- it really -- definitely it threw me back a little bit.
I think I could have come in maybe two or three under.
Q. No. 2 you had a putt that you started celebrating early.
What did you see there?
ROSIE JONES: Yeah, I had a couple of those. Well I just -- I thought
it was in. It was like you put your fist back in your pocket because
I was already swinging it all over the place. I just felt like I hit
some good putts. Like on 9 -- or sorry, 18, 1 and 2. All really good
putts. I thought they were going in.
Q. We got you on number 8. Talk to us about your birdie there.
ROSIE JONES: Well that pin is just really difficult. We were kind
of watching people ahead of us trying to get up to that pin. And it's
just really hard because it's scary to throw it all the way up there
and have it bite. The girls that are hitting 8-iron, 9-iron up there,
that's a little bit easier. But for me I was having to hit a 6-iron.
So I played it back in my stance and nipped it a little bit so I could
try to run it up there. And that's what I hit it right where I wanted
to, got it up on top. But the putt is like about a six foot right-to-left
speedy putt. And it was actually a little faster than I thought it was.
But I had the right line and by the time it was going into the hole
it kind of bent the lip a little bit. But I was glad the hole got in
the way.
Q. Do you figure that's going to be one of the tougher holes?
ROSIE JONES: Yeah, my score I think or my official thinks that
might be a skin today so.
(Laughter.)
Q. Talk to me a little bit how many teenagers are here and are
you amazed at all at how well they're playing so early and so young?
A. Well it's nice. Because we get so many reporters asking us on the
LPGA, what's with the American players, well, they're just another three
years away and five years away, there is going to be a whole other slew
of them coming out on TOUR. And that's what we need. So it's really
good to see that there's a lot of amateurs, young players that are playing
well. Their games are much better than when we were younger. And that's
a tribute to equipment, coaching, teachers, golf courses, just junior
golf programs and everything.
Q. Are you surprised at all with the numbers. 14 of them. That's
a lot for a U.S. Open?
ROSIE JONES: Well that's great. I first started playing The Open
I think when I was about 16 over 17. It's a great place to come and
get some experience and once you get in the Open, you feel like you're
hitting the big time. And it gives them a lot of great experience and
they're ready for it . There's a lot of players out there, especially
players like Michelle Wie, she's played several tournaments on the Tour
this year as an invite and also younger players like her that have played
in the U.S. Opens before this. And so they have got a lot of experience
behind them.
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