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Wie opens with a 69 on tougher qualifying course

Published: December 03, 2008

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She turned pro a week before her 16th birthday in 2005 and pulled in close to $20 million in endorsement and earnings her first year, becoming one of the biggest stars in women's golf without having won a tournament. Wie drew the biggest galleries at LPGA Tour events, and even some of the PGA Tour events she played.

But her crash was as spectacular as her rise, and Wie went 14 consecutive tournaments without breaking 70 as she tried to play with wrist injuries and continued to test herself against the men.

Now, she is back to the start, one of 140 players trying to earn a spot on the LPGA Tour. She's even a part-time college student, enrolling last year at Stanford and bringing books with her to Q-school to study for final exams next week.

But this is far away from the stage where she once drew so much attention.

Wie was announced on the first tee to a smattering of applause from about 75 fans who followed her round. After a good chip to save par on the fourth hole, Wie hit her approach to 2 feet for a birdie on the 366-yard fifth hole, and closed out her front nine with a 10-foot birdie on the ninth.

She missed only four fairways and four greens and had 26 putts, missing four birdie putts inside 12 feet.

Renowned for her power, Wie only hit driver on holes where the fairway was generous, and she played the par 5s as three-shot holes, although she could have reached them all in two with big tee shots.

``The big thing this week is not to make mistakes,'' Leadbetter said. ``And she only made one today.''

That was on the 14th, when Wie left her birdie putt 5 feet short and the par attempt caught the left edge of the cup. Even so, Leadbetter liked what he saw. The Wie family spent last week in Orlando, where they had Thanksgiving dinner with Leadbetter, and her swing coach was curious how she would respond.

``She looked very comfortable, very composed. She hasn't played a tournament in a while, so that's a good sign,'' he said. ``If she plays anywhere near her potential, this shouldn't be a problem.''