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Michelle Wie (75) faces climb at Open

Golf, LPGA

SOUTHPORT, England -- U.S. Open champion Michelle Wie got off to a rocky start as she struggled to keep the ball in the fairway, shooting a 3-over 75 to fall 7 strokes off the first-round lead at the Women's British Open on Thursday.

Wie, who has two victories among eight top-10s in her past nine tournaments, spent too much time chipping out of sand and rough, finishing with five bogeys and two birdies in what might be the easiest conditions all week at Royal Birkdale.

"Thought I made a good game plan," Wie said. "Just didn't hit good shots today."

Ayako Uehara of Japan seized the lead with a 4-under 68. She got her lone mistake out of the way early on the opening hole. She made three birdies in a four-hole stretch en route to a one-shot lead over Mo Martin.

Wie wasn't the only one struggling. Cristie Kerr didn't make a birdie, shot 81 and withdrew with a sore back. Only nine players broke par, all but two of them in the relative calm of a sunny morning along the Irish Sea.

"It's only going to get harder," defending champion Stacy Lewis said after a 71. "Anything under par on this golf course is a good score."

"Ayako obviously put up a really good number,. She seems like she wasn't in trouble at all. She was just greens, greens, center of the green. You can kind of learn a little bit from that and maybe not go at so many pins."

Morgan Pressel scrambled her way to a 70, joined by Sarah Kemp and Mina Harigae. The only players who broke par in the afternoon were former U.S. Women's Open champion So Yeon Ryu and Amy Yang, who played in the final group at the U.S. Women's Open last month. Both shot 71.

"I don't think they can make it any easier," Pressel said.

Pressel had 23 putts, though only four of them were for birdie. She escaped with par when she found trouble off the tee and one time salvaged bogey. Playing her third shot from the right rough to a pin on the right side of the tough 16th green protected by a pot bunker, Pressel played short of the green and got up-and-down to limit the damage. Her putter made all the difference.

Paula Creamer was 5-over par after five holes and rallied for a 75. The best comeback belonged to Jessica Korda, who went out in 39 and then made four birdies on the back nine to return to even par. Karrie Webb, Inbee Park, Suzann Pettersen and Kraft Nabisco champion Lexi Thompson also were at even par.

The way it looked Thursday, anyone around par might be in good shape when it ends on Sunday.

Wie now has to climb back on a course that makes it feel as though she has to scale a mountain. She tried to rely on her powerful stinger off the tee, using mostly hybrids, to stay short of the bunkers and out of the rough. But she hit only seven fairways, leading to three of her bogeys.

"I definitely felt like my tempo was a little bit off," Wie said. "But it's a long way until Sunday, and I battled out there. It's not the score I was looking forward to on Thursday, but it could have been a lot worse."

Martin had a plan for Birkdale, too. She is one of the shorter hitters on the LPGA Tour and can't recall a round where she hit so many 3-woods off the tee, all in an effort to stay out of trouble.

"Every hole, every shot is its own test," Martin said. "You just really have to have so much strategy. It keeps you in the moment and it's a challenge. It's a fun challenge."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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