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Ko ties Sorenstam’s record of 29 straight rounds under par

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Lydia Ko, of New Zealand, hit out of the bunker on the 13th hole during the first round of the LPGA Tour ANA Inspiration golf tournament at Mission Hills Country Club on Thursday, in Rancho Mirage, Calif. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. » Lydia Ko was in trouble Thursday in the ANA Inspiration. Trying to tie Annika Sorenstam’s LPGA Tour record for consecutive rounds under par, the 17-year-old New Zealander was even par with three holes left and stuck behind five large trees to the left of the seventh fairway.

"It was a pretty nasty place to be," Ko said.

To escape, she needed to a hit a sweeping, low hook.

She did, with the ball scampering onto the green and stopping pin-high 25 feet to the right.

"I said, ‘I’m going to try to hit the biggest hook,’" Ko said. "It would have probably looked really bad, that swing on camera, but it ended up being OK. … I had to hit it low enough and had to hit a slinging hook, so I didn’t end up in the bunker."

She two-putted for par, then hit a 6-iron to 18 inches on the 158-yard eighth to set up the birdie she needed to get under par. She closed with a par on the par-5 ninth for a 1-under 71 to match Sorenstam’s record of 29 straight rounds under par.

Ko was tied for 10th, four strokes behind first-round leader Morgan Pressel in the first major championship of the season. Pressel won the 2007 tournament to become the youngest major champion at 18 years, 10 months, 9 days.

"I kept the ball in play," Pressel said. "I was never really in terrible position."

Ai Miyazato was second at 68, and Hall of Famer Juli Inkster, So Yeon Ryu, Alison Walshe and Gwladys Nocera shot 69. The 54-year-old Inkster won in 1984 and 1989.

"I actually have been hitting the ball fairly well the last couple of weeks and I’ve been out with a bulky putter," Inkster said. "Today, I made a few putts and I made great par on 16."

The top six played in the afternoon, long after strong wind tested the morning starters on their opening nines at tree-lined Mission Hills.

Lexi Thompson had a 72 playing alongside Ko in the morning. The defending champion was impressed with her young friend’s recovery shot on No. 7.

"It was an incredible shot," Thompson said. "I didn’t know she had that kind of shot because she was on an upslope. I didn’t know she could keep it under the trees."

The top-ranked Ko started the streak in the first round of her victory last year in the season-ending event. Her worldwide streak is 32, counting her three rounds in her victory in the Ladies European Tour’s New Zealand Women’s Open.

Sorenstam set the LPGA Tour mark in 2004.

"I’ve talked to her a couple of times," Ko said about Sorenstam. "I would love to play with her one day. That would be really cool."

With the wind gusting to 20 mph, Ko opened with a 14-foot birdie putt on No. 10 and made an 8-footer on 12. She bogeyed the 13th, hitting into the front right bunker and leaving a 25-foot putt.

After Thompson hit into the front water on the 133-yard 14th with the wind gusting to 25-30 mph, Ko hit pin-high to the right and made the 15-footer.

"I had to play like 12 yards (for the wind), so I went up a club and a half," Ko said.

Ko bogeyed three of the next four holes to make the turn at 1 over.

Playing into a right-to-left crosswind on the par-4 15th, she drove into the front of the left fairway bunker. A half-foot from the lip, she chipped 30 yards to the fairway and hit her 6-iron third to 35 feet.

On the par-4 16th, she drove left into rough on the front edge of a bunker. Her fairway wood with the ball below her feet was short of the green in the left rough and she hit her third to 20 feet.

She was fortunate to drop only one shot on the par-5 18th. After going from the right to left rough and sending her third through the green, Ko hit a flop shot that ticked a palm tree and stopped in the fringe. Her downhill putt raced 15 feet past, but she holed the comebacker.

"I would have never thought I would hit the tree that was like 3 yards away right on my target," Ko said. "But holed a good putt, so maybe that was the turning point."

Ko got back to even par on the par-5 second, chipping to a foot. She also chipped to a foot on the par-3 fifth after missing to the left.

She was too busy scrambling to worry about the record.

"A record was the last thing I was thinking about," Ko said.

Ko won in Australia in February — the week before her New Zealand victory — for her sixth LPGA Tour win. She has 10 worldwide titles in professional events.

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