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By the time the Cup was ready to start, Christina had already become
a fan favorite in Indiana. During the opening ceremonies, both team
captains got a chance to introduce their teams to the crowd. When
Nancy said Christina Kim's name, the crowd's cheering got notably
louder and more boisterous than it had been. Nancy remarked from
the podium, 'I think they like you, Christina', which caused Christina
to bust a little dance move with her shoulders. Cristie Kerr, who
was standing next to Christina, nearly lost it from laughing, and
the crowd elevated their reaction even more. Later, the two captains
were asked to comment on their choices on which teams would play
in the first round in the morning. Christina had been chosen to
play the third match, teamed with Pat Hurst. Catrin Nilsmark put
two veterans, Sophie Gustafson and Trish Johnson, into the match
opposite Christina and Pat. These are blind pairings, so she didn't
know for sure that Christina would play then. But she told the commentators
that she suspected Christina would be in that group, so she put
two veterans against her whom she thought could 'handle all the
hoopla'. Christina laughed at that one.
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Christina Kim hams it up for the crowds
during the opening ceremony at the Solheim Cup
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Christina during day one of the Solheim Cup
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As mentioned, Lopez wasted no time throwing Christina into the
mix: she was scheduled to play in the first session on Friday morning
with Pat Hurst as her partner. This was the dreaded alternate shot
format, a format Christina had never played in her life other than
during their practice sessions earlier. And she would be matched
up against two seasoned Solheim veterans. How would Christina handle
the pressure?
Actually, she did very well. She and Hurst managed to carve a nice
little lead out by the midway point in their match. Indeed, the
Americans were ahead in three of their first four matches, and it
looked for a while like things would go their way across the board.
But momentum has a way of shifting at the Solheim Cup, and it did
so mightily back in Europe's favor as the round progressed. In the
end, what looked like it might be a 3-1 lead for the Americans turned
into a 3-1 lead for the Europeans. The Euros won two of the matches
outright, and tied the other two. Christina and Pat managed to hang
on to square their match with their opponents. It was certainly
a mild disappointment that they did not get the win, considering
they had had a two up lead with just a few holes to play, but at
least they acquired a half point. In the final morning match, Annika
Sorenstam and Suzann Pettersen came from four down with six to play
against Michele Redman and Laura Diaz, winning the match on the
final green. Once again, the Americans had disappointed in the foursome
matches.
In the afternoon fourball matches, Christina did not play. The
Americans and the Euros split evenly, 2 points a piece. Thus after
day one, Europe had a 5-3 lead over America.
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America needed a shot in the arm to get the momentum back on their
side. The fans had been quiet as ghosts, particularly in the morning
round. On day two, Nancy decided to send two of her rookies out
in the first match, hoping that their play would energize the crowd.
That team was Christina Kim and Natalie Gulbis, and they ended up
being matched against the two French rookies, Gwladys Nocera and
Ludivine Kreutz. From the first hole, the Americans charged, playing
brilliantly. But it was Christina's supercharged antics that elevated
the crowd into a frenzy on hole after hole. She made clutch putts
and shouted, pumping her fist. She did funny dances. She high fived
the crowd. On one hole, a member of the gallery shouted out 'Christina
Kim for President!' Gulbis replied, 'I'd vote for her!'
One particular putt late in her match Christina would later call
'the best putt of her life'. Gulbis had left her a 10 footer for
par to halve the hole and maintain their three up lead. After she
and her father had taken some time lining up the putt, Christina
buried it, and turned to the crowd to give a magnificent fist pump.
The crowd was already going crazy when she made the shot, but when
she turned to acknowledge them, its volume increased exponentially,
to the point where the whole of Crooked Stick shook. It was, in
a word, awesome.
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Christina electrified the crowd on Saturday morning
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Christina hugs team captain Nancy Lopez while her
morning teammate Natalie Gulbis looks on
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After Christina and Natalie finished off the Euro rookies 4-2,
they waited by the green to greet the next team in. Christina kept
her cheering up, maintaining the level of frenzy she had helped
generate with the win. You cannot overstate how much Christina's
play and attitude had electrified that crowd, turning them into
the valuable additional teammate the Americans needed. By the end
of the morning session, the Americans had won three out of four
points, returning the matches to a tie at 6-6. It was one of the
few times in Solheim history that the Americans had done so well
at foursomes. Lopez's decision to practice that format had paid
dividends, but so had her decision to trust her rookies with heavy
responsibilities early and often. They were now delivering, and
with Christina's almost insane level of enthusiasm, the Americans
had seized momentum big time.
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Christina and Pat Hurst were
paired again in the afternoon four ball matches. But they had the
unfortunate luck of bumping into a historic team: for the first time
in Solheim history, Laura Davies and Annika Sorenstam, the two Euros
who had won the most points all time, were paired together in a single
team. Christina and Pat tried their best, but the two Euro superstars
beat them easily. Fortunately, the Americans managed to get 2 points
in the afternoon, while the Euros also scored 2. So by the end of
day two, the matches were all tied, 8-8. But on Sunday would be the
singles, traditionally the strong suit of the American team. Could
Christina come through again? |
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