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Volume 4, Number 11, December 13, 2006 | ||||||||||||||
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LPGA Update |
Pages TOC
1, 2, ADT 1, 2, TOC Gallery, ADT Gallery, TOC Results, ADT Results |
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After all was said and done, thirty two golfers qualified for the final
tournament. That's when things really took a turn for the strange. The
tournament was still to be played at Trump International in Florida, as
it had been the two previous years. But this time the rules for the event
were quite different. The golfers would play two rounds of golf, and on
Friday afternoon, after the second round was complete, only the top 16
golfers in the field would continue on (if there were any ties, there
would be sudden death play-offs). On Saturday, they would play a third
round, and after that, only the top eight would proceed to the finals.
It was in the finals where things really got wild. All the scores were
to be thrown out, and the eight golfers would play one round of golf.
Whoever had the low score at the end of the day would walk off with a
one million dollar first prize, by far the largest single prize in the
history of women's golf. The second place golfer would only get $100,000,
and no one else would get more than 20 grand. In effect, it was a winner
take all situation, and it had the capability of greatly changing the
money list all in one day. For one player, that final day could be a life
changing event.
After the first round, three of the Koreans had effectively knocked themselves out of the tournament. Sun Young Yoo and Sung Ah Yim had only barely qualified for the event, and so it wasn't that surprising that, after the first round, they were the two players in last in the entire field. They both also had never played in this event before, and perhaps weren't ready for the tough course they would be facing. But Rookie of the Year Seon Hwa Lee also struggled mightily on this day, shooting a 77 that put her in fourth to last place. As she told this magazine a few issues ago, she has really run out of steam in the second half of the year and intends to be more strategic about making her schedule in 2007.
The course definitely showed its teeth on this day, and the preponderance of water on the course, particularly on the final three holes, made it a nerve wracking experience all around. On day one, the seventeenth hole was particularly nasty to the Koreans. Se Ri Pak made a clutch long birdie on the 16th hole, but hit a weak iron and watched it land in the water on the par 3 17th. She got a double bogey there. But on 18, she buried another long birdie putt to finish with her 71. Hee-Won Han also saw her tee shot on 17 go into the water, but JJ was able to get a little back with a solid tee shot to ten feet and a birdie from there. The main action involved those near to the cut line, which at this point stood at 1 over par. Jee Young Lee finished the day at even, Hee-Won Han right on the cut line. Jeong Jang, meanwhile, was at 2 over and had some work to do to make the top 16. Some of the top players in the field were also hovering around this point, including two time defending champion Annika Sorenstam, who finished the day at 2 over par, and money list leader Lorena Ochoa, who was at 3 over. |
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