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Volume 4, Number 11, December 13, 2006 | ||||||||||||||
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2006 LPGA Qualifying School |
Pages 1, 2, 3, Gallery, Results | |||||||||||||
Ashley Prange, the Big Break V winner, shot a 3 under 69, while Jeanne Cho, the runner up to Ashley in Big Break, shot a one under. From the KLPGA, Hyun Hee Moon also started well, with a 2 under par 70. Her KLPGA compatriots Eun Hee Ji and Hae Jung Kim shot even par. Hana Kim, Minny Yeo and Naree Song, all trying to come back to play again on tour, shot +2 74s. Not great, but not terrible. Ji Young Oh, the unbeatable 18 year old amateur, shot +1 on the first day, leaving herself well down the leaderboard in a tie for 58th. But she had started slowly at the sectional, too, and improved day after day, so there was reason to believe she would correct her situation as the week progressed. The only Koreans that dug a deep hole for themselves were Ha Na Chae and Jimin Jeong, both of whom shot 76s. But even those were not scores that were impossible to comeback from.
Jane Park was still trying to get into the groove, however, and was at even par, tied for 28th. She was going to have to step it up if she wanted one of those coveted exemptions for 2007. One player who really had trouble in round two was Hyun Hee Moon. She shot a 77 and plunged down the leaderboard. She had fallen all the way down to a tie for 58th, and had to right the ship quickly or she would be struggling just to make the cut (the top 70 and ties would advance to the final day after the first four rounds). And Minny Yeo and Hana Kim were starting to fade. Yeo shot a 76 to fall all the way to 93rd, while Kim was in 58th after a 73. One player with a particularly troubling story was Naree Song. Once upon a time, the Song twins were the toast of junior golf. Both of them had done amazing things as young girls. Aree had finished in the top ten at a Major while still only 13 years old, while Naree had been the youngest to make the cut at the US Women's Open another year. But Aree has had only a middling career as an LPGA pro so far. She's been able to maintain her exempt card pretty easily, and has occasionally contended for titles, but this is not what was expected of her when she nearly won her first Major as a member of the LPGA in 2004. But if Aree had had the occasional disappointment, Naree has really struggled. She turned pro about a year after her sister did, but has never been able to earn exempt status on the LPGA. She has one win on the Futures Tour, but has never come close to earning her exempt card that way, either. And in the past few months, things have gone from bad to worse. She has been stricken with a mysterious malady, one that saps all her energy and makes it difficult for her to concentrate on the course. Her sister needed to shout at her to even get her up before her rounds this week, and lately she has found it difficult to practice for more than an hour at a time. Doctors are still working to isolate the cause and find a cure. But in the meantime, Naree soldiered on. So far, her first two rounds in Florida had been tough, and it would take all her waning energy to keep up the good fight for a card.
For Jeanne Cho, this year's Q-School was notably less nerve wracking
than it had been in the past. For one thing, she had the Big Break experience
behind her now. The pressure there had been great, but she had handled
it wonderfully, advancing all the way to the finals before losing to Ashley
Prange (Prange, also in this year's Q-School, was tied for 30th after
three rounds at 2 over par). Also helping Cho stay balanced was her recent
marriage. She had met her husband at an event a few years ago when she
suddenly found herself in need of a caddie. Although he didn't know her,
he volunteered his services, and a friendship was born that eventually
led to love and marriage on November 18th of this year, just a few weeks
before Q-School. Like Hee-Won Han, the most successful married Seoul Sister,
having her partner there to give her support really seemed to be working
for Cho. But she still had two tough rounds of golf to go.
Then there was Ji Young Oh (pictured). The teenage sensation had shot a 70 in round two to climb the leaderboard, but a 75 on day three set her back. She was at +2, tied for 30th. She looked poised to make the cut, and had a reasonable chance at making her exempt card; but she was still on the outside looking in. Could she rally in the next two days? On the fourth day, the cut fell, and while the dream ended for some (At least for another year), others really solidified their position in impressive fashion. In-Kyung Kim really flexed her muscles on this day. Already tied for the lead when she began play, she shot a 6 under par 66, her lowest score yet, on the course where she had previously shot her only poor round of the week, a one over 73. How's this for consistent -- 18 greens in regulation! This gave her a startling 6 shot lead over anyone else in the field. At this point, she would have to be disqualified on Sunday not to earn her exempt card. But if In-Kyung could shoot 68 or better on the final day, she even had the chance to beat Ai Miyazato's Q-School record of 17 under par. Six shots behind her in second was Hye Jung Choi, who continued to surprise. Although a solid Futures Tour player in 2006, who even managed a 21st place finish in one LPGA event, nothing about her record suggested she was this good. She wasn't quite the lock for a card In-Kyung was, but short of shooting in the 80s, she, too, probably had locked up her card for 2007. |
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