Volume 4, Number 12, January 17, 2007 | |||||||||||||||
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Top Ten Korean Golf Stories of 2006 |
Pages 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 | ||||||||||||||
8.
Jin Joo Hong 7.
Amy Yang Amy Yang is one of a number of Korean teens with golfing talent who decided to leave Korea while still very young to seek training elsewhere. Many of those Korean teens end up coming to America, where it is so much easier than in Korea to get onto a course to play and practice. But a growing number have made Australia their destination. Gloria Park was one of the first; she dominated Australian junior golf in the late 1990s, before becoming a top golfer on the LPGA tour. Amy Yang and her family moved to Queensland a few years ago. Thanks to
good training and her great talent, it wasn't long before she became one
of the top amateurs in the country. As a result, she was invited to play
in the ANZ Masters, one of the most important professional tournaments
each year down under. The field for this year's edition included top players
like defending champion and former world number one Karrie Webb, Laura
Davies, KLPGA stars Hee Young Park and Bo Bae Song, and Japanese sensation
Ai Miyazato. With so many top players in the field, it seemed unlikely
that Amy would be a factor. But in the end, the tournament came down to
Amy Yang, American amateur Tiffany Joh, and LPGA journeyman Catherine
Cartwright. Joh missed a short par putt to get into a playoff, and one
hole later, Yang beat Cartwright and claimed the top prize. At the age
of 16 years, 10 months, she became the youngest player to ever win a tournament
on a major golf tour, male or female (the tournament is a part of the
Ladies European Tour). Overnight, she became a major news story all over
the world. Amy showed all year that her win was not a fluke. She was invited to play the Evian Masters and British Women's Open, and did well in both. At the Open, in fact, she was the low amateur. She then surprised everyone by announcing she was turning pro. The LET gave her a special exemption to play on tour even though she was technically younger than their minimum age limit. For her first tournament, she played the Dubai Ladies Masters. She had never played in Dubai before, and was facing stiff competition in the form of Karrie Webb, Annika Sorenstam and several other top LET pros. She finished fourth, losing only to those two superstars and multiple tournament winner Helen Alfredsson. She capped her year with a third place finish in her second pro event, the Mauritius Open. Still only 17 years old, the future seems to hold limitless possibility for this golfer. 6.
Kimmie wins twice But despite not having won for nearly four years, Kimmie had hardly been having a terrible time of it. In 2004, she achieved the dubious distinction of winning the most money in a single season in LPGA history without a win. She managed fifteen top tens that year. Clearly, she was doing everything but hoist a trophy. She showed signs right away in 2006 that she might break her winless drought. In her very first event of the year in Mexico, she found herself in the final group on Sunday, playing with none other than Annika Sorenstam and Paula Creamer. Kim was only able to shoot a 72 that day and finished fourth, but it was still a good beginning. In late April, the LPGA played a huge money event that was new to their schedule: the Ginn Clubs and Resorts Open. With a top prize of $375,000, the event attracted all the top players in the league. Yet heading into the final round, the leader, by an impressive three shots, was none other than Mi Hyun Kim. The question that weighed heavily on her mind was: could she finally get that win? Kim had lost tournaments in the past with larger leads going into the final round. She later admitted that, had she not won this event, she would have felt that she would never win an event on tour again. Things looked bad at the outset, with top player Lorena Ochoa going out like a house on fire. In less than nine holes, Ochoa caught Kimmie, and Karrie Webb, winner of the first Major of the year, was not far behind. As if that weren't bad enough, Annika Sorenstam was also making a huge run towards the top. It would be hard enough for Kim to win an event under any circumstances, but could she hold off the top three players in the league to do it? She fought like a tiger the whole back nine. Every time it looked like her lead would slip away, she made another clutch birdie to climb back on top. But the supreme moment came on the seventeenth hole, a par five. On that hole she hit a tremendous drive, 290 yards in length, one of the longest drives of her life. Showing no fear, she hit her second shot over a treacherous bunker onto the green. She two putted for birdie, and went on to at last break her victory drought! In fact, the most challenging aspect of the entire week for her might have been trying to lift the unwieldy trophy she won! Kimmie continued to have a great season after that. She contended all weekend for the LPGA Championship, finishing third; then in July, she won an impressive playoff against Natalie Gulbis for her second win of the year. That victory came thanks to a four shot comeback by Peanut on the back nine, and a tenacious three hole playoff against not just Gulbis, but against a huge crowd, almost all of whom were rooting for the popular American. Kimmie put the icing on her season by captaining the Korean team to victory at the Kyoraku Cup in December. Oh yeah, and she played the Tournament of Champions as well, although she got sick and had to drop out after the first round. Oh well, at least she qualifies for the field until 2009! |
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