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Volume 5, Number 10, January 30, 2008 | ||||||||||||||
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SeoulSisters Awards |
Pages 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 | |||||||||||||
Which brings us to 2007, and the player SeoulSisters.com considers the Korean golfer who was the most impressive this season: Ji Yai Shin, the KLPGA superstar who smashed one record after another on her way to the top Rolex ranking among all Korean golfers in the world. Note that, despite the fact I am giving this award to Shin, I am not necessarily saying that she is the best Korean golfer in the world (although she may very well be). I am saying that her achievements in the calendar year of 2007 made her the golfer who most deserved this award. This is not the first time that a golfer playing on a tour other than the LPGA was considered for this highest honor. In 2006, Song Hee Kim had a marvelous, record shattering performance on the Futures Tour, winning five times and becoming the youngest professional to ever win a pro event in the States. And Ji Yai Shin set all sorts of records on the KLPGA in 2006, winning three times, becoming the first player to ever card a sub-70 scoring average, and shattering Se Ri Pak's nearly ten year old record for most money earned in a single season. But achievements on lesser tours like the Futures and the KLPGA have to be weighed appropriately against the big tour. Quite frankly, it is more impressive to be a mid ranked player on the LPGA than to be even the top player on those other tours. So the achievements of top caliber LPGA players like Kimmie, JJ, Hee-Won Han and Seon Hwa Lee, even though they did not involve records or as many wins, came out on top. But in 2007, Shin was so overwhelming that she simply could not be denied
again. In 2006, she had made over 300 million won, but in 2007, she more
than doubled that total, absolutely annihilating that tour's most money
in a season record. In all of history, no player had ever won more than
five times in a single season; not Se Ri, not Mi Hyun, nobody. Shin won
9 times. To be more precise, 9 out of 18 times, or 50% of the tournaments
she played. And even when she wasn't winning, she was almost always in
contention. She had only one tournament all year on the KLPGA where she
was not in the top ten, and that was an 11th place. Only one other time
was she outside the top 5, a 6th place. Every other finish was a top five,
16 of 18. She once again had a sub-70 scoring average as well.
In 2007, Shin proved herself on the international stage as well as the domestic one. She played her first Major in 2007, in fact three of the four contested, and did well in all of them. At the Kraft Nabisco, she finished with a respectable 15th place ranking. At the next Major she played, the US Women's Open, she was in contention for much of the week, even leading the field on Saturday night, before winding up in 6th place. At the British she struggled more, but still wound up with a 28th place finish. In general she was more inconsistent when she played international events than she was at home, but that's only because she was so mind bendingly consistent at home that anything less than nonstop top fives would seem a letdown. She started her year by representing Korea (along with Young Kim) at the Women's World Cup in South Africa. They were never really in the hunt, thanks to the fact that Paraguay took a huge lead on day one and never slipped after that; but they were duking it out with an American team consisting of Hall of Famer Juli Inkster and recent US Women's Open Runner up Pat Hurst for second. They would finish one shot behind that team in third, thanks largely to a two stroke penalty they incurred for taking a drop that violated a local rule. Shin next played two events in Australia, where she finished top five in both, including a second at the ANZ Ladies Masters (behind only Karrie Webb). She followed that up with her lone Ladies Asian Golf Tour event of the year, the Thailand Ladies Open, which she won by ten shots. Four events on three continents, all top fives, including one runaway win and one solid second.
At the end of the season, she had a fairly weak showing at the team Kyoraku Cup, losing both her matches, but bounced back nicely by going undefeated at the Lexus Cup the following week (2 wins, one tie). She also collected yet another tournament win at the Orient Ladies China Open in China, an event where she was the defending champion. The tournament, co-sanctioned by the KLPGA, will count towards the 2008 KLPGA season. So, even before 2008 had started, she already had a leg up on her league competition. That made a grand total of 11 wins in the calendar year of 2007 (including the Thailand Open), far and away the most any Korean accomplished anywhere in the world. The skeptics among you may still wonder if what Shin accomplished was
good enough to top any of the great LPGA Korean golfers and their 2007
seasons, especially in a year when a record five of them finished in the
top ten on the LPGA tour. If Shin were playing full time on the LPGA in
2007, would she have been able to finish ahead of those women on the money
list? Would she have won any events, let alone double digit numbers? Would
she have even won the Rookie of the Year trophy against competition like
Angela Park and the other fine 18 and 19 year old Korean newcomers?
Really, there were five Korean golfers on the LPGA tour who were in the running for this award, the five who did the best on the money list: Mi Hyun Kim, Jeong Jang (both of whom have won this award before), Seon Hwa Lee, Jee Young Lee and Angela Park. The other Korean rookies were great, but Angela Park was clearly better, so if Park couldn't top Shin, it wouldn't make much sense to consider the other rookies. Sarah Lee had her moments, but was pretty inconsistent in the latter half of the year, and Se Ri Pak was too distracted by her Hall of Fame year to really put up the top numbers that would put her into consideration. So, let's look at the top Koreans I mentioned, and see how they stack up to Shin. Firstly, those five players combined won a total of two events in 2007, less than one fifth of the number Shin collected. Granted, winning an LPGA event is a bigger deal than winning a KLPGA event, but that is still quite a stunning difference. And none of those five won more than one event in 2007. For what it's worth, the Rolex rankings (flawed though they are) reflected this. Shin ended the year as the top Korean player in those rankings, despite the fact that Rolex rates KLPGA wins far lower than LPGA ones. Shin was the only player not playing full time on the LPGA who finished in the top ten. Angela Park had an undeniably great year: only one missed cut, two top
fives in Majors, including a second at the US Women's Open, and 8 total
top tens. She came close to earning a million bucks in her first year
on tour, and finished 8th on the money list. And she did all that as a
younger golfer than Ji Yai Shin, with even less pro experience than Ji
Yai had. In addition, she was the top player on the Lexus Cup team for
the Internationals, and carded a 63 at one point in 2007. But Park did
not win a single event in 2007; indeed, she has not won an event anywhere
since turning pro early in 2006. We have never given this top award to
a winless player, so it was hard to give the nod to a player who had never
won over one who had 11 wins this year alone. Yes, winning on the LPGA
is tougher than on the KLPGA, and Angela has come close to winning. But
Shin actually came even closer to capturing a win on the LPGA tour than
Park did, when she came within one roll of that playoff at the Evian.
And she did it in far fewer events than Park. And so, impressive as Angela's
rookie season was, I give the nod to Ji Yai Shin for the more impressive
year overall.
Jeong Jang had a third straight great year on tour in 2007. For the third
straight time, she broke a million dollars in earnings. She did have a
weird year, though. For much of the first part of the season, she was
not much of a factor. She did finish tied for third at the Safeway International
in March, but other than that, did not play all that well early on. She
even missed a few cuts in there, rare for her these days, and had a very
poor Kraft Nabisco. By May she was getting better. She notched a top ten
at the US Women's Open, and a tie for fifth in defending her title in
Rochester. She did all right at the HSBC as well, but her best result
of the year came soon thereafter at the Evian Masters. She made a great
run on the final day to get into a playoff with Natalie Gulbis for the
title. She ended up losing, but it was still a second place finish at
a premiere event. However, the following week, she missed the cut at the
British, an event she has won in the past and where she usually plays
quite well. She would go on to have 9 top tens on the season, but no wins,
her first winless season since 2004. This was still a great year, but
clearly the weakest of her last three. She had many more top tens both
in 2005 and 2006, and she earned a good deal of her million this season
in just two events, the Open and the Evian. She did beat Shin at the Evian,
but barely, but finished behind her at the other three Majors they both
competed in (and usually a lot behind her). JJ also had a bad time at
the team events, where she had a rare losing record among the Korean golfers
at the Lexus Cup. Though she won both of her matches at the Kyoraku, she
also had the misfortune of missing the crucial playoff putt that handed
the Cup to the Japanese team. So, a very good year for JJ, but not the
kind of stuff she was producing at her peak, and thus not good enough
to topple Shin.
Which brings us to Mi Hyun Kim, in my opinion the strongest LPGA Korean
in 2007. Kimmie had another great year, finishing fourth on the money
list, the highest of any Korean in several years. She only had one win
in 2007 (as opposed to the two she had in 2006), but it was an impressive
one, on a course ill suited to her strengths, in a playoff against a tough
American Hall of Famer, Juli Inkster. Kimmie collected ten top tens during
the year, and unlike Seon Hwa, had several more great chances to win through
the season. She played especially well at the HSBC Match Play, beating
Jee Young Lee before losing a tight, tough match against the eventual
winner, Seon Hwa. Kimmie would win the consolation match and collect $200,000
for her week's efforts, despite struggling with a nagging injury she acquired
during her match with Lee. She also was in the hunt at Corning and the
Samsung (where she rallied for second). She had a decent year at the Majors;
she collected a top ten at the US Women's Open and a 15th at the LPGA
Championship, but was only 30th at the Nabisco and, as she usually does,
she missed the cut in Britain (something about the British Open just does
not agree with her; since her second place finish in 2001, she has missed
the cut almost every year thereafter). Shin outperformed Kimmie at every
Major this year where they were both in the field, even the Open. At the
ADT Championship, Kimmie played extremely well the first two days and
half of the third before a few mistakes put her entry into the finals
in jeopardy. She was forced into a playoff following a disastrous 18th
hole, but rose marvelously to the occasion, nailing a brilliant iron to
a few feet to make birdie and advance. She also played well in captaining
the Kyoraku Cup, winning her one match. And she did all this despite a
plethora of injuries and ailments that seemed to constantly affect her
game all through the year. Put simply, it was another gutsy year for the
tiny but determined star. If I were asked, who is the best Korean golfer
in the world right now, Kimmie would be given strong consideration for
that title.
Honorable Mentions:
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