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Volume 5, Number 3, May 30, 2007 | |||||||||||||||
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Corona Championship: Na On Fire! |
Pages 1, 2, Gallery, Results | ||||||||||||||
Nonexempt rookie Na On Min excels in her first LPGA start | |||||||||||||||
In 2006, getting an exempt membership on tour was particularly tough.
There were only 15 exempt cards available through Q-School; most years,
players can count on more than 20 to be up for grabs. For players who
missed the exempt cut line but finished in the top twenty at the tournament,
it was particularly bittersweet. As it turned out, there were several
Korean golfers who had just that experience: Jeanne Cho-Hunnicke missed
an exempt card by a single stroke, while several more fell two shots short.
Among the latter group were two very promising young rookies: Jane Park
(pictured above) and Na On Min. Min had been a member of the Korean national
team when, as an amateur, she participated in Q School and secured a nonexempt
card. She decided to turn pro and join the tour. Park had been one of
the top Korean American prospects coming into qualifying; just a few months
earlier, she had finished tenth at the US Women's Open just before turning
pro. She then played in the Honda tournament in Thailand on a sponsor's
exemption and notched a top thirty finish. She also had a ream of great
amateur achievements to her credit, including a win at the US Women's
Amateur and another runner up finish, and participation in the winning
squad at the Curtis Cup. But even though the two rookies were among the
top nonexempt players on tour, they were not able to get into a field
until several events into the season. Their first chance to play finally
came when the LPGA held its second event of 2007 in Mexico, the Corona
Championship. Many of the top players in the league decided to take a
pass on this event, opening up a lot of spots for nonexempt players. Thus,
everyone from Min and Park to Hana Kim and Su A Kim got a chance to play
their first event of the year.
It was another Korean rookie, however, who held the lead after two rounds.
Angela Park (pictured) has an exempt card, unlike Min (pictured below),
and she has been the strongest and most consistent Korean rookie on tour
all season. She even contended for a title at the Fields Open, falling
just short and winding up third. She had a solid 72 on day one, but absolutely
exploded into action on day two. She shot an 8 under par 65 on that day,
producing nine birdies and only one bogey in the process. Starting on
hole ten, she was three under on her first nine, but really caught fire
on the back, producing five straight birdies to end her day. Her nine
under total put her into a tie for the lead with Taiwanese golfer Yu Ping
Lin, who also shot a 65 on day two, and Italian golfer Silvia Cavalleri.
Another Korean, veteran Sarah Lee, was almost as brilliant, producing
a 7 under par 66 to move to 8 under total, one shot out of the lead.
Then there's Ji-Young Oh. Oh is another 18 year old Korean golfer in her first year on tour. She earned exempt status at Q-School, but did not have the start in her rookie year she had envisioned: in her first four events she had missed the cut badly. But things were starting to turn around for her: at the previous event, the Ginn Open, she had finished tied for 24th. At the Corona, she once again had a solid start, shooting a 72 and a 70 to move to 4 under par and a tie for 16th. She was poised to collect her first top 20, and perhaps even top ten, finish. At this point in the tournament, it was looking good for a Korean golfer to get into contention for the title. But during the third round, things were shaken up again, and the number of golfers who had a realistic chance of collecting the title was considerably reduced. Sarah Lee and Angela Park followed their great second rounds with lackluster performances, one under par and even par respectively. This plopped them at 9 under par total, tied for 6th. They were now four shots out of the lead. By no means was this too far back to make a run, but considering the player who was in the lead, it made life very tough for them. That player? Local daughter Lorena Ochoa, who shot a blistering and borderline ridiculous nine under par 64 to blow past most of the rest of the field. Also tied for the lead was second year star Julieta Granada and veteran Silvia Cavalleri. There were two more players at 12 under. The chances that all five players would shoot poor rounds on Sunday were slight, meaning that, for Park and Lee, they would need a performance like Ochoa's on Saturday to have any chance to collect the win. Not a likely prospect. |
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