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The
2007 KLPGA season has started at last, and the first five tournaments
have already been contested, including the biggest, the Korean Women's
Open. In 2006, the league was dominated by a teenage rookie named Ji Yai
Shin, who ended up winning virtually every award there was to win on tour
that year, from Rookie of the Year to low scoring average to most wins
to Player of the Year. She set an all time record for most money earned
in a season, and became the first golfer in history to record a sub-70
scoring average on tour. Early in 2007, Shin had continued her torrid
pace with top fives in two events in Australia (including a second place
finish at the ANZ Ladies Masters), and a solid finish at the Kraft Nabisco
Championship. She also teamed with Young Kim to finish third at the Women's
World Cup of Golf. Would the feisty, ever smiling Shin continue her rampage
on the KLPGA tour in 2007?
Several other players hoped to prevent that occurrence. Sun Ju Ahn is
another young golfer who was a rookie on tour in 2006. She was completely
overshadowed on tour that year, despite winning an event and finishing
in the top ten on the money list. Early in 2007, she had also been showing
promise, with strong finishes in the Australian events. Hee Young Park
has been a perpetual runner up on tour since joining in 2005. She finished
second on the money list in 2005 to Bo Bae Song, then second last year
to Shin. Would this be her breakout season? Then there were the players
who had obtained nonexempt status on the LPGA tour but chose to focus
on the KLPGA: Eun Hee Ji, Hae Jung Kim and Hyun Hee 'Honey' Moon. They
have all been solid top ten golfers on the KLPGA in the past; would one
of them have a breakout season in '07?
The
first event of the season was the first KB Star Tour event, contested
from April 19 - 21st. There are four KB Star Tour events on the KLPGA
tour every year, with the fourth and final one being the most lucrative.
In the first round this year, the leader was young Sun Ju Ahn. She shot
a 68 for a 4 under par total and a three shot lead. Making things even
more promising for Ahn was the fact that most of the stars on tour had
a slow start at the event. Hee Young Park shot a weak 75, while Ji Yai
Shin shot a positively miserable 78, and was in danger of missing her
first cut ever on tour. In the second round, Hee Young continued to struggle
and did in fact miss the cut after shooting a horrendous 85, possibly
the worst score of her pro career. Shin rebounded (somewhat) with a 2
over par 74, which, thanks to the tough conditions, moved her into a tie
for 11th. She had a great streak of consecutive top tens going back to
the previous season, and was now in position to continue that. But winning
looked like a tough proposition: Despite a 76 shot by Ahn in the second
round, she was still three shots ahead of anyone else in the field with
her even par total, and eight shots ahead of Shin.
The KB Star event finished much as the previous two rounds suggested
it would, with Ahn claiming the first title of the season. It wasn't easy,
though. She shot another 76 and struggled to hang on, winning the event
by a single stroke over three players, including Hyun Hee Moon. Shin made
a titanic run at the trophy, leaping from 11th to a tie for second with
Moon and fellow KLPGA star Ran Hong. The top ten streak was alive for
the moment, and she had narrowly missed claiming the trophy and sending
a message that Ji Yai Shin was still the top dog on tour. But for the
moment, Sun Ju Ahn had emerged from the shadow of her fellow second year
star to stand atop the tour.
Scores:
1 Sun Ju Ahn 68(1) 76(12) 76(32) +4
2 Hyun Hee Moon 78(65) 75(4) 68(1) +5
2 Ji Yai Shin 78(65) 74(3) 69(2) +5
2 Ran Hong 71(2) 76(12) 74(14) +5
5 Mi Sun Kim 74(19) 75(4) 74(14) +7
6 Sung Hyo Sun 72(10) 83(71) 69(2) +8
Notables
7 Hae Jung Kim 77(46) 75(4) 73(7) +9
13 Ha Neul Kim 71(2) 82(58) 74(14) +11
23 Ji Yeon Lee 77(46) 75(4) 77(38) +13
25 Eun Hee Ji 72(10) 84(78) 74(14) +14
31 Na Yeon Choi 72(10) 86(95) 73(7) +15
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