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Volume 5, Number 3, May 30, 2007 | |||||||||||||||
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Heart and Seoul |
Pages 1, 2, Gallery, Results | ||||||||||||||
Mi Hyun Kim wins one for the Koreans, then makes a wonderful gesture to the US | |||||||||||||||
And over on the LPGA tour, it seemed hardly a week went by where a Korean player wasn't in the mix. Koreans not only won the first two events of the year, both in Hawaii, they also finished second in those events as well. Seon Hwa Lee had already notched several runner up finishes by late April of 2006; Sung Ah Yim had stared down Annika Sorenstam for her first career win in Atlanta; and Sarah Lee and Aree Song had just missed out winning the Phoenix event as well. Cut to 2007, and the landscape had changed markedly. Joo Mi Kim and Meena
Lee both missed the cut in their title defenses in Florida; the Atlanta
event doesn't even exist any longer, but Sung Ah Yim has not been playing
all that well, anyway. Despite a plethora of high quality Korean rookies
in 2007, only Angela Park was really putting up good results consistently.
Song Hee Kim in particular was struggling to adapt to the big leagues;
it took her only three events to notch her first win on the Futures Tour,
but on the LPGA, she found it hard to even make the cut reliably. In event
after event, it seemed like the Korean golfers were absent from contention
when the tournament heated up on Sunday.
The SemGroup Championship was contested May 4 through 6th in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
This event was formerly hosted by John Q. Hammons, and was played in September,
but the powers-that-be decided to change its time to Spring. This proved
to be a somewhat questionable idea. The weather that time of year in Oklahoma
is rainy, to put it mildly, and tornadoes and thunderstorms sometimes
threatened the 2007 edition with delays and even possible cancellation.
The Tulsa area, however, had it easy compared to neighboring Kansas. The
week before the event, the small town of Greensburg was nearly wiped off
the map by a category 5 tornado, one of the nastiest in recorded history.
It was a story that was still very much in the news as the tournament
began.
Shooting a great round on the tricky course, and moving herself into contention as a result, was Mi Hyun Kim. This was certainly an unexpected development. The course played at over 6,600 yards, one of the longest courses on tour, but the wet conditions had made it play far longer even than that. It was certainly not a surprise that a long hitter like Sjodin (or Se Ri, for that matter), would be in contention, but Kimmie was not even in the top 100 among hitters on tour. She was keeping herself in the mix through her accuracy off the tee and her amazing putting. More than that, really: her 68 on day two was one of the best rounds of the day. It left her just one shot out of the lead with one round to go. Several other Koreans and top players lurked a few shots back. Juli Inkster
was at 1 under par, and she was certainly capable of making up three shots
in a round. Lorena Ochoa, the world's number one golfer, was also at one
under. Among Koreans at that score were Meena Lee, Angela Park, and Aree
Song. Young Kim produced a 68 of her own on day two to move to even par
for the tournament. Even golfers five or six shots back had a chance at
the title if, as predicted, the weather turned bad. So there was no lack
of potential winners among the Koreans. But could one of them rise to
the occasion and get that first win of 2007? And if so, who would it be?
The odds definitely favored Kimmie or Se Ri, just based on their previous
track records.
As for the Koreans, Se Ri was not having much luck on this day. For the third event in a row, she put herself into a good position going into the final round, only to struggle on that day. She wound up shooting a 3 over par 74 and faded to a tie for 13th finish, just one shot out of a top ten. It was not a terrible finish, but given the fact that most of the players in contention were unproven on the LPGA, she probably let a golden chance to get her first win of the year go by. All she needed would have been a 70 to tie, a 69 to win outright. Young Kim, meanwhile, continued her excellent year, shooting a one under par round, one of the few under par rounds of the day. She finished at one under total, a tie for fifth, although she missed a great birdie chance on the last hole that would have moved her into a tie with Miyazato for the clubhouse lead. Meena Lee, Jeong Jang and Gloria Park all finished tied with Se Ri at 13th, just out of the top ten. |
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