![]() |
|||||||||||||
Volume 5, Number 8, November 14, 2007 | |||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
KLPGA: Where the Action Is |
Pages 1, 2 | ||||||||||||
With the Korean golfers struggling on the LPGA, the Korean tour regularly spotlights record shattering performances and tense duels | |||||||||||||
The KLPGA has not gotten a lot of respect from the international golf
community, either. The Rolex World Rankings do not reflect well, in general,
the successes of the top golfers on the Korean tour. Whereas the top Japanese
players have tended to find themselves in the top 20 on the world rankings,
the top Korean players were not similarly elevated.
Part of this can be attributed to the strength in the new KLPGA schedule.
The tour now has 18 regular season events, as well as several more events
it co-sponsors with other tours, such as the Kolon-Hana Bank Championship,
the LPGA event in Korea. The purses have also started to go up in the
events; a top tier tournament like the 5th KB Star Tour event now boasts
a purse of 500,000,000 won, or roughly $500,000. That's hardly LPGA territory,
but it is a lot more than a player is going to earn on the Futures Tour,
where top tournament purses are more in the $100,000 range. The events
are for the most part televised, either on network television or on one
of the many sports or golf cable channels in the country. And perhaps
most interestingly of all, the top KLPGA players are finding themselves
invited to more of the premiere women's golf events in the world than
ever before. Just this year, KLPGA stars were invited to participate in
three of the four women's Majors and the Evian Masters, and the top KLPGA
player also gets a chance to represent Korea in the Women's World Cup
of Golf. So if you can be successful in Korea, you can also qualify to
play in some of the greatest international events your sport has to offer.
In the past, there have always been one or two world class players on the KLPGA at any given time, but perhaps at no time in its history have there been so many stars on the tour who have shown they can compete with the best in the world. Hee Young Park is a young player who has been among the top players on the KLPGA since she joined at age 18 in 2005. Na Yeon Choi, who recently won the LPGA Q-School sectional she participated in, is another young player who has focused on the domestic tour for her first few years as a pro. Hyun Hee Moon, Da Ye Na, Ran Hong and Hae Jung Kim are a few more of the promising talents on the tour. But without a doubt, this year three names have separated themselves from the rest on the KLPGA. Indeed, until Na Yeon Choi won the Shinsegae Cup in mid-September, these three women had won all the events contested that year. Second year player Sun Ju Ahn drew first blood when she captured the first (of a series of five) KB Star tour events on tour; this was the season opening event of 2007, after a co-sanctioned event in China. Ahn has continued her magnificent play most of the year, winning twice more. Her season highlight doubtless came when she beat Cristie Kerr and a top field of golfers to capture the Korean Women's Open in May. It is not very often when any player wins three events in a single season in Korea, let alone when a player does it and is not even the top player on tour. The second star is a third year player, Eun Hee Ji. Ji was not much of a force in her rookie year, 2005, but she became a player to watch in 2006 when she managed four top tens. That year, she also was also the Player of the Year on the fledgling Ladies Asian Golf Tour. But nothing prepared folks for her brilliance this year. She has won twice on tour, and looked poised to win three straight events, something only a few players in history had ever done before. She fell just short of that achievement, but has been perennially a factor in many of the events she has entered since. Besides her two wins, she has accumulated (as of The fifth Star Tour Event) seven additional second place finishes, and 13 total top tens.
But all of that was just a warm-up to what she has accomplished in 2007. In the first part of the year, she was actually overshadowed somewhat by the accomplishments of Eun Hee Ji and Sun Ju Ahn. But like the true champion she is, she responded to this tough challenge by raising her game even more than before. In the second half of the season, she became nearly unstoppable. While Ji fell short of winning three events in a row, Shin accomplished that feat, the first player to do that since Mi Hyun Kim in the nineties. After she returned from a few overseas events, she continued her winning ways. She became only the second player to ever win five times in a season, then bettered that, collecting her sixth, seventh and then eighth wins. She already has more career wins on the KLPGA than Kimmie or Se Ri Pak, and is aiming for the all time league record of 20 career wins held by Ok Hee Ku. She is once again scoring under 70 strokes per round, and has nearly doubled her record setting money total from last season. It seems like week in and week out, Ji Yai Shin is either winning the tournament or is right in the hunt to do so. |
|||||||||||||
Next | |||||||||||||