![]() |
||||||||||||||
Volume 5, Number 8, November 14, 2007 | ||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
2007 Samsung World Championship |
Pages 1, 2, 3, Gallery, Results | |||||||||||||
Seven Koreans from the LPGA slugged it out in this elite field event | ||||||||||||||
This year, the sponsor's invitation provoked quite a bit of controversy.
Michelle Wie, the Korean American star who has made a huge splash since
she started playing LPGA events at the age of 12, was offered the sponsor's
exemption into the field at the beginning of the year. It seemed like
a safe bet; Wie had already played the event on an exemption in 2006 and
2005, the latter right after she turned pro. Since that day, she had had
a ton of success in the professional events she had played, including
top fives in several Majors. But there was a problem: after the sponsor's
exemption was given this Spring, Wie started to struggle, and instead
of contending for titles, suddenly she was having trouble even making
the cut in most events. By the time the summer arrived, her game was so
out of whack that she was working hard to avoid finishing in last place
in the tournaments she was playing. But she still had the exemption, and
would still be playing in mid-October with the top players in the world,
unless she decided to drop out. Many felt that Wie's play did not merit
inclusion in this elite field this year. The controversy worsened when
it became clear that Annika Sorenstam, who was not so long ago the number
one player in the world, and who had won the Samsung several times, would
not qualify for the event. Sorenstam had been in somewhat of a mild slump
when a neck problem forced her out of action for several months. She had
not won an event in 2007 coming into the Samsung. Still, she was a player
who had won the event several times, and certainly seemed at the moment
more suitable for the sponsor's exemption than Wie. At this point, things
really got bizarre. The sponsors decided to create a second sponsor's
exemption, to be given to "a Hall of Famer not otherwise qualified".
Even this generated controversy: for Juli Inkster and Karrie Webb were
not in the field, either, and both were Hall of Famers having better years
than Sorenstam. Pity poor Sarah Lee (pictured above): she was the player
who was the last to qualify for the Samsung, then she was out, thanks
to the Sorenstam invite. But when Sorenstam turned down the offer, Lee
was back in. The whole affair quite frankly cheapened the tournament,
and the sponsors would do well to get their field criteria in order well
in advance of the 2008 tournament. It simply won't do to create a 'World
Championship' when what you really want is a field of hand picked players.
A tournament needs to set its criteria and live with the consequences,
even if that means the players you really want in the field don't make
it.
Even with the yoyo status of Sarah Lee, the Koreans were well represented
in the field of this tournament. Lee eventually did make it into the field,
joining Se Ri Pak, Mi Hyun Kim, Seon Hwa Lee, Jee Young Lee, Jeong Jang
and Rookie of the Year Angela Park in the mix. Including Michelle Wie,
that meant that eight of the twenty players in the field had Korean blood.
Interestingly, this event, long sponsored by Korean company Samsung, and
once upon a time played in Korea, has only once been won by a Korean golfer.
Se Ri Pak took the title in 1999, when the event was contested in Minnesota
(!). Karrie Webb seemingly had the tournament wrapped up, but made several
mistakes on the last hole to give the gift win to Se Ri. Se Ri also saw
arguably the worst performance of her career happen at this event just
a few years later. In 2004, mired in a deep slump, Pak could not keep
her drives out of the desert (by then, the event was played at its current
home, the Big Horn golf course in southern California). She wound up finishing
15 shots behind the second to last player in the field. She did not even
qualify for the field in 2005.
Joining Ochoa at 4 under was Mi Hyun Kim. Kim had been battling with Creamer to be the third ranked player on tour for some time. It has been a good year for Kimmie, with the impressive win at the SemGroup Championship earlier in the year (beating Juli Inkster in a playoff, no less), and the third place finish at the Match Play Championship among the highlights. Still, she was hungry for another win. On this day, she produced an impressive round, especially on the back nine, where she shot a scorching 6 under par 30. If she could keep up that level of play, she would definitely be a factor come Sunday. Tied another shot back at three under were two more Koreans, Se Ri Pak and Jeong Jang. JJ had yet to win in 2007, but still had made close to a million dollars by this point, while Pak had one win and several impressive finishes in Majors to her credit (the only Major she finished outside of the top ten at this year was the LPGA Championship). Pak actually owns a house at the Big Horn Club, so she must feel somewhat comfortable playing this course. Jee Young Lee shot a 2 under, Sarah Lee shot a 72, and even Seon Hwa Lee, the worst of the seven Korean tour members on this day, produced a 73. For the moment, all of them still had a shot at the title. |
||||||||||||||
Next | ||||||||||||||