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Volume 4, Number 8, September 6, 2006 | ||||||||||||||
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There's a New Lee in Town |
Pages 1,
2, 3, Can
Open Gallery, Can Open Exclusives, Wendy's Gallery, Can Open Results, Wendy's Results |
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Jee Young wasn't the only Korean to start nicely. Defending champion Meena Lee showed that she really likes the Great White North by shooting a four under par 68. Il Mi Chung, who had made her career best finish (third place) at the previous year's event, also shot a 68. Both of these ladies obviously like playing in Canada! Among the many people tied for tenth at 2 under par were Se Ri Pak, Gloria Park, Christina Kim, Sarah Lee and Young Jo. A few top Koreans, however, did not fare so well. Mi Hyun Kim, who has been having a career year, was coming off a missed cut at the British Open. The bad mojo continued on this day, as she shot a 2 over par 74. Kyeong Bae, Seon Hwa Lee and Aree Song joined her there. Jeong Jang, another Korean having a banner year, also shot over par. But there was still time to right the ship for these ladies, provided that Stanford didn't continue shooting 64s. Jee Young slowed down a little on day two, producing a two under par
70 that consisted of four birdies and two bogies. But the other top players
also shot 70 on this day, so Lee remained two shots out of the lead, tied
with American Cristie Kerr. The big news as far as the locals were concerned
was that Lorie Kane, the most famous Canadian player on the tour, moved
to 6 under and put herself into contention. It was not clear whether her
success would be a distraction for Lee, but fortunately for her, she wouldn't
have to find out, as Kane would be in the second to last twosome on Saturday,
while Jee Young would be in the final twosome with Stanford.
On Saturday, Jee Young played in the final group in an LPGA tournament for the first time since her victory at CJ. It was a tense day for her, but in general she played decently, keeping herself within sight of the top spot for the third day in a row. She shot a solid but unspectacular one under par 71. She struggled mainly with her driving, something that has tortured her all year, but her irons were solid. She made more mistakes on this day, collecting four bogies compared with five birdies. Stanford wasn't making it any easier on her. She shot a 3 under par 69 to move to 13 under par total, five shots ahead of Jee Young. Lee was going to have to go pretty low on Sunday if she were going to win. Still, her great play kept her in third place at 8 under total. Passing Lee for solo second was none other than Meena Lee, the tournament's
defending champion. After Meena shot a 73 on Friday, it looked like she
had knocked herself out of the running. But on this day she shot a flawless
66: 6 birdies, no bogies. This moved her all the way to 9 under par, four
shots out of the lead. Like her fellow Lee, she was going to need a fantastic
round to take the trophy, but it was within her grasp. Another Korean
who fared well this day was Young Kim, who shot a 5 under par 67 that
moved her to five under total and a tie for fifth. Young Jo sat at 4 under
after a 69, while Sun Young Yoo and Il Mi Chung both were just two shots
out of the top ten at 2 under. But realistically, they were out of the
running for the title. If a Korean were going to win the Canadian trophy
this year, it was going to be someone named Lee. The only question was
whether it would be a Lee who had won the title before (Meena) or not
(Jee Young).
In general, it was a great week for the Koreans: eight of them got top
tens. Besides the two Lees, rookie Sun Young Yoo finished 6th, Il Mi Chung
and Young Kim tied for 8th, and Gloria Park, Jeong Jang and Young Jo tied
for 10th.
On the first day, Jee Young again got out to a great start, just like she had the two previous weeks. She played off the tenth tee in the afternoon, and birdied four of her first six holes to shoot 32 on the back nine. She bogied the first hole (her tenth), but birdied 2 and 3 and eagled 4 to vault to 7 under and the lead. One more bogey on the 6th hole gave her a total of 6 under par 66. This would eventually be good for a tie for the lead after round one, the second straight event where she had had at least a share of the first round lead. She was absolutely murdering it off the tee, driving it more than 295 yards on this day and over 290 for the week, the longest in the field. Perhaps this would be the week when she would get that second win. |
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