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Volume 4, Number 1, March 8, 2006 | |||||||||||||||
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Wonder Down Under |
Pages 1, 2, 3, Gallery, Results | ||||||||||||||
So the stage was set: could the 16 year old amateur make history and become the first amateur to ever win a women's professional golf event in Australia? Even more, she could become the youngest person, male or female, to ever win an event on a major golf tour (the ANZ Masters was co-sanctioned by the Ladies European Tour), as well as the first amateur to win on that tour in more than 20 years. A lot was riding on the outcome, but a group of Amy's school chums from her high school (which was only a few miles from the course) followed her all weekend, cheering her on at every opportunity, and her dad acted as her caddie, hoping to keep her steady. But the pressure, and the attention the media was paying, were enormous. Amy got out to a great start with an extremely long drive on the first
hole, followed by a wedge to a foot for an easy birdie. She then moved
to 13 under by reaching the par 5 third hole in two and two putting for
birdie. Her life became easier when Kreutz dropped shots on the first
and second holes, and after birdies on three by Catherine Cartwright and
Joh, Amy now had a three shot lead over the field. So far so good.
Amy's lead was three over Cartwright, but things took a turn for the worse when she bogied 9 while her opponents all birdied. She was still in the lead, but then disaster struck. On the tenth hole, her drive barely avoided the water. She punched out, landed in a bunker, and got on the green in three. She then three putted for a crippling double bogey. Combined with a birdie Cartwright made on the 12th hole, Yang lost her lead for the first time in several days. To add insult to injury, Kreutz also holed a 60 foot birdie to move into a tie for 2nd with Amy. Fortunately, Amy bounced back with two woods to just in front of the green on the par 5 12th, followed by a pitch close and a birdie putt. This moved her back into a tie for the lead with Cartwright. Meanwhile, the Taiwanese amateur Ya Ni Tseng made her own statement.
Coming from way back in the field, she shot a final day 64 to move all
the way to 12 under. She had a chance to make it even lower, but could
not negotiate a birdie on the last hole. Still, there was now a solid
score posted that had to be beaten.
Meanwhile, Tiffany Joh made her own run at Yang. She made a clutch birdie on 15 to move to 12 under, then followed that with another great birdie on 17 to go to 13 under. Amy was not able to make birdied there. So with one hole to go, Amy Yang now had a one shot lead over Joh and a two shot lead over Cartwright. It looked like history might soon be made. But there were still more surprises in store. Catherine Cartwright hit
a solid approach on 18, then buried her birdie to move to 13 under. But
it seemed academic, for Amy hit a perfect drive on 18, long and straight.
Joh's drive landed in the rough, and her second came up well short of
the green. All Amy had to do was get the ball on the green and the title
was probably hers.
The look on Amy's face said it all. She was very sad that she had missed
her chance to put away the championship, but she quickly regained her
composure and prepared to win it in the playoff. The two players again
played the 18th hole. Cartwright hit first, but her drive found a bunker.
Yang then proved she was not shaken up by recent events when she murdered
her tee shot long and straight. Cartwright's second shot found the front
of the green. Now Amy faced the same shot she had screwed up so badly
moments earlier. This time she hit a very solid iron to 20 feet. She had
the advantage, but Cartwright was not out of it.
It had been a truly memorable week. Amy had extended the success of the teen brigade into uncharted waters with this amazing victory. She planned to take a day off from school to relax, but went back to show everyone the trophy she had won. She was duly cheered by her classmates as the media recorded the moment. Yang still plans to stay an amateur until she is 18, and her coach believes she still has a lot of work to do before she is ready for the big leagues. But one could not help but be impressed by the potential. Amy looks like nothing so much as a young Se Ri Pak, powerfully built, belting long drives and making clutch plays while maintaining an eerie composure. Time will tell whether she ever reaches the heights of Hall of Famer Pak, but when you consider how far she has come in such a short time, you can't help but think the sky may indeed be the limit for this teenage phenom. |
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