![]() |
||||||||||||||
Volume 4, Number 3, May 3, 2006 | ||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
2006 Florida's Natural Charity Championship |
Pages 1, 2, Gallery, Results | |||||||||||||
Another first time Korean winner pulls off a stunner in Atlanta | ||||||||||||||
One of the more interesting coincidences is that the two Korean golfers who won those first two events were both second year players: Joo Mi Kim and Meena Lee. One of the golfers who contended for a while at the event Kim won was yet another second year golfer, Sung Ah Yim. Yim would fade in the end, and Kim, a golfer whose career in many ways paralleled Yim's, would go on to take the trophy. It was not the first time their paths had crossed. Both, as mentioned a moment ago, were second year players. Both were 21 years old. And weirdly, both had scored their most recent top five finishes at the same event, the 2005 Safeway Classic, where Yim finished 5th and Kim 4th. And they both had finished nearly identically on the money list in 2005, with Yim gaining a slight edge by finishing 43rd to Kim's 50th place showing. Previous to Joo Mi's win, Yim had come closer to getting a win than Kim had. The event had been the 2005 Jamie Farr Owens Corning Classic. Coming into the last hole, Yim only needed a birdie on the final par 5 to win the event outright. However, she not only missed that putt, she also missed the par save, and thus failed to qualify for the playoff eventually won by American golfer Heather Bowie. Now her good friend Kim won her first good chance to get a trophy and had 'one up' on Yim. But Yim would get a chance to even the score in their friendly rivalry soon enough.
But as the 2006 event approached, Chick-Fil-A decided to abandon their sponsorship. The people who ran the event struggled to find someone else to pay the bills, and in the eleventh hour, an orange juice company named Florida's Natural signed to pick up the tab. Thus you had the weird confluence of a Georgia golf tournament called Florida's Natural. But hey, anything that allowed the tournament to continue was fine with the LPGA! One unfortunate byproduct of all the last minute negotiations was that the tour was not able to secure television coverage for the event. It thus became the first LPGA event of 2006 with no television coverage whatsoever. Regardless of that, Annika was returning to defend her title, but she had not been at her usual early season best in 2006. She had won the first tournament she played this year, the MasterCard Classic, although by only a shot over rookie Seon Hwa Lee. But she had not been much of a factor at either the Safeway International or the Nabisco; the latter event she had won by nine shots in 2005. So doubtless she was really hankering to get back to her winning ways at this event.
Notably absent from the top of the leaderboard were the Koreans. In fact, no Korean was in the top ten after day one. The Koreans who had managed the best first rounds were Jee Young Lee, Meena Lee, Young Kim and the aforementioned Sung Ah Yim. All four ladies shot 4 under par 68s and sat in a tie for 12th. Four more Koreans, including Jeong Jang, were at 3 under. Fortunately there were still three days to go, and these women were close enough that they still had a chance to get back into the event if they played well. If the saying 'what a difference a day makes' were ever true, it was true on Friday, day two of the tournament. The Koreans had played well on day one, but despite that had failed to challenge for the lead. On day two, several Korean golfers shot lights out golf and climbed to the top of the leaderboard. In just one day, the event went from being one of the most disappointing for the Koreans in 2006 to potentially the greatest.
But Yim wasn't the only Korean kicking butt this morning. Starting about
an hour later, rookie Jee Young Lee soon had her own magnificent round
going. The rookie had already shown she could play on the LPGA by winning
the CJ 9 Bridges Classic in 2005 before she was even a member of the tour
(in fact, it was this win that got her onto the tour in the first place).
She had had a decent rookie campaign up to this event, but it had paled
in comparison to that of fellow Korean (and fellow Lee) Seon Hwa Lee.
Jee Young hadn't yet scored a top ten, but had a 22nd and a 15th place
finish on her resume in 2006. At the previous event, the Takefuji Classic
in Las Vegas, she had managed her best finish of the season yet, a 13th.
Jee Young continued that streak by compiling a 7 under par 65 on this
day. Since she started the morning at 4 under, like Sung Ah had, she ended
up the day at 11 under in solo second place.
Several other Korean golfers had good days, though not quite in the same league as those three. Jeong Jang notched a 68 to move to -7, while Meena Lee's 69 also put her at that score. This score positioned them in a tie for 12th. At 6 under total were Christina Kim and Sun Young Yoo, a rookie who made her first cut of the year here by shooting back to back 69s. A shot further back were Young Kim, Mi Hyun Kim and another rookie, Kyeong Bae. |
||||||||||||||
Next Page | ||||||||||||||