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Volume 4, Number 3, May 3, 2006 | ||||||||||||||
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2006 Ginn Clubs & Resorts Open |
Pages 1, 2, 3, Gallery, Results | |||||||||||||
At the LPGA's newest event, it was the old time Seoul Sisters who made a splash | ||||||||||||||
In 2006, the latest entrant into the big money new event sweepstakes
bowed: the Ginn Clubs and Resorts Open. Ginn is a company that runs a
series of high end living communities that cater to people who like the
all-inclusive lifestyle. A number of these communities include golf courses.
The company decided a good way to publicize one of these communities would
be to hold an LPGA event there; and since the tour did not have a regular
full field tour stop in Florida (and in fact had not had one since the
2001 season, when the Office Depot and Your Life Vitamins tournaments
folded), it was a perfect confluence of a niche that needed filling on
the tour and a sponsor's desire to fill it. And so, the Ginn Clubs Open
was born. To make sure the event would do well, Ginn ponied up a tidy
$2.5 million purse, which made it instantly the second most lucrative
event on tour (behind only the US Women's Open). Once again, a new sponsor
created an event designed to get everyone's attention (by the way, to
show that this competition is still alive and well, Evian quickly boosted
their own purse to $2.6 million - shortly after the Ginn Clubs Open was
announced - to once again become the second richest event in the league).
The big story as the week began, however, was not the preponderance of LPGA talent in attendance, or former men's US Open winners in the pro-am, or even concerts. The stories catching attention at the start of the week were the two sponsor's exemptions for the event. The first was a lady named Andia Winslow. She is an amateur golfer who played for Yale, but that is not the reason she was special. Winslow was also the first African American to play on the tour in 5 years. Winslow also had been the first African American woman to play golf in the Ivy League. But an even bigger story was the other sponsor's exemption: 13 year old Dakoda Dowd. It's true that Dowd's age alone would be enough to turn heads, and there's no doubt that, with a plethora of junior golf wins, she is one of the most talented young golfers in the country. But that was not the reason she got the exemption. It had always been the dream of her mother, Kelly Jo Dowd, to see her daughter play on the LPGA. But Ms. Dowd had been diagnosed with terminal cancer, and it was doubtful she would live long enough to see that dream come true. Bobby Ginn, CEO of Ginn Clubs, heard the story and extended Dakoda an offer to play in his event. Few would have guessed the media onslaught that would result from that decision. In the end, both ladies did their best, but neither came close to making
the cut. But as far as feel good stories go, it's hard to top them.
The leader after round one was American Cristie Kerr, who had been playing
solid golf all year without a win to show for it. She shot a 7 under par
65. Not surprisingly, Lorena Ochoa, who seemed to contend every single
week on tour thanks to her tendency to get out to strong starts, was tied
for second after a 67. Tied with Lorena was Laura Diaz, for whom her 67
was the best round she had shot all year. The top Korean on the board
was the aforementioned Mi Hyun Kim. Peanut had already managed two top
five finishes in 2006, one of which she had had a serious chance to win
(the MasterCard Classic). Although 2005 had been the worst season of her
career, it seemed as though 2006 was going to be a whole lot better. Kimmie
shot a 2 under par 70 and sat in a tie for 6th. The other player at 2
under after day one was rookie Sun Young Yoo, a rather surprising player
to have managed that given she had only made her first cut of the year
in her previous event. The golfers at 1 under included another rookie,
Jee Young Lee, and Sung Ah Yim, who had shocked Annika Sorenstam to win
the tour's previous event, the Florida's Natural Championship (read all
about it elsewhere in this issue!). In the end, not everyone was able
to finish due to the slowness of play, so round one actually completed
early Friday morning.
Ochoa reached 10 under par while Mi Hyun got to 8 under. But then Ochoa
pushed a drive on the 14th hole into the trees. She was forced to take
an unplayable due to her difficult lie. She then tried to get over the
trees but clipped a branch and fell straight down. By the time her adventure
was over, she had made triple bogey on the hole and dropped to 7 under
par, where she would eventually finish the day. For the first time in
the tournament, Mi Hyun Kim sat at the top of the leaderboard. Kimmie
would hang onto her spot at 8 under and go into the weekend as the leader.
Coming in at 6 under par was the Japanese rookie sensation Ai Miyazato.
So the final group would contain Kimmie, Ochoa and Miyazato. One thing
was for sure: with the gigantic throng of reporters who followed the Japanese
star's every move, Mi Hyun would not have to worry about empty galleries
on Saturday.
Then there was Se Ri Pak. Coming back from an event where she had to
drop out due to injury, Se Ri had played an unusually strong round on
the first day. She hit 11 fairways and 14 greens and finished the day
at even par, very solid for this course. But on day two, she struggled
a bit more, and began to fall down the leaderboard towards the cut line.
Fortunately, she righted the ship just in time, and a last hole birdie
gave her a 2 over par 74 for the day and 2 over par total for the event.
Since the cut ended up being 4 over, she made it with room to spare. Her
current position, tied for 34th, even gave her a shot at a top ten if
she could rally on the weekend. Talk about an occurrence that was long
overdue!
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