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Volume 4, Number 4, May 24, 2006 | ||||||||||||||
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Jinnie from the Block |
Pages 1, 2, Gallery, Results | |||||||||||||
The least known Lee on tour posts her career best finish in Nashville | ||||||||||||||
Ji Yeon Lee, or Jinnie as she is sometimes known, is one of those journeymen
players on the LPGA. She joined the tour in 2003, but during most of that
time has been a conditional player who has had to fight hard to even get
into fields. She turned pro in late 2001 and played the Futures Tour in
2002, but did not play well enough there to earn an LPGA tour card. At
the end of that year, she qualified for the LPGA as a conditional player,
but did not play the tour at all in 2003. Rather, she worked on her game
some more, returning to Q-School in late 2003 to see if she could get
an exempt card there. It didn't happen, and so in 2004, she played the
tour as a non-exempt player. She didn't earn her exempt card on playing
tour that year (she finished 140th on the money list), so once again returned
to Q-School in 2004. This time she wound up 25th in that tournament, and
after a playoff won a coveted exempt card for the 2005 season. But the
best finish she had in 19 starts was a tie for 16th, and she only made
6 cuts that year. So once again, she was forced back to Q-School, and
this time she was only able to earn non-exempt status. Such is the life
of a lower tier player in professional golf. While the top players jet
around the world, earning lucrative endorsements, the majority of golfers
struggle from week to week just to get by.
The weakest of the Lees in terms of performance has been Jinnie. Besides her non-exempt status, she has other disadvantages. Standing barely five feet tall, she does not have the power of Jee Young or Sarah. Short players usually make up for their height with accuracy and superlative short game. She certainly has the former wrapped up: she is usually in the top ten in driving accuracy, hitting over 80% of her fairways. But her short game is definitely not in the same league as Meena Lee's, who is also a short and accurate driver. Even her name makes it hard to stand out on tour; there are actually three JY Lees on the LPGA in 2006 (although Sarah Lee has changed her name to 'Sarah' to stand out from that crowd). Ji Yeon sounds a lot like Jung Yeon or Jee Young, the other two JY Lees on tour. But perhaps the Lee mojo has rubbed off on her a bit. She started the
season decently with a 46th place finish at the MasterCard Classic in
Mexico. But at the Takefuji Classic, the next event she was able to attend,
she finished 17th, one of the best finishes of her career. It's a mark
of how tough it is for a non-exempt player that she was only able to get
into two fields in the first two months of the season. She did play the
next week as well, though she only finished 77th there. Still, a paycheck
is better than a missed cut.
But one star who was in the field was Grace Park. Grace has had flashes of her old brilliance in 2006, but by and large it has been a tough slog for the world's former #2 golfer. But on the first day she came out firing and produced a 6 under par 66 that put her near the top of the leaderboard. She had done the same thing at the first event of the year, but proceeded to fade after that. Hopefully things would go differently for her this time. Her round consisted of seven birdies and one bogey. The damp conditions definitely played in her favor; they made the course play longer, and Grace, who not only hits the ball long but high as well, is a player who is relatively unaffected by wet fairways. Although she still wasn't driving the ball that confidently, everything else seemed to make up for it. If there was a Korean in the field who had the experience and talent to win this, it had to be Grace. But there was a lot of golf yet to be played. Several other Koreans did well on day one. Young Kim shot a 5 under par
67. Young seems to be in the habit of putting herself in contention, then
fading a bit at the end of the week. Perhaps this would be the week she
ended that trend. Another player who had struggled a lot in 2006, even
more than Grace, was Gloria Hee Jung Park. Gloria was not even in the
top 100 on the money list thanks to her disastrous play to date. But on
this day, she shot a 4 under par 68 to put herself on the leaderboard.
Rookies Kyeong Bae and Sun Young Yoo both shot 69s to finish tied for
17th.
The other Korean ladies by and large did not keep pace. Grace Park followed
her wonderful first round with a disappointing even par 72. She still
sat at 6 under, but was now 6 shots out of the lead. Still, with two full
rounds to go, that was not a bad place to be. Rookie Sun Young Yoo, who
had not had a very good rookie year to date, followed her first round
69 with another 69 to join Grace at 6 under. Young Kim also shot a 69
to join Jinnie Lee as the top Korean on the leaderboard at 8 under. Gloria
Park also shot a 72, just like Grace, and sat at 4 under total. Still
a fairly decent result for the struggling star, considering all the missed
cuts she had endured to that point in 2006. |
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