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Volume 4, Number 8, September 6, 2006 | ||||||||||||||
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2006 Safeway Classic |
Pages 1, 2, 3, 4, Gallery, Results | |||||||||||||
At that point I saw Kimmie walk by on 15. She was at one under par. An enormous crowd was following them; she was paired with Natalie Gulbis and Morgan Pressel on this day, which explained the mobs. On 17 JJ was again nearly perfect: perfect drive, approach to 15 feet, putt to the lip, tap in par. 18 was also routine. She was playing really well, and it seemed like she might be a factor come Sunday. She ended up shooting a 69 on the day, which definitely put her in the hunt, at least for the moment. Next I walked over to watch Joo Mi Kim, who was playing with Amy Hung
the first two rounds. In the group behind these two were two rookies I
had never seen play live before, Jee Young Lee and Sun Young Yoo. Joo
Mi was dressed fetchingly in a bright blue blouse and white pants. She
was playing well, but Hung was not. While Joo Mi made a routine par on
the par 3 8th, Hung hit her tee shot in the water, had to walk all the
way back to the drop zone after a ruling, and generally made a mess of
things. I stayed to watch Jee Young and Sun Young play the hole. I can
tell you right now what Yoo's problem is: putting. Tee to green she was
pretty sharp. But she had at least three three putts while I was watching,
and missed all those par saves from within three feet. She has got to
work on that if she wants to go to the next level.
And that's the last time I was able to say THAT for a while, because Jee Young caught fire like you wouldn't believe, and I got to watch it all! Her next seven holes were among the most impressive I have ever witnessed. On 10, the par 5, she takes out what looked like a 7 wood for her tee shot. Then KAPOW! High, long, straight. The gallery in the bleachers at ten gasped. I've never heard that sound before at this tournament! Turns out she hit that tee shot 250 yards, outdriving her two partners, who both hit driver. Just incredible. To add insult to injury, she hit the 7 wood again and, despite being 250 yards out, reached the green. She wasn't close to the flag, but two putted for birdie. Yoo did it the old fashioned way, hitting her third to three feet and making birdie that way. On 11, Jee Young's tee shot was great, but her approach bounded off the back of the green. They had to move some wires so she could strike her ball. She then hit a perfect chip, and it found the bottom of the cup. She had a big, cute, almost sheepish, smile after that!
Well, it was worth it, because Joo Mi had a virtual tap in birdie after a great iron on 15. She moved to 5 under. Then Jee Young hit her own laser on 15 to a few feet for a birdie. 7 under par. It was at this point I realized that she had made 6 straight birdies. I wonder if she knew? On 16, Lee hit yet another brilliant iron to about three feet for an easy birdie. That made seven in a row. I told the marshal at the hole, and after she teed off on 17 and I walked back past him, he shouted out, 'Is she in the fairway?' He was really into her quest for eight straight!! On 17, she was in the fairway, and her approach was maybe a foot from
perfect. But as it was, it rolled off the top tier to about thirty feet
from the flag. A super tough birdie try. But darn if she didn't almost
make it. Her line was perfect but her speed was just two rolls short.
Her tap in par was her first since the 9th hole. She also parred 18, again
just missing a birdie. Still, her 29 on the back gave her the first round
lead by the end of the day. She made the tough back nine on this course
look easy, and did it without hitting so much as a single driver.
Christina wound up shooting a 66, which left her in second place after the first round. With Jee Young Lee in first place and Mi Hyun Kim tied for fourth at 5 under, the Korean women got off to a great start this week. Others on the top of the board included Joo Mi Kim, who shot a 4 under par 68. Joo Mi finished 4th at this event in 2005, so she obviously loves this course. And then there was JJ. She had told me earlier how much she likes this course, and her two second place finishes were proof of that. She picked up right where she left off with a 3 under par 69 that put her into contention for her much coveted win. After Christina was done, I worked my way over to watch Hana Kim. Hana
has struggled since becoming a pro, and had missed the cut here in her
rookie year. But wonders of wonders, she was 3 under par when I reached
her! She made two more pars on the holes I saw and got into the house
with a solid 69 that put her into a tie for 16th. If she could keep playing
at that level, she could be in for the best tournament of her career.
I got to the course at 7:30 AM so I could follow Hana Kim, who was playing in the first group to tee off on the first tee that morning.. I actually got there when Soo Young Moon was teeing off hole 1, and saw her hit it tight on the par 3 2nd. I reached Hana at the fourth hole, and saw her lip out a really short birdie try. This was a good chance for me to get to watch Hana for the first time. From what I can see, she's pretty solid tee to green, and a little worse in her short game. But not too bad. Based on what I saw, I'm surprised she hasn't had better results, but as she told me herself, she feels it's hard to get a run going when you don't know when you are playing your next event (Hana is a conditional player on tour). I would expect her to be a nice solid top 50 pro sometime soon if she keeps playing like she did while I watched. She has that potential. On the par 5 7th, she got to ten yards in front of the green in two, then chipped five feet past the hole and made the birdie. She moved to 4 under, which at the time was 4th place. After she teed off on 8, I moved to the 11th hole, which is right next to the 8th tee. Soo-Yun Kang was teeing off. She didn't look very happy, and was smoking like a chimney while she waited for the fairway to clear. I glanced at her scoreboard and discovered that she had double bogeyed the par 5 10th. Good drive here, though. |
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