Volume 5, Number 10, January 30, 2008 | |||||||||||||||
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SeoulSisters Awards |
Pages 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 | ||||||||||||||
Happiest
news: Honorable Mentions: At the end of last year, she played on the Lexus Cup team, and went 3-0 in her matches, the only player besides Seon Hwa Lee to collect three wins. She followed that up the following month by representing Korea at the World Cup. Along with partner Ji Yai Shin, she finished third. So all indications were that Kim was finally lined up for that breakthrough victory on the LPGA. But she did not start the 2007 season all that well. Firstly, her longtime sponsor, Shinsegae, decided to part ways with her at the start of the year. Additionally, she only had one top 20 finish in her first few events, the lowlight being a DQ at the Ginn Open. She had gone from looking like a sure winner in 2007 to a big question mark again. But immediately after the DQ, she picked up her game in a major way. She had a top five the following week at the SemGroup; indeed, she looked like she might get into contention for a while. She followed that up with two more top twenties. And then she got to the Corning Classic, an event that had been good recently to the Korean golfers. Jimin Kang had managed her own breakthrough victory there in 2005, and Hee-Won Han, who was not there because of her pregnancy, was the defending champion, having defeated Meena Lee in a playoff there in 2006 (Meena had also finished second there in 2005). Young made her big move on the leaderboard in round two. She shot a blistering 8 under par 64 to vault to a 12 under total, at the time a big lead on the field. But eventually, journeyman American golfer Beth Bader would move ahead of her in the standings. Also up on the leaderboard were several multiple winners, including Paula Creamer (who had played with Young the first two days) and Mi Hyun Kim. On Saturday, Bader and Young played together, and took turns taking the lead. Young eventually carved out a 2 shot lead, still without having made so much as a single bogey all week. But on the 13th hole, she finally made her first mistake, barely missing a par save after missing the green. By the end of the day, Kim found herself tied not only with Bader at 16 under, but also Creamer. Mi Hyun Kim made a 40 footer on the final hole to move to 15 under. It would be a shootout on Sunday for the title. Young played very aggressively to start Sunday, and it paid off. By the
7th hole she had moved to 20 under, a three shot lead at the time. But
then she started making mistakes, two consecutive bogies to be precise,
and just like that she was tied for the lead with Creamer at 18 under.
The rest of the round turned into a battle between Creamer, Bader, Kim
and Mi Hyun Kim for the title. Holes 13-15 proved pivotal. Young made
a stellar par save on 13, while she hit it close on 14 for a birdie while
Creamer struggled. On 15, Young ended up in the bunker, and even after
her sand shot, was still farther away than Creamer was for birdie. But
the key swing happened here: Kim drained the par, Creamer missed the birdie,
and Young would hold on to win the tournament by three shots over Creamer
and Mi Hyun Kim. She was so misty eyed after achieving this longtime goal,
she did not even see the many Koreans who swamped her on the final green
to give her a victory beer bath. It didn't matter: Young Kim was at last
a winner on the LPGA tour! Hee-Won
Han has her first child Se Ri in the Hall of Fame In September, the Hall fun continued when the LPGA threw her a party in Orlando to celebrate her entry. They invited a whole bunch of important people from throughout her career to attend, commissioned a special video presentation to commemorate her achievement, and showered her in presents and accolades (read about it in the 'Best Party' category above). Finally, in November, she officially entered the Hall in a ceremony at that building in St. Augustine. To celebrate this achievement, one of the Korean golf channels showed two solid days of Se Ri Pak programming (in many ways, Se Ri's success was in large part responsible for inspiring the existence of this channel). They showed many of her best tournaments from throughout her career, a two hour special on her career, and capped the marathon with several showings of her Hall of Fame induction. What many may not realize is that, Se Ri also qualified for the KLPGA Hall of Fame in 2007, only the second woman, after Ok Hee Ku, to make it into this Hall. All in all, the almost constant festing was draining and distracting, but she loved every minute of it. And if anyone deserved that kind of attention, it was the chief architect of the Korean Wave, one of the biggest sea changes to hit golf in years. Congratulations again to Se Ri Pak!!!! Birdie
Kim gets married Best reaction of the Year: Honorable
Mentions: Shi Hyun Ahn can't stop smiling after holing out at Canadian Open,
final hole Young Kim can't contain her joy following her Corning Classic win Jee Young Lee's look of misery after hitting drive into woods, 18th
hole, HSBC match vs. Kimmie Best
hot streak: In 2007, her hottest streak came in the middle of the KLPGA season. It started at the Hill State Seokyung Open. At this point in the season, she was, amazingly, third on the money list. She had already won an event, but Sun Ju Ahn and Eun Hee Ji had both won two events. At the Hill State, the tournament came down to a battle between those three players for the crown. It was at this point in the season that Shin put her foot down, shooting a 6 under par 66 in the final round to beat Ji by a shot and Ahn by two strokes. At the next tournament, the BC Card Classic, Shin and Na Yeon Choi were fighting it out for the top spot when a relatively unknown player, Ji Yeon Woo, made a huge back nine charge up the leaderboard. Shin managed to make only one late birdie on the day, but it was enough, and she claimed the one shot win over Woo. Her third win of the season moved her back to the top of the money list. And now, she had a chance to become the first golfer since Mi Hyun Kim in the late 90's to win three tournaments in a row on the KLPGA tour. She did not squander that opportunity. The next event was the KB Star Tour #3. Right away she established herself as the player to beat, making eight birdies and two bogies in the opening round. But Eun Hee Ji wanted to play the spoiler, and she shot a 64 in round one in defense of her title, two shots better. They continued to be neck and neck the rest of the week, with Shin clinging onto a one shot lead most of that time. On Sunday, Ji shot a marvelous 67, but Shin did her one better, shooting a 66 for a 16 under par total, one of the lowest total scores in KLPGA history. Ji's 14 under par total would have been good enough to win most any other tournament in 2007, but Shin still prevailed, claiming her third straight win. The next week, she traveled to the US Women's Open, the biggest tournament in women's golf. Played in miserable conditions with umpteen weather delays, the tournament was tough going for everyone in the field. Nonetheless, at the end of the day Saturday, the name at the top of the leaderboard was Ji Yai Shin's. She would play nearly two rounds of golf on Sunday, and perhaps that was a bit much for her to deal with. Nonetheless, she wound up finishing in solo sixth, her best ever Major finish. She returned to Korea, going for her fourth straight win. Weather forced the cancellation of round one, though, and despite a good run, was only able to finish fifth at the Korea Golf & Art Village Open. Sun Ju Ahn, meanwhile, claimed her third win of the year, perhaps announcing she would challenge Shin again for supremacy. The
KLPGA then took its midyear break. Shin played in a few international
events. She continued her hot streak at the Evian Masters, finishing third,
just a shot out of the playoff eventually won by Natalie Gulbis. However,
she also was eliminated in the first round at the HSBC World Match Play,
and finished tied for 28th at the British Open. When she returned to action
in Korea, however, she quickly picked up the pace again. At the next event,
the KB Star Tour #4, not even a weird rule fiasco which forced the nullification
of the first round (after Shin had grabbed the lead) could slow her down.
Even after falling behind in the second round (which was now the first
round), she still made it up after a furious charge in round three/two,
claiming her record tying fifth win of the year. The following week, she
was at it yet again. At the SK Invitational, she had a more star studded
field than usual to contend with. In the first round, she was paired with
Mi Hyun Kim, the top Korean on the LPGA tour, and Young Kim, who had won
on the LPGA in 2007 and had been her playing partner at the World Cup
at the start of the year. She also had to deal with Jin Joo Hong, the
defending champion of the event. None of that mattered. She handled Kimmie
and Young Kim fairly easily, but Hong hung tough the whole week. Just
two shots ahead of Hong at the turn on Sunday, Shin made two quick birdies
to pad her lead to four. Shin went on to claim her sixth win of the season,
and fifth KLPGA win in her last six starts. After Na Yeon Choi derailed
Shin at the next event, the Shinsegae Cup, Shin would once again return
to the winner's circle the following week at the Samsung Finance Ladies
Championship. How hot was she? Six wins in eight starts, a top ten at
a Major and a top five at the Evian, three wins in a row at one point,
tying the record for most wins in a row, and six total wins on the season,
breaking the all time record for most wins in a season on the KLPGA. That,
my friends, is a hot streak!! The next week, those two would once again battle atop the leaderboard. The tournament was the KB Star Tour #2. In the third round, Park actually outplayed Ji, and should have had a win, but for the unfortunate incident where Park found one of Ji's clubs, put it in her bag, and was called for a two stroke penalty. Ji ended up beating Park in a playoff, so unfortunately that two stroke penalty cost her the match. But regardless of how she got the win, that gave Ji her second straight victory, and a chance to become the first KLPGA golfer since the 90s to win three straight. The next event was a biggie: the Korean Women's Open. And Ji continued her torrid pace, capturing a two stroke lead after two rounds. But that's when the fun ended for Ji: she shot a third round 76 to plummet down the leaderboard, and eventually her rival Sun Ju Ahn would capture the trophy. Still, two straight wins and nearly a third constitutes a pretty major hot streak! Christina Kim's run after Solheim diss |
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