Volume 4, Number 4, June 21, 2006 | ||||||||||||||
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2006 McDonald's LPGA Championship:
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Pages 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, Gallery, Results | |||||||||||||
The Greatest Seoul Sister of them all completes an epic comeback | ||||||||||||||
The McDonald's LPGA Championship is the second Major of the LPGA season, and the second longest running event in women's golf. The list of players who have won it reads like a who's who of greats of the game. The last three years, it has been dominated by Annika Sorenstam; in 2005, she won without breaking a sweat, despite shooting over par in the final round. In 2006, she would be going for her fourth consecutive title. But this is not the story of Annika Sorenstam, or of the McDonald's LPGA
Championship, for that matter. This is the story of the last woman to
win this event before Sorenstam started her streak. This is the story
of the "Golf Queen", as she is known in her country. This is
the story of Se Ri Pak. For despite Sorenstam's massive success at this
event, no recent player's history is more intimately tied in with this
tournament than Pak's. It was here she jump started her career; here she
established a record for excellence that may never be beaten; and here
she came to try to rejuvenate an indomitable career now on the skids.
This is a tale about a brave young player - 6,000 miles away from her
home and everything she has known - rising to heights no one could have
expected, and a much older player trying to recapture the magic that once
seemed so effortless. Chapter
One: The Rookie Se Ri Pak would change that perception completely, but it wasn't easy.
She did not speak English, and was incredibly lonely and sad much of the
time when she first arrived. She missed her friends, her family, the familiar
comforts of home. But she persevered, winning the Qualifying School tournament
late in 1997, in the process setting the record for low score achieved
there. Her success was so impressive that Golf World Magazine put her
on the cover, declaring 'She's 20, she's from South Korea... and she's
the next Tiger Woods'. An auspicious prediction, and one that, as it turned
out, would have more than a shade of truth. As she started her rookie season, Se Ri played decently for a rookie completely out of her element, but certainly not up to the standards Golf World Magazine, and her own sponsors, had expected. As it turned out, Samsung was starting to have second thoughts about their decision to send her to America. They wondered if they wouldn't get more bang for their won by having Se Ri play in South Korea, where she was almost guaranteed to contend, if not win. Having her finish in 40th place in some American tournament, where she would get almost no television coverage, seemed like a dead end proposition. They began to suggest to her that the experiment might end soon if she were not able to produce more impressive results. And then came the McDonald's LPGA Championship in May. It was the first Major that Se Ri was qualified to play in her rookie year. The weather was tough, the field tougher. Not many expected a twenty year old Korean rookie to make much of an impression. But after the first day, the name that sat atop the leaderboard was hers. Longtime fans of the sport were impressed, but knew that certainly her name would not remain there. As the tournament progressed, the pressure was bound to increase. The veteran stars were used to that pressure; but it would surely destroy an untested rookie who had never before been in that situation. But despite the pressure, despite the veterans, despite the less than
ideal conditions, the determined Korean youngster maintained her position.
Even when she was caught by one of her competitors, who tied her for the
lead at the end of the third round, Se Ri persevered. And so it was that,
as the last putt fell on Sunday, it was she who put that putt into the
hole as the new champion. Improbably, the Korean rookie had won, and even
more incredibly, her first win was at a Major. She would later admit that she had no idea that the LPGA Championship was in fact a Major at the time. Perhaps that might have made a difference, perhaps not. What is clear is that, when she reached the next Major on the schedule five weeks later, she managed to win that one, too. And in that case, she had no doubt that she was winning one of the most important events on tour. Se Ri's two wins in Majors turned her into one of the most popular players on the LPGA tour. Suddenly, even magazines like People and US News, which would normally never report on women's golf, featured stories about the bubbly new star. But if she became popular in the US, over in her native land, her success turned her into an icon. The country was going through hard times in 1998; they had been forced to participate in a financial bailout by the International Monetary Fund when they were unable to make good on loans from international institutions. Their soccer team had failed spectacularly to advance at the World Cup that year. The country needed a pick-me-up, and the plucky young girl who was taking the LPGA by storm delivered big. Se Ri became so huge that when she returned home in November, her arrival at the airport was greeted by a huge throng of press, all jockeying to get close to the legend in her own time. Her success also directly fueled the dreams of hundreds of young girls, all of whom suddenly realized that they, too, might be able to compete with the Americans after all. And if they were able to succeed, they might become as rich and famous as Se Ri. This all led to the massive influx of Korean stars onto the LPGA tour in the last few years. And it all started with Se Ri's win at the LPGA Championship. |
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