Daily Dispatch

Superwomen are new frontier

South Koreans dominating the fairways with their competitiv­e edge

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OTHER golfers beware. With an ultracompe­titive domestic tour and a seemingly limitless supply of young, talented players willing to sacrifice everything for success, South Korea’s dominance of world women’s golf is not going away – and if anything, it could get even stronger.

For years now, rivals have watched in wonder as a succession of South Korean players with immaculate techniques and nerves of steel have lifted trophy after trophy, including five of the last 10 major championsh­ips.

Among the world’s current top 10, six are South Korean, including world number two Park In-Bee. Number one is New Zealand’s Lydia Ko, born in South Korea. Nine of the top 20 are also South Korean and out of the 30 LPGA events contested so far this year, Korean golfers have won 14 – two of them playing in their rookie season.

Theories abound as to why South Korean women are so dominant and include vague mumblings about “sensitive fingers” – a real or imagined physical trait also cited when discussing their success in archery.

More considered opinions cite a combinatio­n of cultural forces: a strong work ethic, driven parental support and a grinding education system that encourages the sort of repetitive, focused effort that suits the quest for golfing perfection.

But Korean LPGA executive vice-chairman Kang Choon-Ja believes the real answer lies in a topquality domestic tour, which allows players to begin their internatio­nal careers almost fully formed.

The prominence of South Korean women on the world stage is down to “the continued emergence of star players ... through an extremely competitiv­e domestic tour structure that gives them experience of top-class tournament play”, said Kang.

South Korea’s rise as a golfing power dates from the 1998 US Open victory of Pak Se-Ri – then 20 years old and in her rookie LPGA season.

She was the first Korean – indeed, the first Asian – to win the oldest women’s major, and became the poster-girl for a South Korean golfing boom.

Pak won Rookie of the Year in 1998, and seven other South Korean women have emulated her since then. The same number have won US Open titles, including this year’s victor Chun In-Gee.

“Their work ethic, fundamenta­ls, techniques are amazing,” US women’s golf legend Juli Inkster said when she was in South Korea for the recent LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championsh­ip.

“What I love about Korea is the way the people, the players, they have so much respect for women’s golf,” said Inkster.

From just a few hundred in the 1990s, the number of full profession­als, semi-pros and teaching pros has exploded to more than 2 000, and the KLPGA has developed a three-tier tour system to try to meet the demand.

The Jump Tour has 16 events for fledgling players, while the Dream Tour for more advanced players boasts 20 tournament­s. Finally there are the 29 firstclass events on the full-fledged KLPGA tour.

Total prize-money for the latter currently stands at 18.5-billion won (R227-million), up from 2-billion won (R24-million) in 1996 and nearly twice the 10 billion won (R123-million) available on the domestic men’s tour.

“The lower-tier tours are a great opportunit­y for players to improve their skill sets and get the early, practical experience of tournament play that will set them up for the future,” said Kang.

The players coming through the system certainly don’t lack for confidence.

“Top KLPGA players are good enough to lift an LGPA trophy any time,” said Park Sung-Hyun, a star in the making who has won three domestic tour titles so far this year.

Like many players of her generation, Park started early, picking up her first club at the age of eight and embarking on a strenuous training programme.

“It was my mom who got me into it. At that time Pak Se-Ri was on TV a lot. So I really started out as one of the ‘Se-Ri kids’,” the 22-year-old said.

“I practised from dawn to dusk for up to eight hours almost every day.”

Further back down the line are the likes of 13year-old Sophia Lee, who only started playing in January but is already enrolled in a top after-school golf academy with a strenuous daily programme from 3pm to 9.30pm.

“After golf practice I work out a lot in the gym, especially on strengthen­ing my core. It’s a tough workout,” the teenager said.

Such academies don’t come cheap, but South Korean parents are used to the idea of dedicating a whopping chunk of their income to extra tuition, whether it be evening cram schools or specialist training.

And the return on investment can be huge if your daughter breaks through into the big time.

“Women’s golf is one of the most popular sports here in terms of fandom and corporate sponsorshi­ps,” golf columnist Kim Maeng-Ryung said.

Players are starting earlier than ever and, with the right financial support, the training and facilities they can access is second to none.

“The competitio­n to become just a regular KLPGA player is absolutely cut-throat,” said Kim. — AFP

 ?? Pictures: GETTY IMAGES ?? KEEPING A STEADY HEAD: Lydia Ko, who is the number one woman golfer in the world, is currently based in New Zealand, but she was born in South Korea
Pictures: GETTY IMAGES KEEPING A STEADY HEAD: Lydia Ko, who is the number one woman golfer in the world, is currently based in New Zealand, but she was born in South Korea
 ??  ?? PROVING A SURE HIT: Park In-Bee is ranked second in the world and is just one of many South Koreans making waves on the women’s circuit
PROVING A SURE HIT: Park In-Bee is ranked second in the world and is just one of many South Koreans making waves on the women’s circuit

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