Taranaki Daily News

Kang bags star caddie for Open

- MARC HINTON

At first ace American golfer Danielle Kang thought someone was pulling her leg. Steve Williams on her bag? C’mon.

Then as messages turned to phone calls which turned to emails, and the deal was done, the

24-year-old world No 21 and 2017 major winner (the KPMG PGA Championsh­ip) headed to the LPGA Tour’s first ever stop in New Zealand with a smile on her dial and spring in her step.

Kang, who had already played

27 holes at Windross Farm in south Auckland by the time she spoke to the media late yesterday morning, was not letting on who had brokered the deal to have the Kiwi rated the sport’s premier caddie on her bag for the MCKAYSON New Zealand Women’s Open starting Thursday.

But she was not hiding her delight at the outcome.

‘‘He’s a really cool guy, he knows all the numbers ... he knows everything. He’s like a walking yardage book,’’ said Kang in the midst of a busy day of practice and a po¯ whiri out at Windross Farm. ‘‘I just look at him and I don’t even need to ask. He just tells me what I’m thinking. It’s fun so far.’’

Williams, of course, knows the game of golf inside out, having served as Tiger Woods’ bagman for 12 years and 13 of his 14 major victories, and more recently for Aussie Adam Scott.

As well as their seemingly telepathic understand­ing, Kang figures if he can shave a shot a round off her score he will have more than earned his keep.

‘‘He knows the game, and adapts very quickly to my game and how I am,’’ she said. ‘‘Ultimately if a caddie can save you a shot they’ve done their job. He will help me decide on certain shots, and that will be the gameplan.’’

But the American was cagey when asked how their partnershi­p had come about.

‘‘I needed a caddie – a local because my caddie isn’t able to be here. Someone said would you mind having Steve Williams on your bag. I thought it was a joke at first. Eventually I emailed him, and that was that.

‘‘I had hopes of finding a local caddie, and he’s as local as it gets. I think I did pretty well there.’’

Kang is thrilled to play at the first LPGA-sanctioned New Zealand Open, first and foremost because she considers Lydia Ko, the 20-year-old Kiwi and former world No 1, her ‘‘baby sister’’ on tour.

‘‘She’s family to me,’’ said the California­n. ‘‘I’ve known her since she was a baby. She still is a baby. I called her ‘Baby’ just now, and she was like ‘you’re only five years older than me’, and I said, ‘that’s a lot’.

‘‘I wanted to come out in support of Lydia. There wouldn’t be a tournament here without her, and this is her home. I’ve been in New Zealand before, everyone is so welcoming, it’s very homey out here and I didn’t think it would be a challengin­g place to come by.’’

Kang has had a strong year, with that PGA victory, a couple of fourths, five top-10s in all and US$847,434 in prize-money. She hopes to play well and ‘‘take that trophy home’’.

But if she can’t get it done, she figures Ko will be tough to beat in a week that stacks up well for her close friend.

‘‘It’s a great honour to have an event in your home country, and it’s an incredible thing what Lydia has done for the tour and her country. It will be comforting and exciting for her, in front of her home crowd and having her friends come out.

‘‘You just ride off the vibe.’’ For her part, Kang said all signs were that this was going to be a popular stop for the players.

She liked the hotel, liked Auckland, liked the proliferat­ion of Asian restaurant­s and liked the fact Matilda was on at the theatre (‘‘I might go watch that.’’)

More importantl­y, she likes what she has seen so far out at Windross Farm. ‘‘It’s very linksy. I wouldn’t have thought to have a New Zealand golf course without trees.

‘‘But the greens are in great condition, the fairways are forgiving and it’s beautiful. I’m hoping the wind blows a bit. It’s been going very smoothly. Lunch was out on time, and the course setup is great. There’s not much more you want from a tournament – good golf course, good food and good setup.’’

Throw in good caddie, and Kang has her bases covered this week.

‘‘Everybody knew she [Lydia Ko] was going to be special, but the question was what platform would she have to play on? The exciting thing now is that stage is as big as it can get."

LPGA Commission­er Michael Whan

The man credited with both revolution­ising and globalisin­g the sport of women’s golf is not done breaking down the barriers for the LPGA Tour.

LPGA Commission­er Mike Whan has further extended his Tour’s reach by adding this week’s MCKAYSON New Zealand Women’s Open to a schedule which now sees 30 tournament­s traverse

16 different countries around the globe. The Florida-based Whan isn’t able to make it to Auckland for the first LPGAsancti­oned New Zealand Open – he will attend next year, he promises – but spoke exclusivel­y to stuff.co.nz from the US where he continues to plot the next moves for his groundbrea­king Tour.

Whan came on board with the LPGA in

2010 and set himself three clear goals for the major women’s golf tour in the world: to build a full schedule; to make it truly global, both in participat­ion and event locations; and to establish a worldwide television audience.

With the schedule having grown from

22 to 30 events, with 15 of those stopovers in countries not named the United States, the players now coming from all points on the globe and TV reach sitting at 150 to 170 nations, he has ticked those boxes.

‘‘As I think about the next three goals, it’s not about extending the schedule, but about making the events we do have bigger and better,’’ he says. ‘‘The second thing is to continue to expand on internatio­nal TV. I’d really like to get to

190 countries over the next couple of years which would make us Olympics-like.

‘‘And, thirdly, we’ve got to create a few breakthrou­gh events that change the way people think about our sport. Playing with the guys is one way, as well as having some team competitio­ns, and really making our majors, the Tour Championsh­ip and Olympics showcase events.’’

Broach the topic of mixing it up with the men and you begin to understand the ambition and contempora­ry approach of Whan. Golf is a sport at times bogged down by its traditions; but certainly not across the Commish’s desk.

‘‘I don’t know about teeing it up against them, but we’re interested in trying to create that competitio­n. I’m a guy that loves to challenge traditions and I’d be totally up for that,’’ he says.

‘‘The first stage might be to have an event or two where men and women play on the same stage. [PGA Tour Commission­er] Jay Monahan and I both have a goal of getting the Tournament Champions event played in Hawaii to be Tournament Champions for men and women.

‘‘He might have 50 [players] and I might have 30, and you could intermix them. They could play in the same groups, even off different tees, and what an interestin­g spectacle that would be for fans, media and the players.

‘‘We’re committed to figuring out how that might work first, then looking at some other team ideas down the road. I’m talking to some other tours as well. Anything we can do that captures the attention of sports fans is something we need to look at.’’

Whan is immensely proud of his Tour’s true global nature now. When he first met his players he told them of a vision for the future where ‘‘players are going to come from all over the world, we’re going to play all over the world, you’re going to have fans all over the world, and you’re going to have logos on your shirts from companies all over the world’’.

He also reminded them, ‘‘this will be our greatest competitiv­e advantage’’.

‘‘I’m sure I had more than my share of eye rolls, but today we’re an Olympic sport for a reason ... because when we show up in New Zealand, you’re going to feel like it’s the Olympics, with elite golfers from all over the world in the prime of their careers, playing an incredible home-town event, and we’re going to let the rest of the world eavesdrop. Women’s golf is leading the world in showing a sport that is borderless. Men’s golf is catching up, but it’s still a decade behind us. Our brand is truly global, and the end result of that is pretty powerful.’’

Whan has a special affection, too, for New Zealand’s Lydia Ko (he calls her ‘Uno’, or No 1), the main reason the LPGA has come to this outpost, and a player who has single-handedly changed some key perception­s in her sport.

‘‘Everybody knew she was going to be special, but the question was what platform would she have to play on? The exciting thing now is that stage is as big as it can get. Lydia has made 16 the new 26. She comes out, Lexi [Thompson] comes out, Minjee [Lee] comes out, and people have an expectatio­n they can be the best in the world before they can have a driver’s license.

‘‘For 70 years that wasn’t perceived as do-able. When you meet somebody like Lydia and realise how much experience, poise and focus you can have at that age, it’s a game-changer.’’

In fact, Whan tags Ko a transcende­nt figure in the sport.

‘‘Some players change records, but what Lydia has done is change expectatio­ns for every young girl . It used to be you’d dream of making it to the LPGA some day, but some day meant in your 20s, and playing your best golf even later. Lydia has changed those expectatio­ns. Girls believe then can now do it at 14 and that’s because she was the one who did it first.’’

 ?? PHOTOSPORT ?? American Danielle Kang says her NZ Open caddie, Steve Williams, right, is ‘like a walking yardage book’.
PHOTOSPORT American Danielle Kang says her NZ Open caddie, Steve Williams, right, is ‘like a walking yardage book’.
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 ?? DONALD MIRALLE/GETTY IMAGES ?? LPGA Commission­er Michael Whan says Lydia Ko has changed the expectatio­ns of young players in the sport.
DONALD MIRALLE/GETTY IMAGES LPGA Commission­er Michael Whan says Lydia Ko has changed the expectatio­ns of young players in the sport.

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