Bangkok Post

Chan aims to sparkle on biggest stage

Q-School graduate makes history by becoming first Hong Kong player to qualify for top circuit

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>> HONG KONG: Tiffany Chan says she is still coming down to earth after becoming the first golfer from Hong Kong to qualify to compete with the world’s elite on the lucrative LPGA Tour.

The 24-year-old finished second last week at the final stage of the LPGA Tour’s qualifying school in Florida behind Japan’s Nasa Hataoka, earning a coveted tour card for 2018.

It means she will now rub shoulders with superstars such as New Zealand’s Lydia Ko, Lexi Thompson of the US and China’s world No.1 Feng Shanshan — and has put Hong Kong on the golfing map.

“This is my dream — I spent a lot of time and energy preparing for it. You can say the last four or five years had been dedicated to this goal,” Chan told AFP. “I haven’t calmed down yet.”

Softly spoken and self-possessed, Chan describes the sport as mentally demanding due to a host of variables, from the weather to her overall condition, but she hopes her new-found status will encourage other Hong Kong youngsters to give golf a try.

The bustling southern Chinese city of seven million people has just six golf clubs with 10 courses, and most are exclusive members-only facilities perched on picturesqu­e coastlines and islands.

But Chan disputes the notion that golf in Hong Kong is only for the rich — and says her own story shows that anybody in the city can take up the sport.

Chan first learned to love golf at a public driving range near her home in the northweste­rn suburb of Tuen Mun.

It charged just HK$6 per hour for children at the time, Chan recalled, in a city where golf club membership­s often change hands for millions of dollars.

What started as a way to have fun at the weekend with other children became a more regular pursuit when she took up free classes offered to young players at the age of eight.

“I hope to use my results to show that golf is not just something for businessme­n or a game for the rich,” Chan said. “I want to inspire kids from any socio-economic background to fight for their own goals.”

Chan’s burgeoning talent earned her sponsorshi­p as a teenager by Swiss private bank EFG who continue to support her career.

She went on to win US national titles in 2014 and 2015 at the NJCAA (National Junior College Athletic Associatio­n) golf championsh­ips while attending Daytona State College in Florida.

She transferre­d to the University of Southern California and graduated earlier this year before turning profession­al.

Mainland China has long been hailed as an important future market for golf and has produced players such as women’s No.1 Feng, and recent European Tour winners Wu Ashun and Li Haotong.

Feng, a multiple winner on the LPGA Tour also took Olympic bronze in Rio 2016, where Chan competed as an amateur and finished 37th ahead of some notable profession­als such as Lin Xiyu of China and a 14-time winner on the Ladies European Tour, Gwladys Nocera of France.

Semi-autonomous Hong Kong has never produced a golfing household name. Chan’s rise could change that.

“Tiffany’s our first ever homegrown talent to qualify for a major tour,” said Brad Schadewitz, Chan’s former coach.

“Everybody knew that it’s possible but actually having somebody do it — I think it gives even more inspiratio­n especially to young girls in Hong Kong,” added Schadewitz, who is lead coach at the Hong Kong Golf Associatio­n.

Chan says her next challenge is to break into the top 50 in 2018 and maintain her status on the tour in the coming years.

She will be facing tough competitio­n from other Asian stars such as No.1 Feng and second and thirdranke­d Sung Hyun-Park and Ryu So-Yeon from South Korea, a country which dominates women’s golf with 22 players currently in the world’s top 50.

“I will need to keep up the same spirit as I did in the qualifying tournament,” said Chan.

 ??  ?? Tiffany Chan of Hong Kong.
Tiffany Chan of Hong Kong.

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