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Why Korean golfers are dominating LPGA Tour

By Jennifer Mario, Staff Writer, Golf Publisher Syndications


SOUTHERN PINES, N.C. - Cristie Kerr, an American, won the 2007 U.S. Women’s Open. This was a major storyline for this year’s Open, remarkable because only two Americans appeared in the top-ten spots of the leaderboard going into the last round.

The last names on the leaderboard read like a Pusan phonebook: Bae, Jang, Kim, Lee, Pak, Park, Park, Shin.

Why is it that the leaderboard at women’s golf events tends to be so very, very dominated by Asians - and Korean golfers in particular?

This year’s Open included 34 Koreans (and that doesn’t count Korean-Americans, like Christina Kim or Michelle Wie). To put that in perspective, the next-highest international group represented in this tournament is Sweden—with eight players. With a population of only 45 million, Koreans were somewhat overrepresented at this tournament, and on the LPGA Tour in general.

“Why are Korean women so good?” asked Rhonda Glenn of the USGA to In-Bee Park after her second round. Grimacing, In-Bee, who was born in Seoul but is now a U.S. citizen, responded, “I’m really getting tired of that question. Everyone always asks me that.”

Ok, In-Bee, fair enough. But the question is a legitimate one, and it deserves an answer. Having been born and raised in Korea myself, I can probably help you answer it.

It begins and ends with parenting: Korean parents raise their kids a little differently than American parents do. Okay, a lot differently. What Americans consider “pushing” their kids, Koreans consider right and proper. The more freestyle approach used by American parents—let kids have time to be kids— Koreans consider borderline irresponsible.

Leaving children to make their own decisions would be disastrous. Every moment of time is accounted for: children are in school, in an after-school tutoring program, or in a sports activity until it’s time to go to bed and start all over again the next day. Yes, it’s hard, but it’s a competitive world out there and the role of the parent is to teach the child to be successful in it.

Westerners in general would view the pressures placed on Korean children to be inappropriate. We like our children to be “well-rounded.” Korean parents, meanwhile, don’t fret over lost childhoods. Children are expected to do their share to help their family—and their country—succeed.

Golf: the new path to success

Once Se Ri Pak helped put Korea on the map by winning the 1998 U.S. Women’s Open, golf became a national pastime there. The floodgates opened. Korean women had a new path to success, so the obsession became not just golf, but training daughters to become professional golfers.

And when Koreans set a goal, they put everything they have into reaching it. Nothing is done halfway.




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If a child shows a talent for golf in Korea, golf becomes pursued with a single-minded purpose unseen in American families, to the exclusion of all other activities, sometimes even to the exclusion of education.

“I think there’s less emphasis on academics (in golfers) over there,” says Tom Creavy, Se Ri Pak’s swing instructor, as he discusses the issue with Gary Gilchrist. As the former Director of Golf at the International Junior Golf Academy in South Carolina, Gilchrist has coached his fair share of Korean students.

“Yeah, absolutely,” agrees Gilchrist. “A lot of the kids over there don’t even go to school. You’ll probably find a lot of the girls on the LPGA that are doing well never finished high school. Those who go to school do well at school, and those who choose golf do well at golf.”

“There’s such an interest in golf now in Korea that they decide at a really young age that that’s what they want to do,” says Creavy. “And they get the instruction and the mental health and the funding—the parents find money whether it’s their own or a sponsorship and they just go for it. They’re driven and so motivated to practice. They’re intense.”

Sponsorships
Sponsorships are easier to come by in Korea, this is true. In the U.S., only big names win contracts. Meg Mallon, the sponsor-free winner of the 2004 US Women’s Open, famously had to purchase her hat in the merchandise pavilion. In Korea, girls that show talent early on have no problem finding someone to help them foot their bills.

Won-Seok Choi is a manager for Hi-Mart, Korea’s version of Best Buy, a sponsor for several Korean women on the LPGA Tour and dozens more in Korea. “We started sponsoring four years ago,” he says. “We like to support many Korean women golfers because they have a chance to become a big player, like Se Ri Pak.”

His explanation for the Koreans’ success on tour? “Their families are very supportive,” he explains. “They support everything for the players. Asian people have very strong families, and support is the most important thing.” Americans see pushiness, Koreans see support.

The only downside for Choi is the tendency to leave school early. “Some of the players don’t finish high school. Personally, that’s the one thing I don’t like about it, because there’s a time to study and a time to play.”

“Their motto is, the younger the better,” says Gilchrist. “It’s not like they’re patient and waiting—as soon as their kid shows an interest, they’re 100 percent committed to it. And I think in the States it’s considered a negative thing to push your kids—they use that word, ‘push.’ But the Korean attitude is, if you do anything, you have to be successful in it.”

Pushy parents—it’s one of the reasons why teen phenom Michelle Wie is such a lightning rod of controversy. To the American media, it’s apparent that her parents have pushed her too hard and fast.

When she was playing well, with close to a million dollars in earnings her rookie year and three top-five finishes in the majors, the question wasn’t, how is she doing this? It was: are her parents pushing her too hard? Now that she’s playing poorly, the jury is in: her parents have finally succeeded in killing the golden goose. But remember that BJ and Bo, her parents, are Korean. Their parenting style is the only one they know.

Ji-Yai Shin is as Korean a player you could find. Number-one on the KLPGA Tour, the tiny, endearing 19-year-old has been invited to all of this year’s majors plus several other tournaments. In Korea, she’s touted as “the next Se Ri Pak.”

She begs to differ about pushy parenting. “Korean parents might push when the children are little, but not when they’re older,” she says through an interpreter. “My father used to push me to play, but not anymore, now I want to play.”

What does she think of the story about her counterpart Mi-Hyun Kim, whose father told her she couldn’t get married until she wins a major?

“I think they’re just kidding, that’s just a joke,” she laughs.

Through our American eyes it appears overbearing. To Koreans it’s simply good parenting. But it’s no joke how hard the Korean players push themselves.

At the U.S. Women’s Open this weekend, darkness had fallen and most everyone had cleared out for the day. But five stalwarts remained on the putting green, practicing long after everyone else left. All five bags bear Korean flags.

(July 2, 2007)
Content for this site is provided by GolfPublisher Syndications.

Se Ri Pak Win

Se Ri Pak gets Fifth Win

Golf Publisher Syndications



“Se Ri Pak held off a late charging Morgan Pressel Sunday to win her fifth Jamie Farr Owens Corning Classic.



The victory earns Pak a place in the LPGA Tour history books alongside Mickey Wright and Annika Sorenstam as the only women to win the same event five times. The $195,000 winner’s check brings Pak’s career earnings at the event to just shy of $1 million.”




“This has been my best week on tour, between my best finish and getting to play at St. Andrews,” she told the media. “I’d say this final round was probably as nerve-racking as the final round at Q School.”

July 16, 2007

How Doing Yoga For Golf On The Ball Can Quickly Improve Women Golfers’ Balance And Stability


By Mike Pedersen, CPT


Are you getting tighter by the day? Do you feel like your balance and stability isn’t what it could be? Doing yoga with a ball will help.

Improving flexibility is a well-known thought for most golfers, including women golfers. But why are women golfers hesitant to stretch regularly? Could it be that it’s boring?

There is a growing population of women golfers who are taking up yoga. Yoga is a great resource for not only improving your flexibility but strengthening your core and improving your balance for a more stable golf swing.

Some of you may not be interested in the benefits of yoga for your game. That’s why adding some interest by incorporating a stability ball in the routine might increase your interest in doing yoga.

Using a stability ball in a yoga routine can add some visual interest as well as challenge. The stability ball by itself works the core and stabilizing muscles of the entire body. Add some yoga exercises and you’ve got a great workout that will dramatically improve your golf game.

GOLF TIP: The Simple Exercise That Helps You Relieve Back Pain — and stress on your hips when you play.

This exercise targets the muscle groups in your hamstrings, glutes and hips. Theses are key muscles to strengthen to not only reduce back pain, but improve golf posture and stability in your swing. Here’s the exercise that will solve that problem:




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I call it the “Bridge On The Ball” It requires the use of a stability ball. Sit on the ball and roll out until only your head and upper back are on the ball. Now raise your hips up until they are parallel with the ground. Hold this position for up to 60 seconds and repeat 3 times. That’s all there is to it! Do this exercise everyday and you will notice a marked improvement in lower back pain and stability in your golf swing.

Consider this: It’s proven that tension in the golf swing is a killer. Really pay attention to how you feel on the course. Standing over a shot that you don’t feel comfortable with. That’s a common scenario in golf. The result is undo tension - causing mishits and higher scores.

Being able to trust your body during every shot will greatly reduce the amount of tension your produce in your swing give you the best chance at solid-ball contact and greater distance and accuracy.


Author’s Bio
This article was provided by Mike Pedersen, Golf Fitness Expert and founder of the webs first and only online womens golf performance program at www.fitgolfforwomen.com

Mike is a Certified Fitness Professional, who has been in the field for over 20 years. He has specialized in fitness for golfers the past 9 years. Mike just launched the webs first and only online womens golf performance program geared to help women golfers improve their games quickly.

Angie Hill: Inspirational Rookie


Rookie
Angie Hill: Finding The Place Where She Belongs


By
Lisa D. Mickey

For
the first seven and a half years of her life, Angie Hill was a
beautiful little child looking for a place to belong. From foster
home to foster home, she would pack her little bundle of belongings
and move to the next house – just hoping that the doors she
walked through would become her one true home and the arms that
greeted her would offer the love and support she wanted so badly.

It
was a bumpy start and one that rendered more lessons than Hill, now a
rookie on the Duramed FUTURES Tour, can even begin to describe. But
no doubt, the constant yearning in those early days stirred the soul
of a child who would emerge as a determined young woman – a
woman who turned pro one day before last year’s LPGA Sectional
Qualifying Tournament in Venice, Fla., and who fired a career-low
round of 66 on the final day to finish as co-medalist of the event.




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This
is the same young woman who began playing golf seven continued on
page 4 years ago, becoming proficient and hopeful enough to travel to
the College of Charleston (S.C.) to ask for a tryout. The coach there
told her she needed to be able to break 85. Hill played the first
nine holes of her tryout at two-under par, beating every player on
the team. That was all coach Jamie Futrell needed to see. He pulled
her off the course, gave her a scholarship and she went on to break
14 school records in women’s golf. Hill played three years for
the Cougars, won three college tournaments, won the 2006 Southern
Conference Championship, earned an NCAA Division I collegiate ranking
of 20th and was the 2006 Southern Conference Player of the Year.

So
it was odd, but perhaps more oddly understandable, when Hill spoke
quietly to the media a few weeks ago in McAllen, Texas and admitted
that she was “starting to get more confidence playing with all
of these big names.” She had just finished second in McAllen.
She had just beaten most of those “big names,” and had
rocketed from No. 119th to No. 10 on the Tour’s money list.
What could Angie Hill possibly think she lacked?


I
guess I just wanted to feel like I really belong out here,”
said Hill, 23, of Canton, Ohio, who is now ranked 14th on the Tour’s
money list after six events. “After I finished second and had a
chance to win, it was kind of scary in a way. I didn’t know
that I’d feel like I belong to something as much as I do, but I
feel like I belong to a tour and I finally feel a lot better about
things.”


On
the surface, those words are surprising from a professional who must
regularly propel herself on confidence to perform. But coming from
Hill, such heart-felt honesty is the fuel that has pushed her to
reach for the things she has wanted throughout her life. Even her
adoptive mother can hear a new confidence in Hill’s voice
whenever they talk on the telephone.

When
this child gets something in her mind, she won’t stop until she
gets there,” said Jan Hill of Canton, Ohio. “I don’t
know where she gets her drive. And the more I think about her
journey, it appears that maybe it has to do with her struggle as a
child – just wanting and waiting to belong somewhere.”

I
think she’s scared that she’s not going to become
anything,” said her boyfriend Gary Farrar of Charleston, S.C.,
a touring pro who plays on the Tar Heel Tour. “She’s the
only person I know who’s been through what she’s been
through who hasn’t turned to drugs or alcohol. She just wants a
chance. She wants to be somebody. It drives her.”


Additional
Editorial Note:





After
listening to what Angie has had to overcome in life is a true
testimony and inspiration to anyone. Angie has displayed the true
character of what heroes are made of. She has show the heart,
courage, desire, determination and
the will to not let anything stand in her way of acheiving her goal
in life, wanting and waiting to belong somewhere. Well done, Angie.





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