The story appears on

Page A13

July 30, 2010

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Sports » Golf

Shin in the hunt for British success

SOUTH Korea's Shin Jiyai chases her second women's British Open title on top of the world and on top of her game. Two years ago when she won at Sunningdale she was barely known outside her own country.

Now fresh from winning the Evian Masters in France on Sunday she is ranked world No. 1 again and Royal Birkdale in Southport, England, holds no great fears.

"I love links golf and it would be great to win this major again," the 22-year-old Shin told reporters.

"When I won at Sunningdale two years ago it made a really big change in my life. Up until then getting to play on the LPGA Tour was just a dream.

"It gave me so much confidence and just made a huge difference to everything."

Shin experienced links golf for the first time at last year's British Open at Royal Lytham, finishing a creditable eighth behind Scotland's Catriona Matthew.

"I think I like this course better," she said. "There are not so many blind shots. But I love links golf. You have to wear so many clothes and think of lots of different shots."

Operation

Shin's win in Evian was the first this season and it came just six weeks after an emergency appendix operation.

"I felt ready to play about two weeks ago - Sunday proved I was ready to win again," she said.

Paula Creamer, winner of the US women's Open three weeks ago, is another player who is seeking a second major after a season of injury. The 23-year-old had a thumb operation at the start of the year and is still not fully fit.

"Last week (in Evian) was difficult and I wasn't sure if I could practice on Monday," she said.

"But it's not too bad.

"After surgery you never know if you are going to be able to play again, never mind compete at the highest level.

"Winning (the US Open) at Oakmont was such a breakthrough. I had come close to winning majors before, but now I know what it takes to actually do it. It has definitely lifted my expectations."

Matthew, who won the title at Lytham 11 weeks after she gave birth to a second daughter was also in confident mood. "I'm feeling great and have looked forward to this week all year," she said. "I love the course and my game is in pretty good shape."





 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend