CA
ON
추천업소
추천업소 선택:
추천업소 그룹 리스트
  • 식품ㆍ음식점ㆍ쇼핑1
  • 부동산ㆍ건축ㆍ생활2
  • 미용ㆍ건강ㆍ의료3
  • 자동차ㆍ수리ㆍ운송4
  • 관광ㆍ하숙ㆍ스포츠5
  • 이민ㆍ유학ㆍ학교6
  • 금융ㆍ보험ㆍ모기지7
  • 컴퓨터ㆍ인터넷ㆍ전화8
  • 오락ㆍ유흥ㆍPC방9
  • 법률ㆍ회계ㆍ번역10
  • 꽃ㆍ결혼ㆍ사진11
  • 예술ㆍ광고ㆍ인쇄12
  • 도매ㆍ무역ㆍ장비13
  • 종교ㆍ언론ㆍ단체14
yunpro
멋진스윙.. 장타를 원하십니까? 오랜경력의 윤프로가 확실하게 책임지도 해드립니다. 647.291.2022
블로그 ( 오늘 방문자 수: 5,265 전체: 12,454,773 )
Kim wins U.S. Women's Open title in spectacular fashion Jun
lucasyun

Kim holed a 30-yard bunker shot on No. 18. (AP) Kim wins U.S. Women's Open title in spectacular fashion June 26, 2005 GolfWeb Wire Services CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE, Colo. -- She gave herself the nickname "Birdie" to distinguish herself from the other girls on the LPGA Tour. All it took was one shot -- one spectacular birdie from the bunker -- to make Birdie Kim a most unlikely U.S. Women's Open champion Sunday. Going shot-for-shot with 17-year-old Morgan Pressel in a tense duel at Cherry Hills, the 23-year-old South Korean was trying to get close for par when she holed a 30-yard bunker shot from across the 18th green, raising her arms as the ball disappeared in the back of the cup. Pressel, poised to become the youngest major champion in golf history, was walking up the fairway in the group behind when she saw the reaction of the record gallery. She put both hands over her head in disbelief, realizing her dream of winning was all but gone. "It was like, `I can't believe that actually just happened,"' Pressel said when asked for her reaction. Kim's victory put an end to Annika Sorenstam's pursuit of a Grand Slam, and it put the kids in their place. Even so, her victory might have been even more shocking than teenagers in contention at the most prestigious event in women's golf. In two years on the LPGA Tour, she had made only 10 cuts in 34 starts and only once had finished in the top 10. Her career earnings were a meager $79,832. One shot that ranks among the most dramatic in a major changed everything. Kim holed a 30-yard bunker shot on No. 18. (AP) Kim finished at 3-over 287 and earned $560,000, the biggest payoff in women's golf. She closed with a 1-over 72 to win by two shots over a pair of teenage amateurs -- Pressel, who went for broke on her birdie chip at the 18th and made bogey for a 75; and 19-year-old Brittany Lang, who missed an 8-foot par putt on the final hole for a 71. Kim made the only birdie on the 18th hole in two days, a 459-yard par 4 that requires a daunting tee shot over water and an uphill climb the final 180 yards. "I can't believe it," she said. "I don't think I was going to make it. I was trying my best to make par." Sorenstam was never a factor. She tried to drive the first green and instead hit a tree and went into the creek, making bogey. She would up with a 77 to finish at 12-over 296, the first time in four years Sorenstam shot over par in a 72-hole event. "Just didn't happen," she said. Pressel's peers were not up to the challenge either. Fifteen-year-old Michelle Wie shot 42 on the front nine on her way to an 82, while 18-year-old Paula Creamer made two double bogeys and a triple bogey to shoot 79. The U.S. Women's Open champion went by her given name, Ju-Yun Kim, as a rookie last year, but decided to use "Birdie" this season to stand out from the other five players with Kim as a surname on the LPGA Tour. "I wanted something different, something simple and easy," she said at the start of the season. "Birdie is good in golf, and it's good for me." It was better than she ever imagined on a sun-baked afternoon at Cherry Hills, which ultimately came down to a battle for survival. This was the first time the Women's Open champion was over par since 1998 at Blackwolf Run, when Se Ri Pak won in a playoff after finishing at 6 over. This one looked destined for a playoff. Separated by one group, Kim and Pressel were tied at 4 over with two holes to play. Both gave themselves a good chance at birdie on the par-5 17th, missing from about 20 feet. With Pressel in the fairway behind her, Kim needed to get up-and-down for any chance of a playoff -- a tall order considering she ranked 141st in sand saves coming into the Open. But the shot came out clean, checked slightly and rode the slope toward the hole. Pressel, who stayed in contention as fellow teens Wie and Creamer wilted, chipped well past the hole. She tossed her wedge at the bag, removed her glove and slapped it against her thigh. Crouching behind the green after it was over, she wiped away tears. Sorenstam came out of the clubhouse and gave Pressel a long hug before she went to sign her card. It was a stunning conclusion to a brutal final round in which the field averaged 76.1 and there was only one round under par, a 69 by Lorie Kane of Canada. Arnold Palmer made Cherry Hills famous in the 1960 U.S. Open for his charge from seven shots behind. This was more of a retreat, a battle to see who could survive. Lorena Ochoa of Mexico had cause to feel even worse than Pressel. She was 3 under for the round and 3 over for the tournament -- a likely winning score -- until she hit her tee shot into the water on the 18th, making a quadruple-bogey 8 to finish four shots behind. "I fought so hard for 71 holes and just the last one, you know," Ochoa said, as tears welled in her eyes. "I feel really sad. That's the way golf is." Sorenstam had played conservatively all week, but drew cheers when she pulled driver from the bag on the 346-yard opening hole, the same one Palmer drove in the 1960 U.S. Open when he charged from seven shots behind. Palmer hit the green and made birdie. Sorenstam clipped a tree and went into a hazard for a bogey. "My game plan today was to be a little bit more aggressive," she said. "It totally backfired." It was a major bummer for Wie, who was coming off a runner-up finish in the LPGA Championship and was tied for lead going into the final round. The gallery lined both sides of the first fairway, eager to see if the 15-year-old could make headlines around the world. What they saw was someone who played every bit her age. She took double bogey on the opening hole, hitting into the rough and laying up in more rough. She missed putts inside 3 feet on consecutive holes. And trying to hammer a shot out of the thick grass, the ball dribbled only 25 feet. Wie went out in 42 and was never a factor the rest of the day. "I have to give my ball a GPS because it was lost," she said.