South Korea’s Kim Hyo-joo produced the shot and the round of the day to lead the Ricoh Women’s British Open by a shot from Lydia Ko and Cristie Kerr at the sunbathed Trump Turnberry on Thursday.
Kim took advantage of the favorable weather to post a seven-under-par 65 and raise her hopes of adding a second major to her victory in the Evian Championship in France in September last year. At Evian, the 20-year-old shot a 10-under-par 61 in the first round — the joint lowest round in major championship history — and she again proved to be an opening day specialist with a flawless round of five birdies and an eagle.
The eagle came at the 449-yard 14th, where she hit a second shot to inside a foot.
Photo: AFP
“I almost made an albatross,” said a delighted Kim, who has won six times on the Korean LPGA Tour and was not even a member of the LPGA when she won the Evian title.
New Zealand’s Ko set her alarm for 3:30am to meet her 6:40am tee time — she admitted she pushed the snooze button a few times — but was wide awake by the time she teed off. In a fast start, she birdied four holes in a row from the second and added others at the seventh, 10th and 14th.
Her only error was a bunkered tee shot and a four at the short sixth. Ranked No. 1 in the world at the start of the year, 18-year-old Ko has two more chances — this week and the Evian Championship in September — to outdo Morgan Pressel and become the youngest ever winner of a women’s major. The US’ Pressel won the 2007 Kraft Nabisco Championship when she was two months short of her 19th birthday.
“I don’t think too much about records,” confessed the Kiwi, who has already said she plans to retire from golf at the age of 30. “But my goal is to win one major in my career.”
“This was my lowest round in a major, so it was a nice solid start. I tried to take advantage of the good weather and the par fives,” Ko said.
Kerr, the 2007 US Women’s Open champion, eagled the long third by hitting her five-iron second to 22 feet and making the putt, and she also tagged seven birdies into her round to offset the three bogeys.
Runner-up to the US’ Sherri Stenhauer at Royal Lytham and St Annes in 2006, 37-year-old Kerr is keen to add a second major.
“But I’ll just be taking it day by day,” she said. “Today was lucky. The weather was spectacular.”
Taiwan’s Teresa Lu finished the day tied for sixth with a four-under 68, while compatriots Cheng Ssu-chia and Yani Tseng, as well as Kaohsiung-born Candie Kung of the US, tied for 53rd after carding even-par 72s.
Further afield, Taiwan’s Hsu Wei-ling finished tied for 93rd on a two-over 74.
World No. 1 Inbee Park was a little disappointed with her 69 — “I wasn’t in complete control of my ball striking” — while 2007 champion Stacy Lewis finished two-under-par with a 70.
The oddest round of the day belonged to Paula Creamer. Out in 40 with an eight at the fifth — she took three to escape from a bunker — she came home in 31.
“I was two different players,” the 2010 US Women’s Open champion said.
The opening day of the tournament also saw the Turnberry course owner and US presidential hopeful Donald Trump make a spectacular entrance.
The 69-year-old arrived on his private helicopter, sporting a cap emblazoned with the slogan “Make America Great Again.”
Trump showed up despite becoming embroiled in a controversy with golf authorities over comments he made about Mexicans.
Additional reporting by staff writer
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