The Korea Herald

피터빈트

Top-seeded Choi to face Matthew in Sybase

By 로컬편집기사

Published : May 18, 2011 - 18:43

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GLADSTONE, New Jersey (AP) ― The Sybase Match Play Classic hasn’t started, but the advantage already belongs the long hitters on the LPGA tour.

More than nine inches of rain fell on the Hamilton Farm Golf Club last month and the hilly course became even wetter on Monday and Tuesday. To make matters worse, there’s more heavy showers predicted on Wednesday.

The draw for the 64-player field was held at a press conference Tuesday with the top 32 players in the 64-player field drawing a golf ball to determine who they would face. A designated official drew for players not at the conference.

Top-seeded Choi Na-yeon of South Korea drew Catriona Matthew of Scotland, the No. 39 seed, in the $1.5 million event.
Sybase top seed Choi Na-yeon (AFP-Yonhap News) Sybase top seed Choi Na-yeon (AFP-Yonhap News)

“I just hope I play better than last year,” said Choi, who lost in the opening round.

Not all the top seeds were lucky in the draw, though.

Second-seeded Shin Ji-yai was paired with No. 33 seed Lee Mee-na in a match involving South Korean players.

Third-seeded Cristie Kerr was not in the press center and was paired against fellow American Amanda Blumenherst, the No. 48 seed. Kerr showed up minutes later and asked to make her own selection. It was denied.

No. 4 seed Yani Tseng of Chinese Taipei, the LPGA’s leading money winner this year and the No. 1 player in the world, had the best draw, getting a match with No. 63 seeded Marcy Hart.

The course, though, is going to be a test due to the soggy conditions limiting the distance that the ball will roll. Long-hitting Brittany Lincicome practiced on Tuesday and was wary about the course.

“It’s definitely going to be on the long-hitters’ side,” she said. “I played nine holes this morning and with just the little rain we had this morning, No. 18, I could not get to the other side of the water and had to lay up short of the water. It was just a lot of longer irons into the greens than what we are used to.”

Lincicome then smiled and said a player never knows what they will get from match play.

“If you are not on top of your game every day you’re not going to keep going,” she said. “Or you play (lousy) and it depends on what happens that day. In match play, you never know.”

Several friends were paired in opening-day matches. Australian Karrie Webb (No. 23) and Sarah Kemp (No. 50) were paired, and rookie Belen Mozo (No. 64), who was given a sponsor’s exemption, drew fellow Spaniard Azahara Munoz (No. 30), last year’s rookie of the year.