Have clubs, will travel is the motto of Canadian professional
golfer Lorie Kane, one of the invited players in the $400,000
Pegasus New Zealand Women's Open at Pegasus Town, near
Christchurch, starting tomorrow.
The 130-strong field includes defending champion and winner
of the 2008 Order of Merit, Gwladys Nocera (France), former
world No 1 Laura Davies (England), American Diana D'Alessio
and South African Open champion Tandi Cuningham.
A large Australian contingent including last year's joint
runner-ups, Sarah Kemp and Nikki Garrett, Sarah Oh, Kristie
Smith and Queensland's Sarah-Jane Smith, current leader of
the ALPG points series, are among the starters.
Leading New Zealand contenders include Cathryn Bristow, Sarah
Nicholson, former LET Tour player Liz McKinnon and the top
amateur from last year, 15-year-old Cecilia Cho.
Kane, a four-time winner on the United States LPGA tour,
wasted little time in enquiring if there was a place in the
field for her on learning that the co-sanctioned European
(LET) and Australasian (ALPG) event preceded the two
Australian tournaments next month.
"Last year I played the ANZ Masters at Royal Pines before
going to Hawaii for the first LPGA event of the year, so I
decided if I was going to come this far I might as well play
all three events instead of one," Kane said, before teeing
off in today's pro-am.
"As soon as we finished the (LPGA) tour last October I asked
my agent if we could give Mr Tuohy (Tuohy Associates is the
tournament promoter) a call and see if we could get in.
"I'm interested in playing wherever I can play. The
co-sanctioning of this event with the ALPG and LET tours is
good for women's golf. I just want to play golf and will
travel to do it."
Kane (49) has compiled an impressive record in her 13 years
as a professional. As well as her four LPGA wins, she has
twice finished fourth at the United States Open, had a fifth
place at the British Open, and has had nine top-10 finishes
in majors.
However, Kane, who is based either at Prince Edward Island in
Canada or in Florida in the United States, admits to having
struck a lean form patch in recent years and has been
practising hard in the off-season to remedy it.
"The last few years have not been up to par for me; to be
brutally honest, they've been quite disappointing. I've been
working on getting back to the basics of my golf swing - I
don't have a very technical mind or swing - and it's been a
struggle.
"So I'm excited what the new year has to bring."
Assisting her with the technicalities have been regular
coach-caddy, Danny Sharp, and Sean Foley, who has mentored
some touring male professionals.
Kane, who remembers visiting New Zealand once before to
contest the New Zealand amateur championships at Tauranga -
"when Karrie Webb was 13 or 14 years old" - was complimentary
of the Pegasus course which only opened last December.
"The greens are very good, firm and rolling very nice, and
the fairways are tight. You really have to think, especially
on the back nine, where you are going to your shots and it is
not a driver on every hole. The course has matured quite
nicely and I can see it only getting better."
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.