Date: February 13, 2013
Author: Australian Ladies Professional Golf

9 of the world’s top 20 players tee off at Women’s Aus Open

Nine of the world s top twenty players lead a stellar field which tees off at the ISPS Handa Women’s Australian Open tomorrow at Royal Canberra Golf Club. Headlining the morning groups are Rolex World Number 1 Taiwanese Yani Tseng, American Michelle Wie and newly crowned ISPS Handa NZ Women’s Open champion Lydia Ko at 9.10am off the 10th tee. The world&aposs No. 1 player endured the first truly rough patch of her stellar career in 2012, but she is through it. Six weeks off including a spot of snorkelling in the Philippines and some time at home in Taiwan did the trick. Plus a chat to her mother, Yu-Yun, back at home in Taiwan helped. The elder Tseng reminded her daughter it had been the Chinese year of the dragon in 2012. “I was a dragon, so my mum said: &aposIt&aposs okay, your bad year is over. Your good year is coming this year&apos.&apos&apos In the other morning pairings, American Lexi Thompson, Scot Catriona Matthew and World No. 6 Korean So Yeon Ryu tee off together while Queenslander Katherine Hull-Kirk, American Brittany Lincicome and France s Gwladys Nocera begin at 8.50am. Rolex World No. 12 Karrie Webb, World No.3 Stacy Lewis and defending champion Jessica Korda headline the afternoon field, teeing off the first at 12.50pm. Lewis, who lost a playoff for the Open at Royal Melbourne last year, remains the understated figure of her country&aposs golf, remaining in the shadow of the media stars despite better results. “I&aposm not Michelle Wie. I get that, and I&aposm fine with that. It just gives me more motivation.&apos&apos Feisty Lewis has her eyes on the No. 1 ranking, having climbed to No. 2 last year before sliding to No. 3 late in the year behind Tseng and Na Yeon Choi of South Korea. “My goal is to put myself in contention every week and chip away at Yani&aposs No. 1 ranking,&apos&apos she said. Webb will play with home advantage but said the pressure of playing at home was not as much of a factor as it had been. I don&apost know if I feel the pressure anymore. I do like playing in Australia or love playing in Australia and I do like to play well, only because the one or two times a year that I get a home field advantage with fans that are actually pulling for me harder than they re pulling for someone from another country. That s what I love about it. I probably put that pressure on myself just so I can have that experience with the fans and give them what they came to watch. Tiger s niece Cheyenne Woods tees off with Swede Anna Nordqvist and Korean World No.8 Jiyai Shin among other major groups in the afternoon. A former runner-up at the Women’s Australian Open, Korean Shin won her first major championship by nine strokes in 2012 at the RICOH Women’s British Open at Royal Liverpool. ABC1 TV will broadcast the tournament live across all four days. Thursday s broadcast runs from 3.00PM-6.00PM (AEST).