Lee
keeps eye on big picture as LPGA wins prove elusive
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[May 02, 2018]
By Andrew Both
(Reuters) - Former amateur world number
one Minjee Lee has not quite taken the LPGA by storm since turning
professional in 2014 but refutes any suggestion that she is an
underachiever.
The 21-year-old Australian has played well in her more than three
years as a pro but, without an LPGA victory since 2016, media
attention has switched to other young talents.
While her rival Down Under, Lydia Ko, grabbed lots of headlines with
her rapid ascent to world number one, Lee has quietly gone about her
business, improving incrementally if not spectacularly and
preferring to let her clubs do the talking.
Three LPGA victories, as well as two more in her homeland, is not a
bad resume for one so young, but it pales beside the 15 wins racked
up by Korean-born New Zealander Ko, who has slipped to 13th in the
world but is nearly a year younger than Lee.
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“It’s really hard to win. I think I’m doing pretty good,” Lee told
Reuters while preparing for this week’s LPGA Texas Classic, reacting
with equanimity to any suggestion she is an underachiever.
“I didn’t win last year but I still had 10 top 10s. I had a good
year,” she said. “Just because you don’t win doesn’t mean you aren’t
doing well. I’m always trying to improve. As long as you’re doing
that you’re going in the right direction.”
Lee is having a stellar 2018 campaign by virtually every measurement
except victories. She has posted five top-10 finishes in eight
starts, sits 10th in the LPGA points ranking, and 15th in the world
ranking.
Only an eagle by Ko at the first playoff hole at Lake Merced on
Sunday denied Lee another victory.
“I would like to have won but can you really top an eagle?” said
Lee, whose smooth yet deceptively powerful swing suggests she will
be among the game’s elite for as long as the competitive fire burns.
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Minjee Lee tees off on the ninth hole during the second round of the
U.S. Women's Open golf tournament at Trump National Golf Club-New
Jersey. Mandatory Credit: Eric Sucar-USA TODAY Sports
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Born in Western Australia of Korean parents, Lee diplomatically
describes her personality as “half and half” when asked whether she
feels more Korean or Australian.
She learnt the habit of dedication early in life as a competitive
swimmer, before applying that work ethic to golf from the age of 10.
Lee says a typical day of practice on a week off might extend for
seven or eight hours – maybe two or three hours on the driving
range, followed by short game work and putting, and finally a
session in the gym.
It’s a strict regimen that she has little choice but to follow if
she wants to keep up with the wave of young players, many of them
Asian, who continue to flood the LPGA circuit.
“I want to win more and keep doing better,” Lee said, understated as
ever.
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by Ken
Ferris)
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