CREAMER TAKES ADVANTAGE OF SPONSOR INVITATION
10-time LPGA Tour winner Paula Creamer is in the field this week thanks to a sponsor’s invitation, and the 32-year-old is wasting no time proving she deserves to be in Shanghai. Aiming for her first win since 2014, Creamer fired a 4-under par 68 to put herself in a tie for fourth on Friday in her first round in over a month.
“It definitely has been a learning experience for sure,” said Creamer of her 2018 season. “I have had so many up and downs, but it was good out there and play good golf. Had a good couple weeks off after Evian and kind of resituated some things and worked hard with my coach, Kevin (Craggs). See what happens this week.”
MAY’S DOMINANT 2018 SEASON
The numbers don’t lie – “May” Ariya Jutanugarn has been far-and-away the best player on the LPGA in 2018. Here is a glimpse at what she is accomplishing this year:
- Ranks tied for first with three wins – one of three players with multiple wins in 2018
- Ranks first in top-10 finishes with 14 in 24 starts, two more than the next closest player (Minjee Lee, 12)
- Ranks first on the Official Money List with $2,357,788, nearly $1 million more than the next closest player (Brooke Henderson, $1,392,602)
- Ranks first in the Rolex Player of the Year standings with 207 points, 71 points more than the next closest player (Sung Hyun Park, 136)
- Ranks first in the Race to the CME Globe with 3,702 points, nearly 1,000 more than the next closest player (Minjee Lee, 2,728)
- Ranks first in scoring average (69.385), birdies (404) and rounds in the 60s (50-of-91, 54.95%)
WENBO LIU, YU LIU PACE CHINESE PLAYERS
17-year-old Wenbo Liu (T4, -4) was the low player from China on the first day of play in Shanghai. Liu, who is competing in her second career LPGA tournament this week, made waves last April by winning the Zhangjiagang Shuangshan Challenge to become the youngest winner in China LPGA Tour history at the age of 16 years, two months, 11 days.
2018 LPGA rookie Yu Liu, who ranks fourth in the Louise Suggs Rolex Rookie of the Year standings, shot a 3-under par 69 in her first start in China as an LPGA member. She came over to Qizhong Garden Golf Club to practice during her three weeks off from playing after The Evian Championship and says she “knows the course pretty well.”
“I used to like watching LPGA a lot because the Golf Channel in China, they have coverage every week,” said Yu Liu, who lists top-ranked Chinese player Shanshan Feng as her role model. “I used to be the one sitting in front of the TV.”
KANG BUILDS OFF STRONG RESULT IN KOREA
2017 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship winner Danielle Kang (T2, -5) has carried over her form after last week’s T3 finish in the LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship, where she was the co-leader heading into the final round. Kang has shot in the 60s in four of her last five rounds.
“Today's round went very smooth,” Kang said. “Coming off a very good momentum after last week and I've been hitting the ball really well, playing great. Just been trusting my game and just kept giving myself birdie chances. They kept rolling in. Excited for this week.”
PLAYER NOTES
Rolex Rankings No. 2 Ariya Jutanugarn (66, -6)
- Jutanugarn, 23, is from Bangkok, Thailand
- Jutanugarn leads after the first round for the ninth time in her career and third time in 2018
- Jutanugarn ranks tied for second on Tour in first round scoring average this season (69.08)
- In 2018, Jutanugarn has three wins and 14 overall top-10 finishes in 24 starts
- Jutanugarn was the 2016 Rolex Player of the Year after capturing the first five titles of her LPGA career
- Jutanugarn has never won an LPGA tournament in Asia – she has six wins in the U.S., two in Canada, one in England and one in Scotland
Rolex Rankings No. 15 Sei Young Kim (67, -5)
- Kim, 25, is from Seoul, Republic of Korea, 23
- Kim’s 67 on Thursday was her 30th round in the 60s of the season
- Kim is a seven-time LPGA winner, including the 2018 Thornberry Creek LPGA Classic where she finished at 31-under par breaking the all-time LPGA 72-hole scoring record by four strokes
- Kim and Brooke Henderson are the only players with LPGA Tour wins in 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018
- Only one of Kim’s seven wins have come in Asia (2015 Blue Bay LPGA)
Rolex Rankings No. 29 Danielle Kang (67, -5)
- Kang, 25, is from San Francisco, Calif. and played collegiately at Pepperdine University
- Kang will celebrate her 26th birthday on Saturday, October 20
- Kang has six top-10 finishes in 2018 including a tie for second at the HSBC Women’s World Championship
- Kang’s lone LPGA victory came at the 2017 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship
- Kang posted a 3-1-0 record as a rookie on the victorious 2017 U.S. Solheim Cup Team