KirkwoodGolf: WORLD NO 2 FEMALE AMATEUR CECILIA CHO (NZ) TURNS PRO

Thursday, April 26, 2012

WORLD NO 2 FEMALE AMATEUR CECILIA CHO (NZ) TURNS PRO

FROM THE NZHERALD.CO.NZ WEBSITE
By DYLAN CLEAVER
One half of the outstanding amateur duo that New Zealand Golf hoped would propel them to glory on professional tours has switched allegiance.
Cecilia Cho has recently started on the Korean professional tour, playing under the Korean flag. Cho had dual citizenship and has opted to play the Korean tour as a Korean.
Unless she has a change of heart, her swansong as a New Zealander was the New Zealand Women's Golf Open at Pegasus in February, where she finished top amateur.
NZ Golf talent and coach development manager Gregg Thorpe was philosophical about Cho's decision.
"It was exciting having Cecilia as part of our programme and watching her develop over the years," Thorpe said. "As far as we're concerned, she holds dual citizenship and dual nationality so she decided it was in her best interests to take that first [pro] step as a Korean."
Cho moved to New Zealand with her parents when she was eight years old  and quickly become one of the top amateur golfers in the country.
A source told the Herald that Cho, 17, who now plays under her Korean name of Jeongmin, was keen to continue playing under the New Zealand flag but her parents wanted to switch her allegiance to Korea.
Cho won the NZ Women's National Amateur in 2009, beating the now World No 1 female amateur, Lydia Ko (also born in South Korea before her family moved to New Zealand) in the final.
The following year she won the Australian Strokeplay Championship, becoming the youngest to accomplish that feat, before losing in the final of the Australian Amateur Championship, a match-play event.
By March last year Cho had established herself as the No 1-ranked female amateur in the world before Ko overhauled her. This week she is still ranked No 2 behind Lydia Ko on the RandA website.
Now Cho will attempt to make her fortune on the professional circuit.
Nobody will begrudge her that, but it once more raises the question of how many resources NZ Golf should pour into Korean-born players without guarantees of professional allegiance.
When Sharon Ahn did something similar in 2007, her decision was met with dismay in golfing quarters. Peter Williams, who became a director at NZ Golf Inc, wrote a column in the Herald on Sunday castigating her.
"Sharon Ahn has exploited this country and is ungrateful for the benefits she's had ... She was granted citizenship with help from the former Women's Golf New Zealand, making her eligible for national teams where she was part of the taxpayer-funded, high-performance programme which paid for coaching and tournament expenses ..."
It's an argument that doesn't sit well with Thorpe.
"Once a person is a New Zealander and a citizen of New Zealand, they're entitled to as much support as any other New Zealander is," he said.
The practice of "using" New Zealand before recommitting to their birthplace was not widespread and he cited the example of Danny Lee continuing to play professionally as a New Zealander as an example.
Thorpe said Cho had communicated with NZ Golf and they were not blindsided by the move.
There will be some anxiety as to the future movements of Lydia Ko who had her 15th birthday this week. She is rated even higher than Cho, becoming the youngest player to win a professional golf tour event at the New South Wales Open in January.
At this week's Herald Future Stars awards ceremony, Ko said she was proud to wear the silver fern on her chest - a positive indicator for future allegiance, perhaps.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Charley Hull was No 4 in the World Women's Amateur Rankings until the news of Cecilia Ko turning professional filtered through to Europe. Stand by for Charley moving up to No 3. 

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