|
Lorena
Ochoa dominating like Tiger Woods
Of all the trophies Lorena Ochoa has collected since her
magical hands first touched a golf club, one of her favorite
mementos is a photograph taken when she was 12, standing
beside a teenager who even then looked like a giant in
the game.
Her head doesn’t quite reach the shoulders of 17-year-old
Tiger Woods.
They posed in 1993 after Ochoa won her age division for
the fourth straight year at the Junior World Golf Championship.
They did not see each other again until last year at the
Golf Writers Association of America dinner in Augusta,
Ga., where Ochoa and Woods were honored as players of the
year.
Woods’ eyes lit up when he saw the Mexican phenom,
and he wrote an extensive message on the photo before signing
it.
Now they are linked by more than just a snapshot.
As Woods continues to rule his sport, Ochoa has emerged
as a force in women’s golf. She has won five of her
six tournaments this year, including a major, by a combined
37 shots, raising questions about who is the more dominant
player.
“That’s something that’s out of my hands,” Ochoa
said. “That’s more the fans and the media point
of view. But to be able to put my name next to him is always
an honor, and I’m happy with that.”
Each seemed destined for greatness at an early age.
Woods learned the game before he could walk, mesmerized
by his father swinging a golf club as Woods sat in a high
chair. Ochoa was climbing trees at Guadalajara Country
Club when she was 5 and broke both wrists after falling
some 15 feet. She was in a cast from her shoulders to her
fingers for three months.
“They said the doctor gave me magical wrists, some
magic in my hand,” Ochoa once said.
Since setting an NCAA record at Arizona by winning eight
straight tournaments as a sophomore, the 26-year-old Mexican
has hit her stride and is running side-by-side with Woods.
Both are No. 1 in the world rankings, with more than double
the points of the next-best player.
Woods skipped the PGA Tour’s first two events in
Hawaii, then began his season with an eight-shot victory
at Torrey Pines. Ochoa skipped the LPGA Tour’s first
two events in Hawaii, then made her 2008 debut in Singapore
and won by 11 strokes.
Woods won four straight times to start the season, extending
a streak that began in September. Ochoa won her fourth
straight start last week in Orlando, Fla., the first woman
in 45 years to win four consecutive events on the schedule.
Next week in Tulsa, Okla., she can tie the LPGA record
for consecutive victories held by Annika Sorenstam and
Nancy Lopez.
Ochoa has won 19 times since the start of the 2006 season,
including the last two majors. Woods has won 18 times on
the PGA Tour since 2006 with three majors, although he
has played 20 fewer events.
The biggest difference between them—at least this
year—is their quest for a Grand Slam.
Woods was the runner-up, three strokes back, at the Masters,
ending his bid before it could get started. A week earlier,
Ochoa ran off three straight birdies around the turn to
pull away and win the Kraft Nabisco Championship by five
shots.
It was her second straight major, having won the Women’s
British Open last summer at St. Andrews.
“I guess right now I’m a little bit ahead
because I won the last two,” Ochoa said.
Perhaps more parallels await.
Ochoa will be going for her third straight major at the
LPGA Championship the first week of June. Pat Bradley in
1986 was the last woman to win three straight majors, while
Woods is the only professional—male or female—to
capture four in a row.
What can stop her?
“I’d like to believe nothing and nobody,” Ochoa
said after winning the Nabisco. “I know this is just
the beginning of the year. I know I put some high goals
this year, but I want to try to keep going.”
It was only three years ago that similar comparisons were
made between Woods and Sorenstam, who dominated women’s
golf for five years. Sorenstam won six of her first eight
tournaments in 2005, including the first two majors, by
wearing down the field with her consistent, precise, robotic
play.
Ochoa brings far more sizzle, not to mention power, and
it shows in how badly she is crushing her competition.
Ochoa twice has won tournaments by 11 shots this year.
At the Safeway International outside Phoenix, the strongest
field in women’s golf, she won by seven strokes.
“Everything that she’s done this year has
been phenomenal,” Brittany Lincicome said.
Even more remarkable is a graciousness rarely found in
an athlete so ruthless.
Ochoa is proud of her heritage and her people, and often
goes to the maintenance barn at golf tournaments to visit
with the grounds crew, most of whom are Latino. She spent
a half-hour with them at the Kraft Nabisco in Palm Desert,
Calif., helping them cook breakfast, talking soccer and
thanking them for their work.
When she closed out last season with a $1 million payday,
Ochoa pledged $100,000 for flood victims in Mexico and
set aside a large amount to help build schools for needy
children in her town.
LPGA officials still rave about last year at the Ginn
Tribute, which honored the women who founded the LPGA Tour
in 1950. Some of the founders asked for Ochoa’s autograph,
and only after signing did she go back and ask for theirs.
She also had her picture taken with them.
“To keep for memories,” Ochoa said.
No doubt, she will treasure it along with the photo with
Woods, both in their own way reminding her of an amazing
journey.
|