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Lorena
Ochoa's rise to the top of the game
The house where Lorena Ochoa grew up overlooks the swimming
pool at Guadalajara Country Club, a playground paradise
for a tiny, wiry girl with big dreams.
She would scamper to the tops of magnolia and ceiba trees
that crowd the golf course. She would swim and play tennis
and hold putting contests for a peso until it was too dark
to see the hole.
“Lorena liked to play fantasy games—hit it
over the tree, between the branches, over the rocks,” said
Shanti Granada, who began playing golf with Ochoa at age
7. “She always stayed to hit practice shots, always
with an extra imagination to make practice fun.”
From these beginnings rose the best female golfer in the
world.
Ochoa, 26, already has met the performance criteria for
the Hall of Fame. She has won five times in six LPGA Tour
events this year, crushing the competition by a combined
37 shots, and this week in Oklahoma she will try to win
her fifth straight tournament and tie a record held by
Annika Sorenstam and Nancy Lopez.
A month later, she will be a heavy favorite to capture
her third straight major.
Heady stuff for a kid from a soccer-loving country where
there are fewer than 300 golf courses. Rafael Alarcon,
though, might have seen this coming.
Ochoa was drawn to Alarcon, a local PGA golfer, when she
was about 8. She would stand behind him as he hit balls,
peppering him with questions and following him around the
course, until he one day invited her to play.
As the trophies piled up—Ochoa won her age division
at the Junior World Championships five years in a row—Alarcon
asked her once on the practice green why she wanted to
know so much about the game.
“I want to learn to beat you,” he recalls
her telling him. “I know if I beat you, I can be
the best player in the world.”
The day before she left Mexico for the University of Arizona,
she did just that, by two strokes on the back nine.
Now in her sixth full season on the LPGA Tour, there appears
to be no stopping her.
“Lorena is an amazing golfer and an even more impressive
person,” said Lopez, whom Ochoa considers a role
model. “She has become a true superstar … so
well liked on the tour and so successful at the same time.”
This is the essence of Ochoa. She has risen to the top
of a sport still dominated by the wealthy in her native
Mexico, where green fees often cost five times the average
daily wage. Yet she is loyal to the working class who care
for the golf course and to impoverished children who have
never seen the game played.
“She has always been sincere and friendly,” said
Francisco Javier Lopez, who has worked on the Guadalajara
golf course for 18 years. “Now that she’s winning
and winning, she’s just the same as before, very
humble.”
Hometown papers call her “La Reina”—the
queen—and praise her as much for her humility as
her 280-yard tee shots.
She already has her own charity, sponsoring a school for
needy children in the Guadalajara area. On the road, she
often takes time to meet with Latino groundskeepers, even
helping them cook breakfast just before this season’s
first major championship.
And she has vowed to quit the LPGA Tour after 10 years
to start a family, always the most important part of her
life.
“My family is the one that keeps me happy. It’s
my motivation,” she said in March. “They make
me feel normal, and I love that.”
Ochoa’s parents—her father is a real estate
developer, her mother an artist—raised their four
kids in a small house overlooking the country club, just
15 minutes from the cathedral and colonial plazas of Mexico’s
second-largest, sprawling city.
She was 5 when her father put a golf club in her hand,
and success soon followed—a state championship at
age 6, a national title at age 7, and the first of five
straight world championships a year later.
None of that was an accident.
Granada recalls how she and Ochoa were the only girls
in a weekly golf class with 15 boys. The two played together
everyday after school for the next 10 years, following
a detailed practice schedule that Ochoa sketched on notebook
paper and carried with her clubs.
“Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday: Putt, 4:00-5:00; Approach,
5:00-6:00; Driving range, 6:00-7:00,” Granada recalls,
diagramming a replica of the schedule on the country club’s
ferny terrace. “Everything was perfectly structured.”
From a young age, Ochoa learned to seek challenges and
conquer her fears. She climbed Mexico’s highest volcano
at age 12 and completed a three-day mountain “ecothon” of
biking, kayaking and swimming at 14.
Ochoa’s father hated his kids to sit around, so
she dabbled in everything, including swimming, tennis and
basketball. But when he told her to pick one sport, she
chose her clubs.
Most days after early mornings on the golf course, her
father would pop her on the back of his moped and speed
her to the Torre Blanca Catholic girls’ school,
dressed in a blue plaid jumper and motorcycle helmet.
Cameras showed up there in the fifth grade, as Ochoa continued
winning Junior World Championships. Yet despite the attention,
teachers remember a steady, dynamic and fun-loving perfectionist
who never sought special treatment and was good at every
sport she tried.
Ochoa’s only teen rebellion was to sneak in to play
basketball and volleyball—discouraged by her father,
who asked gym teachers to keep her concentrated on golf.
“One time she jammed a finger, and it swelled up
fat and black and blue. We said, ‘Quick! Ice! Quick!
Before her father gets here!”’ Ochoa’s
high school gym teacher, Abigail Faviola Vasquez, recalls. “She
was always a really positive, natural leader, and when
she’d come to play, her enthusiasm was contagious.
You could tell she was meant for great things.”
Before leaving for Arizona, Ochoa asked Alarcon if he
would one day be her coach. But first, she worked her way
through college alone.
She sometimes struggled to understand professors or write
papers in English, but found her stride on the golf course,
winning 12 of 20 tournaments in two years and twice earning
NCAA Player of the Year honors.
“I just remember seeing this little bitty thing
and wondering how in the world she can hit the ball so
far,” college coach Greg Allen said of the 5-foot-6
Ochoa. “She had a quiet confidence about her. The
belief she has in who she is just sets her apart.”
Ochoa, who lived with a Mexican family off-campus as a
freshman, was good enough to turn pro after one year but
stayed on a second season to mature, winning eight of 10
tournaments. She then clinched the Futures Tour money title
to earn a ticket to the LPGA Tour in 2003.
Alarcon and Ochoa then got to work, outlining a five-year
plan that included becoming No. 1 in the world.
Along the way, she has hit some bumps, squandering a chance
to win the U.S. Women’s Open in 2005 by hooking her
tee shot into the water on the 18th hole and making a quadruple
bogey. That same year, she blew a three-shot lead to Sorenstam
in Phoenix, a devastating loss.
But she saw the mistakes as a chance to get better.
“She’s so good at learning from experiences
and adversity and turning it into a positive,” Allen
said. “She’s such an emotional person—she
laughs, cries—but she has really learned to control
those things, and that has helped her finish down the stretch.”
A Catholic, Ochoa prays daily and crosses herself before
every round, often on the first tee. Friends say that faith
feeds her confidence, keeping her calm and balancing her
other interests in life.
“The best thing about Lorena isn’t what she
does on the golf course,” Allen says. “The
way she cares about people and wants to make their lives
better, that’s who Lorena really is.”
At La Barranca, the Guadalajara elementary school she
sponsors, low-income students race to hug her when she
visits.
Interest in Ochoa is exploding across Mexico, as thousands
of kids and adults crowd courses in ribbons and baseball
hats, chanting “Lo-re!” and running from hole
to hole alongside her. This fall, she will become the youngest
player to host her own LPGA event there, the Lorena Ochoa
Invitational.
Ochoa and her brother already have opened two academies
to train instructors and hope to help build public courses,
an effort to make golf more accessible.
“The country looks to Lorena because they’ve
identified with her career and what’s important to
her,” Alejandro Ochoa says. “She’s an
inspiration to keep going, never quit and, despite the
circumstances, stay humble and tied to your goals.” |