Inbee Park targets Grand Slam at British Women's Open
Thursday 30 July 2015 16:16, UK
Inbee Park will resume her quest for a career Grand Slam when the 40th British Women's Open gets under way at Turnberry on Thursday.
The South Korean has already won the three American-based majors - the ANA Inspiration (formerly Kraft Nabisco Championship), the Women's PGA and the US Women's Open.
She also triumphed in the Evian Championship in 2012, the same year she finished runner-up to compatriot Jiyai Shin in the Women's British Open at Royal Liverpool.
Despite having three LPGA victories to her name this season, the world No 1 admits she travels to the Donald Trump-owned Scottish links struggling for form.
"It's the time of year where I'm not really hitting it great... but I am just trying to play through it," said Park, who revealed she is suffering from back pain following a long trans-Atlantic flight.
“The true Grand Slam would be winning the British Open and that is my main goal. But I come into this week with no expectations," added the 27-year-old who is playing Turnberry for the first time in her career.
"Last week in the final round I had probably one of my worst rounds of the year (76 in the Meijer LPGA Classic), and I was just hitting the ball everywhere. Really it freed up my mind.
"You get a couple of weeks like that where you don't feel like you're hitting the ball that well. But sometimes it takes a couple of days to come back, sometimes it can take one to two weeks to get back to position."
'Amazing'
In contrast, teenage prodigy Lydia Ko, who is seeking a first major title after 15 attempts, travels to the Ayrshire course on the back of a fourth-place finish at the Ladies Scottish Open at Troon last week.
The South Korean-born New Zealander, who finished fourth to Australian Rebecca Artis, used her outing at the Ayrshire links - just a few miles from Turnberry - to ready herself for the conditions she expects to encounter this week.
Asked how many majors she would like to have by the time she is 30 - when she says she will retire - Ko said with a laugh: "I have no idea. Even one would be amazing."
Charley Hull is the top British player in the field this week and the world No 48 is hoping for a repeat of her experience when she won a club event at the same course... aged just nine.
"It was 10 years ago and I remember it was so windy I got blown over at the 10th and 11th," she said. "There were 24,000 entries from British clubs and I won in a play-off against a 35-year-old.
"Good memories definitely help," she told the BBC. "I just love the golf course but I can only remember a few holes because it was so windy and rainy that day, I didn't get to take it all in."
Hull will be joined in the line-up by former world No 1 Dame Laura Davies, who insists she is not without a chance over the Ailsa Course this weekend.
The 51-year-old, winner of 79 events worldwide, said: "I played there once and missed the cut, but it's a course where I like the holes, and there is no reason why I shouldn't have a good crack at it like I did at Birkdale last year."
There are 34 US players in the 144-woman field this week and they will be looking to complete a hat-trick of victories for Americans after Stacy Lewis triumphed in 2013 and Mo Martin last year.