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Golf - 25. October 2012.

New generation of Chinese players hoping to star at China Suzhou Taihu Open

SUZHOU, CHINA, Thursday, 25 October, 2012 - The new generation of female
golfers from China are hoping to grab the headlines at this week's
Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open.



The 54-hole stroke play tournament, which is tri-sanctioned by the
Ladies European Tour, Ladies Asian Golf Tour and China Golf Association,
gets under way at Suzhou Taihu International Golf Club from Friday.



There will be eight of China's 10 female national team members
competing, including five amateurs and three professionals - and only
two of that group is over the age of 18.



Wang Xin Ying, 13, is the youngest in the field of competitors and one
of the best amateur golfers in China. She finished third on her debut on
the LET Access Series at the Women's Bank Open in Finland in early
August.



Cai Danting, 13, is another promising teenager and playing in the Suzhou
Taihu Open for the first time. She recently won the Volvo Junior
Championship in Guangzhou, has an average driving distance of 220 yards
and recently had two holes-in-one in a week.



Shi Yuting, 13, is the 2012 China Amateur Champion and finished second
in a professional CLPGA event a fortnight ago: the Chongqing Challenge.
She was a member of the China junior team that beat the USA in their own
backyard at the USA-China Youth Golf match by 9 to 7 at the CordeValle
Golf Resort in California in August.



When asked who amongst the group can win the tournament, Zhang Weiwei,
14, appeared the most confident. The slim teen hits her driver an
average of 240 yards and finished 12th in the World Amateur
Championships in Turkey a fortnight ago. She also played in this
tournament in 2011.



Of the five amateurs, Yan Jing, 16, is the last but by no means least.
She was the leading amateur at the 2011 Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open, ending
in joint 18th and also at the World Ladies Championship in March, where
she tied for 21st on level par, two strokes clear of World No.1 Lydia
Ko.



The 2010 Asian Games silver medallist breezed through qualifying to tee
off in the Ricoh Women's British Open at Royal Liverpool in September,
becoming the youngest Chinese female golfer to ever play in a major
tournament. Yan was one of only four amateurs to make the cut and shot a
stunning second round score of 69.



Lin Xiyu, 16, is the youngest professional golfer on the CLPGA but has
the experience of a veteran. This will be her third appearance in the
Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open, where she missed the cut in 2010 and tied for
51st in 2011.



Lin displayed her talents with a tie for ninth at the Sanya Ladies Open
in 2010 and shared fifth place in the same tournament last year on her
professional debut, so will be one to watch next week at Yalong Bay Golf
Club in Hainan. She is also full of confidence after two wins on the
CLPGA, at the Binhai Fortune Plaza Tianjin Challenge Cup and Srixon
Ladies Open last week.



Wang Xin, 18, turned professional in 2011. Her best finish on the CLPGA
was a tie for 13th at the Sanya Ladies Open in 2010. She won the Hope
Amateur Tournament Championship, Beijing leg, the same year.



Meanwhile, at 21, Zhang Yu Yang is the elder stateswoman in the group.
She is enjoying her rookie season on the Ladies European Tour, where she
became the first member from China after successfully passing through
Tour School in December.



Zhang has posted two top-30 finishes from nine tournaments this season,
including a season-best tie for 26th in Germany. Ranked 117th on the
order of merit, she is likely to return to Tour School for 2013,
although she will be in good company, joined by compatriots Lin Xiyu,
Jia Yun Li, Xiao Ying Shi and Wang Xin, who will also make the trip to
Marrakech, Morocco, this December.



The only two female national team members not participating in the
Suzhou Taihu Open this week are Feng Simin, who trains in the USA and
Shi Xiaoying. Simin, 17, was the first amateur to win on the CLPGA tour,
at the Wuhan Challenge this August. Shi Xiaoying, 30, turned pro in 2010
and was a strong amateur with a third place finish at the Citic Forward
Amateur Tour in 2008, but has not had the best results since turning
pro.

This is a watershed moment for Chinese golf.  Earlier this year
14-year-old Chinese golfer Andy Zhang became the youngest player ever to
qualify for a major when he took part in the US Open, while World No 4
Feng Shanshan became the first player from mainland China to win a major
when she claimed the LPGA Championship.



The 2012 Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open marks the fifth year that the Ladies
European Tour has travelled to China and it is no coincidence that the
skill level of the Chinese golfers is improving every season.

In addition to bringing some of the biggest names in women's golf to
China, such as Annika Sorenstam and Yani Tseng, who won the event in
2008 and 2010 respectively, the Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open plays a key
role in golf's development. The tournament provides first class
competition on a quality golf course, fostering excellent international
relations and friendship amongst the 114 competitors from 20 different
countries throughout the world.
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