Oh wow! Former prodigy upstages big names at Australian Open
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
THE SRAITS TIMES. placeholder Credit: Lee Pei Jie
The Straits Times
Follow topic:
MELBOURNE – Some 15 years after teeing off at the Australian Open as a 12-year-old, home golfer Su Oh is again making a splash at her national event after emerging from a prolonged form slump to snatch a share of the lead on Nov 28.
Oh shot an opening round of 66 at Kingston Heath on Melbourne’s sandbelt to be level on seven-under with South Korean amateur Yang Hyo-jin, the pair upstaging a slew of Major winners at the dual gender event.
Oh, 28, had been tipped for big things having become the Australian Open’s youngest qualifier in 2009 and the world’s top-ranked amateur four years later.
She claimed victory in her second professional start at the Australian Ladies Masters in 2015 to earn a two-year exemption on the Ladies European Tour.
With the world seemingly at her feet, South Korea-born Oh promptly disappeared off the radar until breaking a seven-year win drought at the inaugural Australian WPGA Championship in Brisbane in 2022.
The victory was a beacon in an otherwise gloomy few years which saw her lose her LPGA Tour card.
She has since struggled on the developmental Epson Tour, missing nine out of 12 cuts in 2024 and earning US$7,400 (S$9,940) for the season.
“Good thing I like playing golf. I think I wouldn’t keep playing if I didn’t like it,” Oh quipped after savouring a nine-birdie round in glorious morning conditions.
“It was pretty tough, but I think I’m back on the right track with a better team around me.”
She has been working with Ritchie Smith, who coached three of Australia’s four golfers at the Paris Olympics, including Major winners Hannah Green and Minjee Lee, and Lee’s brother Min Woo Lee, who has won three European Tour events.
“I think it’s been good to kind of rebuild and I’ve known Ritchie for a long time, so I think that level of comfort has been there,” added Oh.
“I’ve worked really hard the last few months with Ritchie and I felt like I was hitting the ball much better, so I knew it was there, but I’m very happy and proud I just did it.
“I had to dig deep and believe in what I’ve been practising and I’m really happy it paid off today.”
Meanwhile, it was a case of no practice, no problem for Green as she shrugged off jet-lag to shoot a 67 and lie one stroke off the lead.
Green was among a raft of golfers who played the LPGA Tour’s season-ending CME Group Tour Championship in Florida on Nov 24 and dashed Down Under to compete in this event. REUTERS

