"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"
online golf column
by
Chris Dortch
June 29, 2006
May Wood had some time to kill Thursday
before her debut in the U.S. Women’s Open, so she called in with a
weather report. Historic Newport Country Club, located hard by the
Atlantic in Rhode Island, was socked in with a heavy fog, forcing
her tee time farther and farther back, until finally the first
round was postponed.
Wood was obviously disappointed, but after
what she’s been through to get to this stage in her career,
waiting another day to play in her first U.S. Open won’t matter.
“Whatever happens to me this week, playing in
the U.S. Open is a great stepping stone for me,” Wood said. “Just
qualifying really gave me a boost in confidence. I feel like I’ve
made some great strides with my game—I’m hitting the ball well, I
feel confident on the course and I’ve worked hard on my short
game.”
It’s hard to believe, but it’s already been
two years since Wood left a potential national championship team
at Vanderbilt to turn professional. After earning SEC
player-of-the-year and first-team All-American honors her
sophomore season in Nashville, Wood, reasoning that she’d done
enough at the college level, decided to test her game at a higher
level.
The ensuing months have been an odyssey for
Wood, filled with exhilarating highs and devastating lows. Such is
the game of golf for any player at any level. But when you’re
trying to make a living at it, the inevitable ups and downs are
multiplied tenfold.
At 20 years old, Wood was faced with making
adjustments and decisions most people her age don’t have to
consider. And when she failed to earn her LPGA Tour card in the
2004 qualifying school, she nearly let self-doubt get the better
of her.
Former Baylor golfer
May Wood
“I almost quit,” Wood said. “The game wasn’t
any fun. My life was hectic. I began to second-guess my decision
[to leave school so early.]”
Help came from an unlikely source. Wood, who
uses Callaway equipment, was playing in the company’s pro-am at
famed Pebble Beach when she met Mark Love, brother of PGA Tour
star Davis Love III. Like most anyone who watches the 6-foot-2
Wood hit a golf ball for the first time, Mark Love was impressed,
so he introduced Wood to his brother.
“Davis kind of took me under his wing,” Wood
said. “We played a couple of holes, and he sensed that I wasn’t
having any fun. He encouraged me and told me I had the talent to
make it on the tour. The next week, I went back to Orlando [where
she was living at the time] and got a personal trainer, and I
started working harder on my game.”
It’s taken a while for Wood to see her
diligence rewarded. She tied for 60th in the 2006
Q-school, which mean’s she’s not exempt. Consequently, she’s
played in just two LPGA events this season and didn’t make the cut
in either. Wood has also played in three Future’s Tour events this
year, with a tie for 9th in Louisiana her best showing.
The $2,000 she won barely covered expenses. But it was a check.
Wood, who found Orlando too “impersonal,”
headed back to Chattanooga and the support of friends and family,
and began to devote more than half her days to short game
practice. Her sports psychologist has offered some sage advice,
helping Wood take better control of her emotions, which in the
past have led to some course management mistakes.
Finally came results. In the first stage of
U.S. Open qualifying in May, she tied for medalist honors at
Timuquana Country Club in Jacksonville, Fla. with a 72. In early
June, Wood traveled to Spartanburg (S.C.) Country Club and tied
for the second-lowest score after a 72 and 76. All of a sudden she
was on the biggest stage in women’s golf.
Wood plans on taking advantage. Again taking
advice from her psychologist, who advised her to play practice
rounds with the LPGA’s finest, Wood sought out Annika Sorenstam
and Michele Wie. She actually had a practice round scheduled with
Wie, but it fell through. Too bad. Davis Love might have wanted to
see that one, considering the comments he made a few months back
on the Golf Channel, something to the effect of “wait till people
get a load of May Wood.”
“You have to learn from the best,” Wood said.
“Would I be nervous playing with Annika? No. She’s the best in the
world, but I’m not afraid to play with her. And there are all
kinds of things you can learn. It’s a fine line with these players
out here—what separates the best from the others. Sometimes it’s
who has the best putting week. But the best players are in total
control of their games and their emotions. I can learn a lot from
them.”
If the fog ever lets up, Wood will go to
school this week in Rhode Island. She’s looking forward to the
lessons she’ll learn.
“I’ve got the world by the tail right now,”
Wood said. “I’m so lucky to be able to play golf for a living.
I’ve just got to keep working hard and stay in control of my
emotions. The success will come. I really believe that.”
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