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LPGA at Kingsmill / Daily Press, Williamsburg, Va./ 'Baggin it for a day' by David Teal / Thursday, May 07, 2009



LPGA at Kingsmill

Baggin' it for a day
By David Teel

May 7, 2009


WILLIAMSBURG -



Eighteen holes, no paramedics.

That's the Ambrose Bierce version of my Wednesday as Kristy McPherson's caddie at the Michelob Ultra Open pro-am.

And considering the tales of broken bones, bum backs and surgical repairs that McPherson's regular bagman, Thane Aalyson, spun, I'll take it.

Longer-form writers undoubtedly would note my scorched schnoz, scrawny legs — hey, they work for Allen Iverson — and one fireable faux pas.


But that would ignore our two primary themes.

Caddying is hard.

McPherson can play.

Casual fans may not know McPherson, a 27-year-old University of South Carolina graduate. She didn't dominate the amateur circuit and has yet to win in two-plus seasons on the LPGA Tour.


Be patient. She will.

McPherson has progressed steadily since turning pro and ranks 13th on this season's money list. Stepping to the final tee, she led this season's first major, the Kraft Nabisco, by a shot, only to be denied when close friend Brittany Lincicome eagled the par-5 18th at Mission Hills, Calif.

Given her suburb ball stricking- McPherson ranks 10th on tour in greens-in-regulation and 12th in driving accuracy — Kingsmill's subtly challenging River Course should suit her. In fact, McPherson opened last year's Michelob with a pair of 68s before fading on the weekend with a 73 and 74.

"You remember more than I do," she laughed over the complimentary breakfast buffet.

When McPherson does win, the LPGA will add a valuable marketing commodity. Her Reba-caliber twang and down-home charm are magnetic, and not just to the sweet-tea crowd.

McPherson thanked every volunteer, signed every autograph and posed for every picture. By the time we'd hit the first fairway, she knew each of her four amateur playing partners by name.

Come the ninth fairway, she was comfortable enough to taunt Paul Stoddart, who'd just quaffed a cold one and struck a sweet approach: "Give the guy a beer and he actually hits the clubface."

At the 13th green, McPherson hazed Farm Fresh execs Jimmy Stegall and Scott Libbey for the store's failure to carry her favorite beer, a blueberry-flavored brew she discovered at last year's Michelob players' bash.

Potential and personality aren't McPherson's only assets. She also has a compelling personal story.

Bedridden for months by paralyzing joint pain, she was diagnosed at age 11 with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Medication and a strict stretching regimen allowed McPherson to return to the course, where her first instructor was her father, David.

Despite his 2003 encounter with bone and kidney cancer, David and Janice McPherson are devoted golf parents. They're driving here for the tournament along with other family members — sister Michelle designs McPherson's flashy Web site.

McPherson's tee time Wednesday was 8:18 a.m., and she instructed her caddies to meet her at 7:15. Aalyson and I were on time; she was not.


"I have an excuse," McPherson said as she unfolded from her courtesy Honda Accord. "We were talking about you at the house."

Turns out McPherson is bunking at the Kingsmill home of one of my college suitemates, and judging from his zip code, he's done quite well since our James Madison daze.

The parking lot was my first serious encounter with her golf bag. Unlike those I toted as a college kid, it is not light.

Aalyson estimated the weight at 40 pounds and warned, "A caddie's worst nightmare isn't rain. It's the threat of the rain."

Indeed, foreboding skies force players to carry an oversized umbrella and rainsuits for themselves and the caddie. When sunny, that gear remains in the trunk. When raining, it's used and not weighing down the bag.


As we strolled toward the range, Aalyson recited a litany of caddie injuries and maladies, including his own knee surgery and chronically cranky back. The most serious was the shattered ankle Paula Creamer's bagman, Colin Cann, suffered at Kingsmill in 2005, when he tumbled down an embankment adjacent to the fourth green.

Listening to Aalyson, one thought rushed to mind: Phidippides' fate after running the first marathon.

After all, we're dealing with someone who lost a slew of baby teeth falling over his shoelaces into concrete steps, and broke his right foot stepping on a garden hose.


This is Aalyson's first year working for McPherson and 20th on the tour — his first victory came with Lynchburg native Donna Andrews in 1993. He caught the bug when he met Jack Nicklaus' caddie, the late Angelo Argea, at a fishing hole.

Aalyson revealed a caddie's three best friends: Gore-Tex shoes (my feet were soaked after three holes), Advil and a laser GPS — the latter saves a caddie countless steps calculating yardage and is apparently accurate.

At the par-4 14th, Aalyson called the group's short approach 86 yards to the pin. Our best amateur, Phil Kazer, said we needed a 2.

McPherson delivered, holing a 56-degree wedge. That eagle and 16 birdies in the best-ball format gave the fivesome the winning score of 18 under.

Except for a brief shower as we played the eighth hole, the weather was fine. Better, certainly, than the caddie.

I didn't replace the head-covers on McPherson's driver and putter quickly enough, risking nicks on the most important clubs in the bag.

"Every time they stare at those nicks," Aalyson said, "they'll think of you. Pretty soon they get tired of those nicks, and pretty soon they get tired of you."

On the eighth fairway, I tossed McPherson the wrong ball, a serious offense. But not as serious as jinxing her after a perfect drive at No. 11.

"You haven't missed a fairway all day," I said.

Everyone gasped as if I'd announced I had swine flu.

Sure enough, McPherson drove into the left rough on 12.

Rookie mistake.



Depending on their negotiating skills and the player's generosity, caddies can make a darn nice income. But they earn it.

Kingsmill has some diabolical hills — the climbs to the range and 17th green were the worst — but as the round concluded, there was no searing pain or gnawing soreness.

"You OK?" McPherson asked.

"Fine," I said.


"Come by tomorrow," Aalyson said with a mischievous grin. "Let us know how you're doing."




Kentwool Sponsor's Rising Star / April 28, 2009

April, 28, 2009

Kentwool.com

85140198





Professional Golfer Kristy McPherson Showcases KENTWOOL Brand & New Product Lines on LPGA Tour,
Finishes 2nd at the Kraft Nabisco Championship

Greenville, SC - For KENTWOOL's CEO, it was somewhat surreal watching the company's newly sponsored professional golfer, Kristy McPherson, leading the nationally televised LPGA Kraft Nabisco Championship going into the 18th hole on Sunday, April 6th, at Rancho Mirage, California.

Sporting a visually prominent black, silver and blue KENTWOOL golf bag emblazoned with the Upstate SC company's name and new corporate tag line of Innovation in Motion, McPherson's impressive performance made the moment all the more special for Mark Kent.

Although an eagle by fellow competitor Brittany Lincicome edged 27-year old McPherson out of the win in the tournament's closing seconds, her impressive 2nd place finish positions the former University of South Carolina golfer for success on the LPGA Tour - and the kind of national notoriety that would make any sponsor company smile. With McPherson wearing and promoting a customized, high tech professional golf sock that has been developed in recent months by KENTWOOL as part of its new WINDspun product line, Mark Kent couldn't be more pleased.

When Kent met Kristy McPherson several months ago, he was not only impressed by her superb athletic abilities and potential for real success on the LPGA Tour, but by her proven character and sparkling personality. The LPGA golfer who originally hails from Conway, South Carolina, now resides in Tampa Florida, but has maintained close ties to her home state.

As they say, timing is everything. KENTWOOL was seeking the ideal celebrity golf persona to help promote its new and promising foray into high-tech, high-performance professional golf socks and its forward-moving corporate brand - and Kristy quickly emerged as a perfect fit. In addition to a professional golf career that could be on the verge of taking off, McPherson has overcome major physical obstacles including a childhood disease that challenged her ability to walk.

Mark Kent stated, "Kristy has a rare combination of God-given abilities coupled with demonstrated character. KENTWOOL is very proud to be one of Kristy's sponsors, and to have someone of her caliber promoting our world-class,165-year old South Carolina company. As we're in the midst of launching KENTWOOL's new corporate tag line, Innovation in Motion, Kristy is a great example of the culture and core values we embrace." KENTWOOL's corporate website will be featuring its relationship with McPherson in the months ahead.

The professional golf socks, branded as High Performance BodyGear on the cutting-edge prototype packaging recently developed, contain globally renowned KENTWOOL Windspun yarn as the primary ingredient. In addition to WINDspun, other high tech & sustainable elements have been combined with innovatively engineered design features - potentially creating the finest, customized golf sock ever developed. While the unique sock product is not being sold commercially at this time, providing high-profile exposure through trial testing on the professional golf tour is exactly the kind of early stage targeted marketing strategy which will build a strong platform for future specialized product strategies, according to KENTWOOL Strategic Marketing Partner, Sam Konduros.

Mark Kent, KENTWOOL President & CEO, stated "This is another important step in our evolution as a company that has committed itself to becoming the premier wool innovation and manufacturing company in the world." The innovative Upstate SC-based textile company has a state-of-the-art wool-based yarn spinning operation serving a diversified international customer portfolio covering the knitting, spinning, weaving and industrial textile markets.

President/CEO, Mark Kent, is a 20-year veteran of the textile industry and has served on several national industry boards including the American Textile Export Company and the American Textile Manufacturers Institute. He has been extremely active in South Carolina manufacturing, business, economic development and philanthropic circles, and serves on numerous strategic boards including the South Carolina Chamber of Commerce and the American Red Cross Upstate South Carolina Chapter. In addition to his leadership of KENTWOOL, he is also President of Greenville-based KENT WORLDWIDE and KENT WORLDWIDE DEVELOPMENT.



McPherson tough enough / Golweek, Tour Insider / Saturday, April 4, 2009


The Golf Channel, Tour Insider, Randall Mell
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. –April 4, 2009



David McPherson can’t help marveling watching his baby girl.
 
Kristy’s 27 now, but this proud father says he’ll always see her that way even as he watches her compete against the best women in the world in a bid to win the Kraft Nabisco Championship on Sunday.
 
“If you have children, you know how it is, how there’s something different about the youngest child,” McPherson said of the youngest of his four children.
The memories of this baby girl can make a grown man cry.
 
“They’ve made the whole family cry,” David said.
 
Watching Kristy march so steadfastly around Mission Hills touches David because it seems like yesterday he was lifting her out of her bed in their Conway, S.C., home and cradling her out to the front porch, where she would watch the neighbor kids play on Woodfield Circle.
 
At 11, Kristy was stricken with Still’s Disease, a form of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. David watched the disease ravage his baby girl’s body with stunning swiftness. It caused her face and joints to swell grossly. There were mornings she couldn’t open her eyes. Her internal organs became inflamed, and she would break out in fevers and salmon-colored rashes.
 
For nearly a year, Kristy was bedridden. For about seven months, she didn’t walk.
 
“We’d pick her up and carry her out on the porch so she could be outside,” David said
David said treatment of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis wasn’t as advanced as it is today. The specialist treating Kristy prepared the family for the worst case scenario, that Kristy might not live to see her 30th birthday.
 
“It was destroying her body so bad,” said David, 58, an electrical contractor. “They didn’t have anything as good as they have now to treat it.”
 
David said he read in Reader’s Digest about methotrexate, a drug that would prove to be the answer to the family’s prayers.
 
“It was the greatest drug ever, I thought,” David said. “It was like a magic drug. It seemed like about three weeks after she started taking it, she was up and walking again.”


Still, Kristy would return to school in a wheelchair as a 12-year-old. That was tough on a once athletic child who excelled in team sports. As a respite from the four walls at home, David would take her golfing with him at Pineland Country Club near Myrtle Beach. At first, she just rode in the cart, watching. Doctors forbid her from playing sports that required running or jumping, but when she was strong enough, she took up golf.
 
Kristy took to the sport quickly, pouring herself so completely into it that she was good enough to play on the boys’ high school team when she was 14. She earned a scholarship to the University of South Carolina, where she was a three-time first-team All-America selection and won seven collegiate events.
 
Turning pro would test her, though. She struggled on the Duramed Futures Tour for four years before finally earning LPGA membership. She tees it up Sunday looking to make her first LPGA victory a major. In 50 LPGA events, she has never finished better than a tie for fourth.
 
Yeah, that makes Kristy a long shot, especially with Cristie Kerr breathing down her neck just a shot back. Kerr, an 11-time LPGA winner who won the U.S. Women’s Open in ’07, seems to have fate on her side. She hit a tee shot at the 14th hole that was screaming right toward the water when it hit the rocks on the water’s edge and kicked hard left, nearly rolling into the hole.
 
“It was the hand of God,” Kerr said.
 
Cosmic forces seem to be helping Kristy, too. Her golf seems like a miracle given her feeble state as a child. The rheumatoid arthritis still strikes unexpectedly. At last year’s Longs Drugs Challenge outside San Francisco, Kristy awakened with one eye swollen shut and the other nearly shut.
 
“She played with one eye,” David said. “She’s tough.”
 
David knows tough, too. He faced his own challenges watching Kristy hit every one of her 70 shots Saturday. He rode a scooter, hopping out with a cane at tees and greens. He had his left hip replaced after being diagnosed with bone cancer six years ago. Doctors also removed his left femur and replaced it with a titanium one. Nine days after his last surgery, he was diagnosed with kidney cancer, but he’s recovered from both.
 
“I am cancer free today,” David said.
 
David’s wife and Kristy’s mom, Janice, will join David in the gallery Sunday. So will Kristy’s sister, Michelle.
 
Asked if the trials and tribulations of youth help her overcome golf’s toughest challenges, Kristy pauses.
 
“I don’t think like that, that I can come back after making a bogey because I came back from being sick, but I do think having gone through that allows me not to put so much pressure on myself, but to take everything as a blessing,” McPherson said.


Battle Tested / GolfWorld- by John Strege- Rancho Mirage, CA / April 4, 2009


By John Strege
Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images
April 4, 2009


Kraft Nabisco Championship


Battle Tested

Kfn3rd13 Kristy McPherson was led to golf when a childhood disease forced her to give up other sports. "The best thing that ever happened to me." McPherson said.
 

...........................................................
Kristy McPherson hadn't contended in a major before this week. But she's faced greater challenges, and it's an experience she intends to draw on Sunday.

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. -- Kristy McPherson is en route from obscurity and she isn't traveling light. She brings with her a weighty biography that has begged to be exposed, but has remained veiled for lack of a proper forum.

Now that McPherson has been formally introduced to the golf world by virtue of her third-round lead in the Kraft Nabisco Championship, her story comes to light, and we learn that it includes a childhood disease that restricted her ability to walk and left her bedridden for the better part of a year.

At 11, she was diagnosed with Still's Disease, a form of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. For an active girl for whom softball and basketball were passions, it was as devastating as it was debilitating. Doctors informed her that she would no longer be able to play softball or basketball, nor would she be able to participate in any activity that involved running or jumping.

It was, she said, akin to the end of the world for a sixth-grader, who was unable to walk. The upside to this otherwise grim tale is that her disease and the limitations it imposed on her enabled her to latch onto golf, albeit reluctantly, despite growing up in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

"I didn't really like golf," she said late Saturday afternoon, after a round of two-under par 70 gave her a one-stroke lead over Cristie Kerr heading into the final round on the Dinah Shore Tournament Course at Mission Hills. "But it was the only thing I could do at the time, because I didn't have to run or jump."

She was 14 when she finally embraced the game for which she originally had an aversion. She took to it quickly, climbing from local junior ranks to the American Junior Golf Association and demonstrating enough potential to earn a scholarship to South Carolina.

"Like I always say, getting sick when I was young was the best thing that every happened to me," she said, noting the career it allowed her to find as well as the perspective it has provided her.

"It allows me to appreciate every day. It allows me not to put so much pressure on my golf game, to take everything as a blessing."

She still takes medications daily to control the arthritis that affects her knees and joints. The pain occasionally resurfaces, she said, though not here in the dry, warm Southern California desert. "If it's cold and rainy it bothers me more," she said.

McPherson, 27, is a Futures Tour graduate who is in her third year on the LPGA. Last year, she earned $407,237, though she has never finished higher than a tie for fourth at the P&G Beauty NW Arkansas Championship.

This is new to McPherson, not only leading heading into the final round, but leading a major championship. This is only the fifth major she's played in and she has never finished better than a tie for 21st.

She was tied with Christina Kim heading into third-round play and gave no indication of stage fright. "Today was fun," she said. "I actually had no nerves at all, which was pretty surprising to me. You can't get me or Christina (Kim, her playing partner) to shut up most of the time."

She has a favorable pairing on Sunday, too, in a threesome that includes her close friend Brittany Lincicome, whom she calls "Bam Bam," for her ability to launch the ball from the tee. "That's great," she said. "I would love it. I'm going to be out-driven all day, but that's all right."

A friendly face might help her to cope with the mounting pressure, but she'll require more of the precision shots she has delivered through the first three days. "I know I've got to play a lot of real solid golf. I just want to go out and try to play golf tomorrow and try to keep it simple."

Who knows whether she'll rise to the occasion on Sunday, but it seems unlikely that she'll shrink from it. Playing with the lead of a major championship is not the most difficult thing she has faced in her life.

Then there's this, her favorite quote: "Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss you will land among the stars."


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