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・ Pak Ou District
・ Pak Paengnyeon
・ Pak Phanang District
・ Pak Phanang school shooting
・ Pak Phayun District
・ Pak Phli District
・ Pak Pong-ju
・ Pak Protector
・ Pak Puan
・ Pak Red Crescent Medical and Dental College
・ Pak Sadat Colony
・ Pak salto
・ Pak Sao
・ Pak Sar Jamin Sad Bad
・ Pak sar zamin (disambiguation)
Pak Se-ri
・ Pak Se-yong
・ Pak Seng District
・ Pak Seung-zin
・ Pak Sha Chau
・ Pak Sha Chau (North)
・ Pak Sha Wan (Chai Wan)
・ Pak Shama School
・ Pak Shek Kok
・ Pak Sheung Chuen
・ Pak Shing Kok Station
・ Pak Singhar
・ Pak So-yŏn
・ Pak Song-chol
・ Pak Song-chol (athlete)


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Pak Se-ri : ウィキペディア英語版
Pak Se-ri

Pak Se-ri or Se-ri Pak ((朝鮮語:박세리), (:paːk sʰeːɾi); born 28 September 1977) is a South Korean professional golfer on the LPGA Tour. She was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in November 2007.
==Career overview==
Born in Daejeon, she attended Yuseong Nursery School in that city and then Keumseong Girls’ High School in Gongju City, Chungnam Province where she was the school's best amateur golfer. She then moved to Seoul for training.〔http://english.donga.com/srv/service.php3?biid=2005080233038〕
Pak turned professional in 1996, a year before she moved to the United States as a 20-year-old.〔''TalkAsia'', CNN, 2007〕 In 1996 and 1997, she won six tournaments on the LPGA of Korea Tour. Pak joined the LPGA Tour full-time for the year 1998, crowning her rookie season with victories in two majors: the McDonald's LPGA Championship and U.S. Women's Open. At just 20 years of age, she became the youngest-ever winner of the U.S. Women's Open. About.com writes that "Pak won a 20-hole playoff for that victory, making that tournament - at 92 holes in length - the longest tournament ever in women's professional golf."〔(About.com - Se Ri Pak )〕 Four days after the U.S. Women's Open win, Pak shot a then-LPGA record 61 during the second round of the Jamie Farr Kroger Classic. She won the Rolex Rookie of the Year award for that season.
Since 1998, she has gone on to win 21 more events on the Tour, including three more majors. In June 2007, at age 29, she qualified for the World Golf Hall of Fame, surpassing Karrie Webb as the youngest living entrant ever. (Tom Morris, Jr., who died in 1875 at the age of 24, had been elected in 1975.)
Pak has also competed in a professional men's event, at the 2003 SBS Super Tournament on the Korean Tour. The Korean Tour is a feeder tour for the Asian Tour and does not offer world ranking points. She finished 10th in the event, according to the World Golf Hall of Fame "becoming the first woman to make the cut in a professional men's tournament since Babe Zaharias did so in 1945."〔(World Golf Hall of Fame Profile: Se Ri Pak )〕
At the 2005 McDonald's LPGA Championship, she missed the cut for the first time in 29 majors. In an interview quoted on the PGA Tour's website, she commented that she was searching for a balance between her golf and her personal life: "I've been a little bit unhappy about everything, my game, big game. I'm not really enjoying it at all, and I'm not doing anything with my ability. I know what I needed, a much better balance. I'm always putting a lot of pressure on myself". Eventually, she was found to have a finger injury. In 2006, she rediscovered her best form by winning the McDonald's LPGA Championship for the third time to claim her fifth major title overall.
In 2007, she won the Jamie Farr Owens Corning Classic for the fifth time, making her the fourth player in LPGA history to win the same tournament five or more times (Annika Sörenstam accomplished this feat at two tournaments).
Perhaps the greatest tribute to her career to date came in a column by ''Golf World'' writer Eric Adelson in 2008, who called Pak "a pioneer... who changed the face of golf even more than Tiger Woods." When Pak came to the LPGA in 1998, she was the only Korean player. Ten years later, she was one of 45 Koreans on tour, and the single largest source of revenue for the LPGA was the sale of TV rights in South Korea.
She was the only South Korean on the LPGA Tour in the year 1998, Pak's spectacular triumph at the 1998 U.S. Women's Open encouraged many Korean women to take up golf as a sport. She is regarded as a leader of the game in her home country and has also inspired the new generations of LPGA players Na Yeon Choi and Inbee Park who have followed her footsteps at the LPGA level. A statute of her now stands outside Gongju's stadium.〔http://kr.worldmapz.com/photo/26200_en.htm〕 This statue commemorates her signature moment: a successful shot from a water hazard to remain tied for first place in the 1998 Mcdonald's LPGA Championship; this allowed her to force a sudden death playoff which she then won with "a tremendous birdie putt from nearly 20 feet on the second hole." 〔http://www.mylpga.com/forum/f34/se-ri-pak-inspires-korean-show-birdy-buddy-7319.html〕 This was a victory named by the Korea Times as the 3rd most acclaimed moment in 60 years of South Korean sports history.〔http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/sports/2010/10/136_75338.html〕 Her shot was shown as the basis for the first episode of the Korean TV drama "Birdie Buddy." 〔http://www.dramafever.com/drama/765/1/Birdie_Buddy/〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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