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Yuka Saso is all smiles after completing the final round of the Founders Cup on May 15. Photo: Kyodo

US Women’s Open Championship: Yuka Saso not expecting much in title defence, just hoping to stay calm and have fun

  • Saso will be the defending champion for first time at a tournament, says she doesn’t know what to expect
  • Champions thinks it’s ‘awesome’ that other players still talk to her ‘like I’m 20 years old and not as a major champion’
LPGA Tour

Defending any title for the first time can be a daunting experience, doubly so when it’s a major tournament, and US Women’s Open champion Yuka Saso said she had little idea of what to expect when her moment comes in 10 days.

Saso won her “life-changing” title in a sudden-death play-off last year in San Francisco, but nearly 12 months later the 20-year-old admitted she was still not completely comfortable being known as a major winner.

Victory earned Saso a five-year LPGA Tour card and the right to compete alongside “players I’ve been dreaming of playing with”, but even then she prefers to keep a low profile.

Yuka Saso celebrates with the Harton S Semple Trophy after winning the 76th US Women’s Open Championship. Photo: AFP

I’m a very low-key person, I don’t really go out and say ‘hey, I’m the champion’,” she said. “I respect all the players on tour, and the fact that they still talk to me like I’m 20 years old and not as a major champion is just awesome.”

Still, while the Japanese-Filipino golfer said being introduced as a US Women’s Open champion made her “uncomfortable at a few events”, the title had a nice ring to it and gave her “a good push to start the day”.

“It’s going to be my first event coming back as defending champion, so I don’t know what’s going to happen,” Saso said during a media availability session organised by sponsors AXA. “This will be my first experience of it, so I’m hoping to just stay calm, and do what I do for other tournaments, not trying to overdo things, and enjoy the week again, and have fun.”

Ranked No 15 in the world, Saso is no stranger to success on the golf course. She won the World Junior Girls Championship in 2016, made history at the Asian Games two years later when she claimed team and individual gold for the Philippines, and won twice on the LPGA of Japan Tour.

But this year has proved to be something of a learning curve, with a couple of missed cuts and low finishes, mixed in with some in the top 20, including a tie for 12 at the Founders Cup earlier this month where she shot a 4-under 68 in the final round.

“There are some days I’m playing really good, there are some days that I’m not, the consistency is just not there, so I’m just trying to stay patient,” Saso said. “In golf you can’t play well every week, and I’m not expecting myself to.”

In fact, despite being the defending champion, Saso said she was not really expecting much of herself at all at the Pine Needles Lodge and Golf Club in North Carolina, other than to enjoy the experience.

“I expect myself to enjoy my golf, because I feel the more I enjoy it the better I play. I don’t really [say] I have to play well, or I have to make a birdie, for me that’s not the process,” she said. “For me it’s about trying to execute the shot, and whatever the outcome is, just accept it and move on, and have fun playing with players I’ve been dreaming of playing with.

“I’m still 20, and there are still a lot of things to learn, so I’m trying to enjoy every journey.”

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