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SAN FRANCISCO -- Andy Zhang walked over to the driving range as just another teenager seeking an autograph from his favorite players, and instead had the gallery at The Olympic Club asking for his signature.
Welcome to the U.S. Open, kid.
All of 14 years old and preparing to start the ninth grade, Zhang is believed to be the youngest player in championship history. He was born in China and has lived in Florida since 2008, and about the only place he doesn't show his age is on the course.
Zhang held his own in a practice round Tuesday with Masters champion Bubba Watson and Aaron Baddeley. After shedding some early nerves, Zhang's smile - behind those big braces, of course - lit up the gallery and had everyone from Tiger Woods to Rory McIlroy wondering the same question.
Who is this kid?
Read more here: 14-year-old from China to make US Open history - Wire Golf - The Sacramento Bee
US Open 2012: Teenage whizzkid Andy Zhang, 14, can lead new revolution in China with record-breaking show
Here comes the bum-fluff brigade. Tiger Woods declared on that a 14 year-old’s record-breaking appearance in this US Open would herald a succession of rising sons from the east.
Woods has plainly not been as shocked as the rest of the Olympic Club at the news of Andy Zhang’s qualification as an alternate at the expense of the injured Paul Casey.
Believed to the youngest competitor in 112 US Opens, Zhang has also been claimed to be the youngest competitor in any major since Young Tom Morris in 1865.
To put it in further context, the Florida-based Chinese is nine years younger than Rory McIlroy, the Northern Irishman who last year became the youngest winner of the US Open in 88 years.
Zhang was actually born seven months after Woods won his first major. On his bag is fastened a name tag which shows his graduation date as 2016. Does Woods feel old? Or just worried?
“What helps is technology,” said the 36-year-old American, the leading fancy with bookmakers after a magnificent pitch-in at the 16th helped win him the recent Memorial tournament.
“These kids are now bringing out iPads to the range and watching their swing and breaking it down. I grew up in a VHS era and you always had to adjust the tracking. So you never really got the exact positioning of it.
“I saw a few of these kids over in Korea that they’ve only been playing the game for a year. And six months of it was all indoors hitting golf balls. All they did was put the club in the correct position to hit balls, hit balls, hit balls. They come out and they have perfect golf swings. That’s the new generation.”
As if to prove Woods’s point, the 6ft 1in prodigy was out on the course enjoying his first practice round, sending the ball into orbit and proving that his 70 and 72 in a section qualifier last week was no fluke.
He was in the company of the Bubba Watson, having put his name alongside that of the Masters champion for a 7am tee-off after discovering his inclusion on Tuesday evening. “My mid went totally blank,” said Zhang.
Zhang was born in Beijing, picking up clubs for the time aged six. His mother, Hui Lais, entered him a few junior tournaments and, when he was 10, gave up her job to take her talented child to Florida where he was signed up by the Leadbetter Academy. Since then he has flourished, beating adults on the mini tours, in his own words, “a bunch of time”.
“Andy hits it miles and miles,” said his coach Andy Park. “He’s got a very good head on his shoulders. He couldn’t speak any English when he got here, and now we can’t keep him quiet. He is very outgoing.”
Of course, there will be a debate whether it is wise for such a young teenager to be involved such a high-presser situation, but Woods did not see like it that way. “I tried it when I was 15 but didn’t make it - he qualified, he earned that spot. You’re not too young if you can do it.
“That’s the great thing about this game, it’s not handed to you. You have to go out and put up the numbers - and Andy did.”
As Woods intimated, this is not merely an extraordinary personal story. The interest in his homeland will inevitably spiral. Zhang’s feat is so well-timed. Last Sunday, Shanshan Feng became the first Chinese of either sex to win a major at the LPGA Championship.
And so the explosion of interest escalated, before Zhang threw in another detonator.
China has been waiting for a male golfing hero and, as always with the nature of hype, the speculation is already feverish.
For now, however, Zhang has two rounds to defy the bookmakers’ odds of 6-1 on him making the cut and, dare we dream, of the 5,000-1 on him winning the tournament.
The manner in which he has handled all the interest so far, suggests he could at least give the former a decent shot.
He is the boy living his boyhood dream, amazed that, as a competitor, he gets the use of a Lexus he is not old enough to drive. The sense of wonder will last all week.
While Zhang was being interviewed in the resplendent locker room he looked distracted and the journalists followed his gaze to a spread of chocolate bars on table.
“What, you mean these are free?” said Zhang. “I can really take as many as I like?” A kid in a candy shop, indeed.
US Open 2012: Teenage whizzkid Andy Zhang, 14, can lead new revolution in China with record-breaking show - Telegraph
Welcome to the U.S. Open, kid.
All of 14 years old and preparing to start the ninth grade, Zhang is believed to be the youngest player in championship history. He was born in China and has lived in Florida since 2008, and about the only place he doesn't show his age is on the course.
Zhang held his own in a practice round Tuesday with Masters champion Bubba Watson and Aaron Baddeley. After shedding some early nerves, Zhang's smile - behind those big braces, of course - lit up the gallery and had everyone from Tiger Woods to Rory McIlroy wondering the same question.
Who is this kid?
Read more here: 14-year-old from China to make US Open history - Wire Golf - The Sacramento Bee
US Open 2012: Teenage whizzkid Andy Zhang, 14, can lead new revolution in China with record-breaking show
Here comes the bum-fluff brigade. Tiger Woods declared on that a 14 year-old’s record-breaking appearance in this US Open would herald a succession of rising sons from the east.
Woods has plainly not been as shocked as the rest of the Olympic Club at the news of Andy Zhang’s qualification as an alternate at the expense of the injured Paul Casey.
Believed to the youngest competitor in 112 US Opens, Zhang has also been claimed to be the youngest competitor in any major since Young Tom Morris in 1865.
To put it in further context, the Florida-based Chinese is nine years younger than Rory McIlroy, the Northern Irishman who last year became the youngest winner of the US Open in 88 years.
Zhang was actually born seven months after Woods won his first major. On his bag is fastened a name tag which shows his graduation date as 2016. Does Woods feel old? Or just worried?
“What helps is technology,” said the 36-year-old American, the leading fancy with bookmakers after a magnificent pitch-in at the 16th helped win him the recent Memorial tournament.
“These kids are now bringing out iPads to the range and watching their swing and breaking it down. I grew up in a VHS era and you always had to adjust the tracking. So you never really got the exact positioning of it.
“I saw a few of these kids over in Korea that they’ve only been playing the game for a year. And six months of it was all indoors hitting golf balls. All they did was put the club in the correct position to hit balls, hit balls, hit balls. They come out and they have perfect golf swings. That’s the new generation.”
As if to prove Woods’s point, the 6ft 1in prodigy was out on the course enjoying his first practice round, sending the ball into orbit and proving that his 70 and 72 in a section qualifier last week was no fluke.
He was in the company of the Bubba Watson, having put his name alongside that of the Masters champion for a 7am tee-off after discovering his inclusion on Tuesday evening. “My mid went totally blank,” said Zhang.
Zhang was born in Beijing, picking up clubs for the time aged six. His mother, Hui Lais, entered him a few junior tournaments and, when he was 10, gave up her job to take her talented child to Florida where he was signed up by the Leadbetter Academy. Since then he has flourished, beating adults on the mini tours, in his own words, “a bunch of time”.
“Andy hits it miles and miles,” said his coach Andy Park. “He’s got a very good head on his shoulders. He couldn’t speak any English when he got here, and now we can’t keep him quiet. He is very outgoing.”
Of course, there will be a debate whether it is wise for such a young teenager to be involved such a high-presser situation, but Woods did not see like it that way. “I tried it when I was 15 but didn’t make it - he qualified, he earned that spot. You’re not too young if you can do it.
“That’s the great thing about this game, it’s not handed to you. You have to go out and put up the numbers - and Andy did.”
As Woods intimated, this is not merely an extraordinary personal story. The interest in his homeland will inevitably spiral. Zhang’s feat is so well-timed. Last Sunday, Shanshan Feng became the first Chinese of either sex to win a major at the LPGA Championship.
And so the explosion of interest escalated, before Zhang threw in another detonator.
China has been waiting for a male golfing hero and, as always with the nature of hype, the speculation is already feverish.
For now, however, Zhang has two rounds to defy the bookmakers’ odds of 6-1 on him making the cut and, dare we dream, of the 5,000-1 on him winning the tournament.
The manner in which he has handled all the interest so far, suggests he could at least give the former a decent shot.
He is the boy living his boyhood dream, amazed that, as a competitor, he gets the use of a Lexus he is not old enough to drive. The sense of wonder will last all week.
While Zhang was being interviewed in the resplendent locker room he looked distracted and the journalists followed his gaze to a spread of chocolate bars on table.
“What, you mean these are free?” said Zhang. “I can really take as many as I like?” A kid in a candy shop, indeed.
US Open 2012: Teenage whizzkid Andy Zhang, 14, can lead new revolution in China with record-breaking show - Telegraph