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Sadom Kaewkanjana is going back to the open championship
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Three years ago, Sadom Kaewkanjana marked a T11 conclusion at the 2022 open championship in St. Andrews. This conclusion was a stroke away from an automatic return to the oldest golf majesty.
Twelve months after the talented golf Thai set up an impressive show at the Golf house, he received a two-week interruption to become a ordained monk. Making a ordained monk is a rite of passage that is common for Thai men after returning 20 years old. Jazz Janewattananond went through the same process and won in its first beginning.
“I was ordained because I wanted to return the most merit and pay my parents,” Kaewkanjana said in 2023 When he returned to the course. “During this time of ordination, it had great value and experience, although the ordination was a short period of time.
“I broke away from the rest of the world when I was ordained, it made me feel calmer. I was able to focus more, which will help me improve my golf game.”
A spiritual attraction to Sadom Kaewkanjana before the season resumes next month
Like most young men Thai, Sadom is spending time living as a Buddhist monk and learning how to meditate. .
: Sadom pic.twitter.com/4rjqt7wtes
– Asian tours (@asiantourgolf) 12 July 2023
Kaewkanjana played at the PGA 2023 Championship at OAK Hill, but has not played on the largest golf scene since then. But his big championship return is now set to stone after Kaewkanjana won the Asian Tour Korea on Sunday to score his ticket to the 153rd championship in Royal Portrush.
Korea Open is part of the open championship qualification series, offering the winner a place in the oldest golf. It is the first individual victory of Kaewkanjana since the 2022 Singapore, which introduced it to Open in St. Andrews.
Kaewkanjana began the last Sunday round at the Dunes course at La Vie est Belle Golf Club following compatriots’ friend Poom Saxes with a blow. Kaewkanjana rejected the first hole to fall further but day was starting. Saxansin Double Bogeyed No. 2 to bring both squares, and yo-yoed lead back and forth between two times before Kaewkanjana finally took a two-stroke lead to three holes to play.
“It’s a great honor to win this event; it is one of the biggest in the region,” Kaewkanjana said on Sunday. “I tried to focus more than the last three rounds, so I could do it. I’m very happy.”
Kaewkanjana is the latest good story to provide a place in Royal Portrush.
Australian Ryan Peake completed his redemption story when he won New Zealand Open to win his route to the oldest golf. Peake was part of an illegal motorcycle gang when he was 21 and was eventually sentenced to five years in prison for his role in a serious attack.
“I’ve just changed my life,” said Peake, 31, after his victory in New Zealand Open. “That’s what I do. I want to be here and just play golf. The story is what it is, but I’m just here playing golf.
The open championship will take place in Royal Portrush in northern Ireland on July 17-20. Kaewkanjana is excited about the state of his game and the main opportunity ahead.
“Yes, honestly, I’m very excited, of course,” Kaewkanana said on Sunday for Royal Portrush. “I’ve changed my slightly shaking. I was trying to find a way to get better. So now I think I have, and I can rely on it.”
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Seduce
Golfit.com editor
Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for Golf.com. Before entering Golf, Josh was the interior of Chicago Bears for the NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and Uo alum, seduces and spends his free time walking with his wife and dog, thinking about how the ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become half a professor into pieces. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break 90 and will never lose the confidence that Rory Mcilroy’s main drought will end (updated: he did it). Josh Schrock can be reached in Josho.schrock@golf.com.