Amy Olson is still chasing her first major
accolade since turning pro in 2013, but the grit she put on display amid
difficult circumstances, including a heartbreaking loss, really is the stuff of
champions and there’s little doubting how bright the future could be.
The 28-year-old tied for second place in the
recently culminated U.S. Women’s Open, coming in behind A Lim Kim. But it
hardly felt like a loss considering the dire circumstances. One might have been
fooled into thinking she’d come out on top after she sank a birdie putt on the
18th hole of the final round, given her reaction.
Amy pumped her fists into the air before
removing her ball from the cup and looking to the sky. The tears streamed down
her face as she found another moment to mourn the loss of her father-in-law at
the end of what was a very challenging journey. Two days
before, she had been informed that her husband’s father, Lee Olson, had passed
away unexpectedly. Many questioned whether she would be able to continue the
tournament but, continue she did, although she would have been forgiven for
calling it quits and packing up.
The North Dakota native finished 2 under, one
stroke back from Kim.
"Coming out this morning, I had no idea
what to expect," she told reporters after her round. "I felt very
weak and helpless for the last couple of days. ... I really believe the Lord just
carried me through. It makes you realize how much bigger life is than
golf."
Olson said the words of the song “You Raise Me
Up” played through her mind with every swing.
Having shot an even-par 71 two days prior, she
went into the final round a single stroke ahead of Hinako Shibuno. The weather
in Houston made it difficult for all of the participants, with muddy conditions
presenting a struggle to find pars. Olson, though, fought through it. And, despite
making two bogeys in her first six holes to drop down the leaderboard, she
didn’t waver. The mud balls made it so that every single shot was a painstaking
affair yet, by the end of the day, she was still in contention for a first LPGA
Tour win.
As muddy as the balls were, as frustrating as
the strokes became as a result, Olson found out that they were all minor as she
would receive some terrible news in the wake. When she showed up with her
caddie the following day, news of the passing of her father-in-law was already
rife around the course, with people harboring doubts over whether she would
still be able to compete. Heavy rain caused play to be suspended, seeing to the
first U.S. Women’s Open finish due to the weather
in nine years.
The weather could continue to pose difficulty
for the upcoming tournaments, with the PGA Tour’s Tournament of Champions set
for next month. Sportsbookreview will have you covered in
terms of golf updates should things change on that front.
Questions over Amy's participation continued
to swirl and the speculation intensified after her husband was reported to have
returned home.
Amy and Grant Olson tied the knot in North
Dakota in 2017 after meeting in college at North Dakota State. Both of them
remain the most decorated athletes in uni’s history. Grant is now a
linebacker coach at his alma mater.
The former football player went to Houston to
support his wife but was forced to leave her after the news of his dad’s
passing - his mother and brother needed him a lot more. Amy said she had a
“special relationship” with Lee, who had a “particular soft spot for the women
in his life, particularly his wife and daughter in law.”
Fighting through the indescribable struggle
one goes through after losing a loved one, Amy showed up again on Monday to tee
off, showing remarkable resilience in her 18 holes. After three bogeys in four
holes, Amy hit back-to-back birdies that helped her lead all chasers for hours.
A bogey on the 16th hole set her back, however.
When she dropped that putt in the 18th hole,
the ordeal was over and it showed. In spite of her loss, she must have been
relieved to put the tourney behind her after digging deep and giving everything
she had.
In those final hours, Amy showed the will and the spirit that only a precious few athletes could claim to call on in difficult
times. She will probably look back on the competition as the most challenging
of her career but it’s also one from which she learned a whole lot about
herself.
"I knew I had to stay very mentally
disciplined just to get through the day," she said afterward. "I
allowed myself to think about what I'm grateful for, and I've got a long
list.
It did appear that Amy was poised to win her
first golf tournament but, following that last bogey and Kim’s birdies in the
final three holes, the latter’s victory was all but sealed and made all the more
impressive by the fact that this was her first major championship appearance.
Amy’s strong finish, though, was just as monumental.
Photo Credit: Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons