Blair, only 14, could be the state's best female golfer

Published: Monday, May 18, 2009 9:50 p.m. MDT
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She was too young to play in the high school state tournament last week, yet it would have been Rubik's Cube intriguing to see how 14-year-old Sirene Blair would have fared if they'd have let her play.

One could make a case that this junior high school phenomenon from South Jordan is the best female golfer in the state.

Many girls, at age 14, are just finishing that awkward stage. They've grown quicker than boys to that point and often struggle fitting into their bodies. They're self-conscious, unsure. I have daughters; I know the drill.

Sirene has found her groove in golf. She can place a 5-iron. She's a conqueror. Trade a sword for a driver and she's a little Joan of Arc.

She can drive it with laser accuracy off the tee 230 yards. Her short game gets scary good at times. The trump card is her putter, and when that flat iron's working — well, anything is possible.

On Saturday, Sirene shot a 75 with a double-bogey water ball on the final hole at Southgate to win by one shot over defending 5A medalist, sophomore Tara Green of Weber High School, in one of the first Utah Junior Golf Association events of the year in St. George.

Her father, Robert Blair, once a scratch golfer out of Glenmoor, got her seriously involved when she was 10.

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"I didn't think she could beat me for four or five years," he said. "But she did."

He played from the tips with Sirene teeing it up from the women's tees. His daughter fired a 2-over-par 74 and beat Robert by a stroke at Glenmoor — when she was 12.

"I was very excited about that. Losing to her? I was fine," said Robert. "It came earlier than I ever expected. But I have fun playing with her. I have to play a pretty good game, or I get my butt kicked."

Sirene fired a lifetime-best 1-under-par 71 at Bloomington in the first round of the UGA Winterchamps at St. George back in March, then held on to defeat the rest of the field by five points over Echo Thatcher in the Stableford format. A few weeks later, she won the Mary Lou Baker at Glenmoor, firing 74-75 — 149, good for a 2-shot win over 24-year-old Thatcher and three-stroke margin over 18-year-old Annika Afoa.

That's right, Annika.

"The reaction of the older women? A lot of them couldn't believe how good she played for her age," said Robert. "The older women are very gracious but competitive. They don't like to lose."

While she'll play in her second state amateur tournament this summer at Thanksgiving Point, her main focus this summer is winning Utah Junior Golf Association events, which will propel her to national events like the Junior World Championships in San Diego.

Recent comments

It is good to see that all the hard work that she does is starting...

Anonymous | May 25, 2009 at 4:07 p.m.

what did that have to do with anything...bla bla bla hawaii, bla bla...

yo awesomeronjon | May 20, 2009 at 10:11 a.m.

Anyone familiar with Dick Harmon knows his penchant for trying new...

To JCrunch | May 19, 2009 at 7:54 p.m.

Image

Sirene Blair, left, works on her lob shot with younger sister Tess Blair at Glenmoor Golf Course Monday.

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