In-kyung Kim will go into this week's Lorena Ochoa Invitational in Guadalajara, Mexico, as a lady with a mission. 
                                
In-kyung Kim - tough defence lies ahead 								     
 
That's because the World No 11's record of winning at least one  LPGA Tour title in each and every year since 2008 is in danger right now  as the season heads into it's penultimate event. 
Next week's CME Group Titleholders in which the top three players  from each of this season's 25 tour events, including this one, will  compete, is the season-closing finale of the 2011 LPGA season. 
As the defending champion in the Lorena Ochoa Invitational this  week, meanwhile, the South Korean is hoping that her good memories of  last year's victory will give her the will, skill and confidence to do  it again this time and keep her win-a-year record intact. 
She is under no illusions about the task ahead of her, though.  It's going to be a pretty stiff one with a good few players of real  class opposing her. 
Seven of the World's Top 10 are in the stellar field, including Hawaiian-born American Michelle Wie, the winner here in 2009. 
Wie, now 21 and still a student at Stanford, is another with fond  memories of Mexico for it was here in this event in 2009 that she  picked up the first of her two LPGA Tour victories. The second once came  in the 2010 Canadian Women's Open 
Wie shot a 13-under par 275 to finish two strokes ahead of Paula Creamer, currently the World No 7 and also in the field 
While she does not have a victory from her 18 tournaments this  year, she was a runner-up twice, first at the Honda LPGA Thailand in  February and then claimed joint-second place at the Canadian Women's  Open in August. 
 
Kim, on the other hand, won her first title at the Longs Drugs  Challenge in 2008 with a 10-under 278 that was three shots too good for  American Angela Stanford. 
A year later she won the LPGA State Farm Classic, beating compatriot Se-ri Pak by a stroke. 
 
Last year in winning this event, Kim beat Norwegian star Suzann  Pettersen of Norway, also by three strokes, and she can be sure that  Pettersen, now the women's World No 2, will come back at her with a  measure of revenge. 
And Yani Tseng, the phenomenal World No 1?  
Is she playing?  
 
And considering that the event comes hard on the heels of her  11th world-wide win in China just a few days ago, has she any kind of  realistic chance this week?  
With the kind of magic Tseng is whisking up almost each and every week, the answer to each of those questions has to be yes. 
 
And its yes, despite the jet lag she'll be carrying around with her in the first few days
 
 
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