It is unclear whether Yoon In-na (20-photo), a long-hitting golfer on the Korean Ladies Professional Golf Association (KLPGA) Tour, will be able to return to the sport after being suspended for "playing the wrong ball".

The KLPGA deliberated on a proposal to reduce Yoon's punishment at its regular board meeting on Thursday and decided to discuss it again at the next board meeting in January next year.

Yoon made her KLPGA Tour debut last year. She gained popularity for her long drives of over 300 yards and her cool play. She won her first career title at the EverCollagen Queen's Crown in July last year and quickly became a household name on the KLPGA Tour.

However, her career was suspended after it was later revealed that she had made an illegal play in a tournament a month before her victory. In June of last year, Yoon hit her tee shot into the rough on the 15th hole during the first round of the Korea Women's Open. She found her ball and continued to play, finishing the tournament. However, a month later, she later reported that she had played with a ball that was not hers from her second shot.

This led to a three-year ban from the Korea Golf Association (KGA), the organizer of the Korean Women's Open, in August of the same year. A month later, she received the same three-year ban from the KLPGA. She will be banned from all tournaments organized or hosted by the KLPGA (tour, seeding and selection) until September 2025. In effect, she is banned from almost all tournaments in Korea. 카지노사이트가이드

In September, the KGA suddenly announced that it would reduce Yoon's ban to one year and six months. The reason given was that Yoon had received more than 5,000 petitions for relief and had shown remorse by donating all of her winnings from 13 tournaments on the US Minor League Golf Tour.

Yun applied for a reconsideration from the KLPGA in October, and a board meeting was held today to discuss it. Some speculated that the KLPGA would reduce the length of the suspension due to the KGA's reduction, but the board did not reach a conclusion.

It is reported that there were strong arguments at the board meeting that disciplinary action for behavior that forgot the most important principle of golf, honest play, should not be given free rein. Unlike the KGA, the KLPGA's board is largely made up of players. It did not dismiss Yoon's case but decided to discuss it at the next board meeting, leaving the door open for a possible reinstatement.

The KLPGA will decide whether or not to reduce her punishment based on Yoon's level of remorse, public opinion, and input from active players.