THE globe-trotting schedule doesn't bother world No. 9 Ha Na Jang. Same deal, the day-long flight from Florida to Adelaide. And as for jetlag - what jetlag? 
"My name is Ha Na Jang - you say like 'En-er-giser', right? Ha Na Jang is 'Ha Na-giser', so no problem," the Korean laughs. "I want to play every week but it's a very (tiring) schedule â€¦ (but) every week we play golf because I'm very young so it's no problem." Jang arrived in Adelaide this week for the 2016 Women's Australian Open as the second-highest ranked player, with arguably the hottest form-line of anyone in the field of 156 players.
Tomorrow she starts the richest golf tournament in Australia this summer having claimed her maiden LPGA victory at the Coates Golf Championship in Florida on Sunday.
That victory followed an historic hole-in-one on a par-four the previous week, at an event in the Bahamas.
Her climb into the top-10 rankings makes her the biggest threat to defending champion and world No. 1 Lydia Ko, who is herself coming off a win at her home New Zealand Open on Sunday.
But Jang said plotting to beat Ko was the last thing on her mind. "Yeah, I don't want to think about another player because Lydia is really good my friend," she said.
Jang, a crowd favourite known for keeping her emotions close to the surface, celebrated her breakthrough victory last week by waving her putter like a samurai sword after sinking her winning putt.
She said she was inspired by extroverted players including Tiger Woods and Christina Kim for injecting fun to golf.
"I tried it (the samurai) in a practice round," she said. "I thought; 'I'm going to try the Samurai'. It's really fun."My first tournament, maybe 12 years ago, I played the Korean Open so I try like this (fist-pumping) and then galleries are really fun then big claps so I'm like, `Oh, this is nice'. It looks like fun and a little different style so this is a really good thing."