Glamorous Nelly Korda lights up the red carpet at the Met Gala in New York City

Korda received a rare invitation for an LPGA player.

Nelly Korda, the hottest player in golf, hit the red carpet Monday evening wearing an Oscar de la Renta gown for the annual Met Gala at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, a rare invitation for an LPGA player. But then, Korda’s play of late has been historically spectacular.

This week’s LPGA event, the Cognizant Founders Cup takes place just outside New York at Upper Montclair Country Club in Cliffton, New Jersey, where Korda looks to become the first player in LPGA history to win six consecutive starts.

The exclusive Met Gala – attended by celebrities such as Matt Damon, Sarah Jessica Parker, Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman, Tom Ford and Ariana Grande – is a fundraiser for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute and, according to vogue.com, the event raises eight-figure sums annually.

The theme for this year’s gala is “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion” and the dress code is “The Garden of Time.” Live coverage of the event is being streamed on Vogue.com as well as the publication’s social channels. The event is co-chaired by Bad Bunny, Jennifer Lopez, Chris Hemsworth and Zendaya.

Tennis icon Serena Williams announced her pregnancy last year at the Met Gala. Other athletes in attendance last year included Roger Federer, Dwayne Wade, Russell Westbrook, Patrick Mahomes, Olympic champion skier Eileen Gu, and WNBA player Brittany Griner, who’d been released from a Russian prison just a few months prior.

The LPGA’s Korda, 25, has teed it up in six events so far in 2024 and won all but the first start at the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions. Nancy Lopez (1978) and Annika Sorenstam (2004-05) are the only players who have previously won five consecutive starts. Should Korda win this week’s event, she would join Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan and Tiger Woods as the only golfers to win six.

After Korda won her second major title at the Chevron Championship last month, she pulled out of the next week’s event in Los Angeles, citing fatigue. She had two weeks off to prepare for the Founders Cup. Before heading to New York, Korda hosted an all-girls AJGA event near her home in Sarasota, Florida.

As Korda’s streak grew this spring, she was asked on several occasions how she could help the tour capitalize at a time when the popularity of women’s sports has never been higher.

“I feel like for me,” Korda said, “the way that I promote the game is just the way I am. I’m very true to myself. I’m never going to do something I’m not really comfortable with.”

There’s no doubt the red carpet suits her.

Check out some photos of the pro athletes in attendance at the 2024 Met Gala:

The Big Pickle: Can Nelly Korda really make it an even half-dozen? We discuss

Boone and Nichols put some historical perspective on the potential feat.

In this week’s episode of “The Big Pickle”, Golf Channel’s Grant Boone and Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols preview Nelly Korda’s quest to make history at the Cognizant Founders Cup. A victory in New Jersey would make Korda, 25, the first player in tour history to win six consecutive starts.

Boone and Nichols put some historical perspective on the potential feat and discuss the buzz that surrounds it, including TV coverage.

They also take a look at some early U.S. Women’s Open qualifying results – who’s in and who’s out.

Click here to listen to this week’s audio-only episode:

Meet the 39-year-old mini-tour player who qualified for her first U.S. Women’s Open in 15 years

“There’s an inner belief that you just have to deep down know that hard work will pay off.”

Jean Reynolds turns 40 in September and recently qualified for her third U.S. Women’s Open. The last time Reynolds qualified for a Women’s Open was 2009 at Saucon Valley, back when she was the top player on what’s now the Epson Tour. The 5-foot-2 Reynolds garnered plenty of attention back then when she played her way into contention.

“I really didn’t know if this would happen again,” said Reynolds, who currently holds no tour status of any kind.

Reynolds never has been a cookie-cutter player. After a strong junior career, she was recruited to play golf at the University of Georgia but quit the team after she arrived in Athens, opting for a more conventional college lifestyle. She joined a sorority, studied abroad in Austria, and quit playing competitive golf.

And then, after she graduated with a degree in Child & Family Development in December of 2007, the well-rounded Reynolds was back inside the ropes, refreshed and ready to grind.

She won twice on the developmental tour in 2009 and ultimately tied for 17th at Saucon Valley. She’d never guess that it’d take 15 years to get back to a Women’s Open.

Jean Reynolds at the 2009 U.S. Women’s Open.

Last week, Reynolds flew to Virginia for the Belle Haven Country Club qualifier in Alexandria. She birdied the last two holes of a 36-hole qualifier, draining a 25-foot putt on the 17th, to close with a 69 and co-medal with China’s Ruixin Liu at 5 under. Only two players from the qualifier advanced to the championship, held May 30-June 2 at Lancaster Country Club.

“There’s a lot of validation for me,” said Reynolds. “All the sacrifices, it was worth it. What I believed in myself and my game was true. I still can play, and I still can play with some of the tops. I’m not crazy!”

In the midst of Reynolds’ rookie season on the LPGA in 2010, a lean year for the tour, a shoulder injury popped up from seemingly out of nowhere after the British Open. She’d already played too many events, however, to qualify for a medical exemption.

In 2012, Reynolds underwent shoulder surgery and took 18 months to rehab. Because she didn’t play four years consecutively on the LPGA, she didn’t qualify for Class A status. Faced with the decision to use that degree and start at rock bottom with a real-world job, or start at rock bottom again in the pro ranks, Reynolds opted to stick with the job she loves.

It was back to the Epson Tour, where she continued the grind.

When an EF-4 tornado struck Reynolds’ beloved hometown of Newnan, Georgia, in 2021, she went back to help with the cleanup efforts and wound up with tears in her rotator cuff. It took six Platelet-Rich Plasma injections in each shoulder to keep her competitive days alive.

Reynolds still lives at home with her parents and jokingly calls them her “roomies.” The real MVP of the family, she says, is Chubb, the yellow lab named after former Georgia running back Nick Chubb.

“They allow me to do what I love to do,” said Reynolds, “and they’ve believed in me the whole time.”

Jean Reynolds poses with her beloved dog Chubb. (courtesy photo)

Last summer, Reynolds missed the cut at Stage I of LPGA Q-School, which meant she left the California desert without any Epson Tour status. She called it a sucker punch but tried to see the silver lining.

“I’ve always kind of done things a little bit different anyways,” she said.

Over the winter, Reynolds played on the NXXT mini tour, winning the NXXT Women’s Championship at Rio Pinar in Orlando.

In the lead-up to the Women’s Open, she’ll play on the Annika Women’s All Pro Tour in Texas and, hopefully, the Monday qualifier for the Mizuho Americas Open at Liberty National Golf Course in New Jersey. As a non-member professional, Reynolds will be toward the end of the line when it comes to landing a spot in the qualifying field.

With so few players 40 and over competing on the LPGA these days, Reynolds will be one of the oldest in the field at Lancaster. Reynolds says she’s in better shape now at 39 than she was at 29. She hits it about 260 yards off the tee, 10 yards farther than she did 15 years ago at her last Women’s Open appearance.

Given all that she’s been through since 2009, there’s no doubt she heads to Lancaster more grateful than ever.

“There’s an inner belief that you just have to deep down know that hard work will pay off,” she said. “You hope sooner than later.

“You have to believe it.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1373]

Photos: Marvel actress Kathryn Newton and Will Ferrell show up to LPGA stop in Los Angeles

The movie stars showed up for a junior golf clinic with 1,000 kids.

Australia’s Hannah Green certainly stole the show (again) on Sunday at the JM Eagle LA Championship, but a couple of Hollywood stars also took in the action at Wilshire Country Club. One famous A-lister, in fact, managed to mostly go unnoticed.

Kathryn Newton has been playing golf almost as long as she’s been acting, and when she told the hundreds of kids gathered for the Junior Golf Show on Saturday that she was Cassie Lang in “Ant-Man and Wasp” and Lucy Stevens in “Pokeman,” well, the kids lit up.

Newton co-hosted the clinic alongside Jill Painter Lopez (KCBS), LPGA players Emma Talley and Maria Fassi and golf influencer Karol Priscilla.

On Friday, Wilshire member Will Ferrell came out to catch the action wearing dark sunglasses and a hat. A tournament official said Ferrell managed to walk the grounds mostly unnoticed, though a staff photographer did snap some photos.

Check out images from the LPGA in La La Land:

Big Pickle podcast: Grant and Beth Ann breakdown Hannah Green’s dominant run

“The Big Pickle” will be sure to keep you informed, enlightened and entertained on everything LPGA.

In this week’s episode of The Big Pickle, Grant Boone and Beth Ann Nichols break down Hannah Green’s dominant run at the JM Eagle LA Championship.

The Aussie, now a five-time winner on the LPGA, shot 66 on Sunday to win by three at Wilshire Country Club, closing with a 66. Her record over the past four years at Wilshire is an astounding 1st-1st-2nd-T3.

Click here to listen to this week’s audio-only episode:

Subscribe, comment and tell a friend. As the women’s game continues to gain momentum, “The Big Pickle” will be sure to keep you informed, enlightened and entertained on everything LPGA.

 

2024 JM Eagle LA Championship prize money payouts for all the LPGA golfers at Wilshire Country Club

Green’s fifth win on the LPGA was good for more than a half a million dollars.

Hannah Green’s fifth win on the LPGA was good for $562,500 at the 2024 JM Eagle LA Championship in Los Angeles.

Green is now at $861,302 for the season and $5,375,243 for her official career earnings. She’s the 82nd golfer in LPGA history to surpass the $5 million mark.

Green shot 67-69-70 before saving her best – a 5-under 66 – for last to become the first LPGA golfer to win at at Wilshire Country Club multiple times. She joins Nelly Korda, who has five wins, have combined to win seven of the 10 LPGA stops in 2024.

Check out the full prize money list for the 2024 JM Eagle LA Championship.

Pos. Golfer Score Earnings
1 Hannah Green -12 $562,500
2 Maja Stark -9 $341,488
3 Haeran Ryu -6 $247,725
T4 Jin Young Ko -5 $172,940
T4 Jin Hee Im -5 $172,940
T6 Nataliya Guseva -4 $115,917
T6 Emily Kristine Pedersen -4 $115,917
T8 Madelene Sagstrom -3 $77,402
T8 Gaby Lopez -3 $77,402
T8 Xiaowen Yin -3 $77,402
T8 Mao Saigo -3 $77,402
T8 Esther Henseleit -3 $77,402
T13 Hye-Jin Choi -2 $46,990
T13 So Mi Lee -2 $46,990
T13 Yan Liu -2 $46,990
T13 Ashleigh Buhai -2 $46,990
T13 Hyo Joon Jang -2 $46,990
T13 Charley Hull -2 $46,990
T13 Kaitlyn Papp Budde -2 $46,990
T13 Aline Krauter -2 $46,990
T13 Celine Boutier -2 $46,990
T13 Wei-Ling Hsu -2 $46,990
T13 Jennifer Kupcho -2 $46,990
T13 Nasa Hataoka -2 $46,990
T25 Pernilla Lindberg -1 $31,864
T25 Wichanee Meechai -1 $31,864
T25 Patty Tavatanakit -1 $31,864
T25 Chanettee Wannasaen -1 $31,864
T25 Ayaka Furue -1 $31,864
T25 Ally Ewing -1 $31,864
T25 Grace Kim -1 $31,864
T32 Kristen Gillman E $24,011
T32 Isabella Fierro E $24,011
T32 Yealimi Noh E $24,011
T32 Jenny Shin E $24,011
T32 Paula Reto E $24,011
T32 Sei Young Kim E $24,011
T32 Rose Zhang E $24,011
T39 Jeongeun Lee5 1 $17,644
T39 Mi Hyang Lee 1 $17,644
T39 Lauren Coughlin 1 $17,644
T39 Allisen Corpuz 1 $17,644
T39 Alison Lee 1 $17,644
T39 Cydney Clanton 1 $17,644
T39 Gemma Dryburgh 1 $17,644
T39 Sarah Kemp 1 $17,644
T47 Stephanie Meadow 2 $12,638
T47 Alexa Pano 2 $12,638
T47 Jennifer Chang 2 $12,638
T47 Hee Young Park 2 $12,638
T47 Hyo Joo Kim 2 $12,638
T47 Megan Khang 2 $12,638
T47 A Lim Kim 2 $12,638
T47 Jiwon Jeon 2 $12,638
T47 Auston Kim 2 $12,638
T47 Xiyu Lin 2 $12,638
T57 Jenny Coleman 3 $9,909
T57 Caroline Masson 3 $9,909
T57 Carlota Ciganda 3 $9,909
T57 Karis Davidson 3 $9,909
T61 Amy Yang 4 $8,787
T61 Elizabeth Szokol 4 $8,787
T61 Alexandra Forsterling 4 $8,787
T61 Eun-Hee Ji 4 $8,787
T61 Haeji Kang 4 $8,787
T66 Sarah Schmelzel 5 $8,039
T66 Aditi Ashok 5 $8,039
T66 Yu Jin Sung 5 $8,039
T69 Mina Harigae 6 $7,455
T69 Polly Mack 6 $7,455
T69 Liqi Zeng 6 $7,455
T69 Jasmine Suwannapura 6 $7,455
73 Hinako Shibuno 7 $7,197
T74 Roberta Liti 8 $7,061
T74 Bianca Pagdanganan 8 $7,061
T76 Linnea Strom 9 $6,886
T76 Lucy Li 9 $6,886
78 Jaravee Boonchant 10 $6,755
79 Olivia Cowan 15 $6,668

 

Hannah Green repeats on LPGA with another win at 2024 JM Eagle LA Championship

Green won for the fifth time on the LPGA.

After 54 holes, there was an Aussie duo tied atop the leaderboard at the JM Eagle LA Championship in Los Angeles.

But while Grace Kim stumbled to a 76-77 weekend, defending champion Hannah Green was calm, cool and collected en route to a second straight victory at Wilshire Country Club.

Green shot a 5-under 66 on Sunday – a final round that was only bested by Madelene Sagstrom’s 65 – as she enjoyed a comfortable victory by three shots over Maja Stark.

“I felt like a couple times today almost got like a member bounce,” Green said. “I obviously really am fond of the golf club and joked that they didn’t approve it with me that they were making alterations. I love it here. Such a great atmosphere. Really good crowds this year.”

The Sunday crowd even delivered an “Aussie! Aussie! Aussie!” chant during the post-round celebration.

It’s Green’s fifth victory on the LPGA and she’s the first to defend on tour since Jin Young Ko did it in 2023.

Green’s up-and-down season continued this week on a high note. She won at the end of February at the HSBC Women’s World Championship, but then missed the cut in her next start. After a tie for 21st in Arizona, she missed the cut last week at the LPGA’s first major, the Chevron Championship.

“To obviously already win in Singapore and here this week, I hope that I can get closer to my goal of being Top 10 in the world and solidify my spot in the Olympics,” Green said.

For Stark, it’s a second straight solo second following her runner-up finish at last week’s Chevron. Haeran Ryu was solo third at 6 under, six shots back. Jin Young Ko tied for fourth with fellow Korean Jin Hee Im.

Grace Kim leads JM Eagle LA Championship, aims to be second Australian in a row to win at Wilshire Country Club

Kim has 11 birdies and an eagle with just one bogey through 36 holes.

Grace Kim tied the course record at Wilshire Country Club on Thursday with a 7-under 64. What would the Australian do for an encore in the shadows of the Hollywood Hills?

How about a second-round, 5-under 66, which staked her to a four-shot lead when she walked off the course late in the day Friday at the 2024 JM Eagle LA Championship.

Kim, who won as a rookie in 2023, is in a good position after 36 holes to earn her second LPGA victory. She would also be the third Aussie – and second in a row – to win at Wilshire, following Hannah Green (2023) and Minjee Lee (2019).

“I’ve been mentally in the dumps up until last week, and I wasn’t in a good place,” she said to Golf Channel’s Karen Stupples after her round. “But I knew I was close and I knew my game was good enough. I just mentally had to be sharp enough on the course, and I think having low expectations entering the week helped a lot.”

Kim went bogey free in her opening round. On Friday, after she bogeyed the par-3 12th hole, she quickly responded with an eagle on the 13th. Over two days, she has carded 11 birdies.

In seven LPGA tournaments so far in 2024, Kim has three missed cuts, including last week at the Chevron Championship, and a high finish of T-25, which came two months ago at the HSBC Women’s World Championship.

Aces high

Auston Kim made a hole-in-one on the par-3 18th hole, her ninth hole of the day, on Friday.

It was the third ace of the week, joining Jeongeun Lee5 (18th hole, Thursday) and Alexa Pano (12th hole, Friday).

Maja Stark continues hot streak at JM Eagle LA Championship after adopting no swearing rule

Stark had a new and interesting goal at last week’s Chevron Championship.

Maja Stark had a new and interesting goal at last week’s Chevron Championship: No swearing. No outward displays of frustration.

The advice came from Peter Hanson, a former pro who works with fellow Swede Ludvig Aberg, a rising star on the PGA Tour. Instead of telling Aberg to have more patience, they work on saying “just keep playing.”

The shift takes a player out of thinking about what just happened, and instead points them to thinking about what’s ahead.

“I think that has been way better for me just both with staying calm with what I’m doing now,” said Stark at the Chevron, “but also being aggressive on the next shot.”

Stark, 24, finished runner-up to Nelly Korda last week in Texas, her best finish in a major. Last month, she tied for third at the Ford Championship. This week at JM Eagle LA Championship at Wilshire Country Club, Stark opened with a 6-under 65 and sits one shot behind leader Grace Kim.

Stark said some of the frustration she’s felt on the LPGA is due to the tour playing tougher courses than what she experienced on the Ladies European Tour, where she won six times.

“You know, when you’re used to having more made cuts and top 10s and everything you kind of expect it,” said Stark, “but then the competition is just so much harder out here than it was on my previous tour.”

“So, yeah, and I just tended to get stressed a lot when I messed up and then that leads to me making more and more mistakes.”

Stark left Houston with a confidence boost after a more patient mindset enabled her to get up-and-down from some “really bad places.” That’s carried on this week in Los Angeles, where Stark has worked to conserve energy after a draining major championship run.

“I feel like I’ve just been more patient,” said Stark. “Haven’t made any dumb mistakes. Just taking my medicine where I needed to.”

2024 JM Eagle LA Championship
Hannah Green plays her shot from the fifth tee during the first round of the 2024 JM Eagle LA Championship at Wilshire Country Club. (Photo: Harry How/Getty Images)

Last year’s Wilshire winner, Hannah Green, opened with a 67. The Aussie has stayed with the same host family at the event since 2018 and enjoyed having Wilshire members out watching her play on Thursday. She’s a regular at the Great White Australian café that’s across the street when she has a late tee time. Wilshire is a comfortable place for the four-time winner.

“It’s nice to be able to switch off properly,” she said.

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=1373]

Photos: LPGA’s Amy Olson announces retirement

“I knew that once I had kids I wanted to be home,” Olson told Golfweek. “That was a huge desire of my heart.”

Carly Gray Olson just started to crawl last week. Her first teeth came in, too. These are the sweet moments that take most of Amy Olson’s focus these days, which is why the LPGA veteran announced on social media Wednesday that she wouldn’t be coming back from maternity leave.

Olson’s last event was the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach Golf Links, where she played seven months pregnant.

“I knew that once I had kids I wanted to be home,” Olson told Golfweek. “That was a huge desire of my heart.

“Even when (husband) Grant and I were dating, years ago, we talked about how I wanted to play for 10 years, that was my goal, and then I wanted to shift homeward and focus on family.”

Olson, 31, joined the LPGA in 2014 after winning an NCAA record-tying 20 titles at North Dakota State University, eclipsing the mark of 17 set by Juli Inkster.

Looking back, Olson said winning the 2009 U.S. Girls’ Junior gave her a huge confidence boost as did qualifying for the 2011 U.S. Women’s Open while in college and holding the first-round lead at The Broadmoor. The eventual winner that week, So Yeon Ryu, retired after last week’s Chevron Championship.

One of Olson’s favorite memories on the LPGA was clawing back from 6 over through 13 holes at the 2021 Kia Classic to finish tied for second.

Of course, she realizes that others will remember more painful runner-up finishes, like the 2018 Evian Championship, when she made double on the 72nd hole to lose to Angela Stanford.

Or when she was in contention at the 2020 U.S. Women’s Open in Houston and her father-in-law, Lee Olson, died from a heart attack the night before the final round. Olson finished second that year, too.

“Unfortunately, a couple of the pivotal ones of my career were actually really sad moments,” said Olson. “But I think one of the things I’ve always been most proud of is keeping golf in perspective and realizing that life is bigger than golf. In a lot of ways, some of those bigger moments that people remember me for, I was able to live that out in front of them.”

Olson said while there aren’t regrets in terms of what she could’ve done differently, there are dreams that will go unrealized as this chapter of life ends. She never played on a U.S. Solheim Cup team or won an LPGA event.

“I’ve had to come to terms with that,” said Olson, “I’m just realizing OK, that’s not part of my story, and realizing I have different dreams and bigger dreams, rather than clinging to the same ones that motivated me for a number of years.”

The bigger dreams, she said, are ordinary and small. Being a wife and a mom, being present for the milestones, passing on her perspective and deep faith to Carly.

She’ll have the gift of time.

Here’s a look at Olson’s career in pictures: