Lydia Ko wraps up Vare Trophy for low scoring average, inches closer to LPGA Hall of Fame

For the first time, Lydia Ko won the trophy that goes to the player with the lowest scoring average.

Lydia Ko was desperate to end her 2021 season on a high note.

After a disappointing third round in which she hit shots “maybe even a 20-handicapper wouldn’t even hit,” Ko posted a closing 8-under 64 at the CME Group Tour Championship to leave 2021 with a smile and a new trophy.

For the first time in her career, Ko won the Vare Trophy, given to the player with the year’s lowest scoring average. Technically, Nelly Korda had the lowest average on tour at 68.774. But neither Korda nor Jin Young Ko, who averaged 68.866, met the minimum number of rounds needed (70) to be eligible for the Vare. Korda finished the season with 62 rounds and 17 official events and Ko finished with 67 rounds and 19 events.

Ko had the third-lowest average of 69.329, and met the round requirement with 73.

“It’s really special because obviously it sums up the whole season,” she said. “All the other things do, too, but at the end of the day golf is about how consistently well you can play and what kind of low score you can shoot.

“And the Vare Trophy obviously exemplifies that.”

Ko, 24, almost missed out on the award, too. She had originally planned to skip last week’s Pelican Women’s Championship after playing in Saudi Arabia on the LET, but after learning that she’d be one round short for the Vare, she signed back up.

Ko now has 20 of the 27 points needed to qualify for the LPGA Hall of Fame.

The Kiwi called 2021 one of the most consistent years of her career, and credited the sixth-month forced break during the 2020 season as some of the most important time in her career.

“Having that six months I think I was able to really assess where I was at,” she said, “and that was not only in the technical standpoint, but where I was mentally as well.”

CME Group Tour Championship 2021
Jin Young Ko and Lydia Ko pose during the awards ceremony after the CME Group Tour Championship on Sunday, Nov. 21, 2021, in Naples, Florida. Photo by Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press

Ko ended a three-year victory drought in April at the Lotte Championship to play her way into the 2022 season-opening Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions at Lake Nona, Florida, which happens to be her home club.

To prepare for that start, Ko said she’ll take a new approach to this offseason, staying in the U.S. rather than South Korea and taking shorter periods of time off.

“I normally take a whole month or four weeks off where don’t touch the clubs,” she said. “They stay in the closet. This year I’m going to take a week off during Thanksgiving and then practice for a couple weeks, and then have another holiday for 10 days and then come back and practice for another three weeks.

“I haven’t played the Tournament of Champions in a while, so I just planned my off-season a little bit differently this year.”

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Hannah Green wins the $1 million Aon Risk Reward Challenge

What defines a great year at work? How about one that includes a $1 million performance bonus! For Hannah Green, the fourth-year LPGA Tour professional, that’s exactly how the 2021 season turned out. Since 2019, Aon, a leading global professional …

What defines a great year at work? How about one that includes a $1 million performance bonus! For Hannah Green, the fourth-year LPGA Tour professional, that’s exactly how the 2021 season turned out.

Since 2019, Aon, a leading global professional services firm providing a broad range of risk, retirement and health solutions, has sponsored the Aon Risk Reward Challenge, a season-long competition that rewards the best decision-makers on both the LPGA Tour and PGA TOUR. At each tournament, the golfer’s two best scores on the pre-determined Challenge hole will count (minimum 40 rounds). The player on each Tour with the lowest average score to par pockets the $1 million prize.

Green, 24, has two LPGA Tour victories in 78 career starts and $2.2 million in lifetime earnings. Which makes the $1 million payout life-altering. “I want to buy a house during the off-season, so this gives me an opportunity to play [each season] comfortably,” said Green. “I could almost pay off my house and not have a mortgage, so it’s setting me up for after I finish playing golf.”

Consider this: Thirteen players on the LPGA Tour earned at least $1 million in prize money in 2021. (Green finished 35th on the money list with $531,507.) By comparison, 124 PGA TOUR pros surpassed the $1 million mark. That list included Matthew Wolff, the PGA Tour’s winner of the Aon Risk Reward Challenge, who pocketed more than $2.5 million in prize money (47th on the list). So, yes, the equal-to-the-men, $1 million award is a huge deal for Green and all of women’s golf. “Congratulations to Hannah on her performance throughout the season to win the Aon Risk Reward Challenge,” said Jennifer Bell, Chief Executive Officer, North America at Aon. “At Aon, we’re committed to creating a diverse workforce and an inclusive culture where everyone can thrive, ensuring we deliver more innovative solutions for clients and help them make better decisions. When we created the Aon Risk Reward Challenge, our goal was to create a platform where achievements could be equally celebrated across the men’s and women’s game. We’re so proud of this program and the level of skill and quality of decision making we continue to see week in and week out throughout the challenge on both Tours.”

Green, a native of Perth, Australia, showed the heart of a champion in capturing the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship and Cambia Portland Classic in 2019. This year, on the designated Aon Risk Reward Challenge holes, she was a shrewd decision maker and clutch shotmaker, particularly in the latter stages of the competition. Following a break for the 2020 Summer Olympics (where she finished T5), Green competed in six of the tournaments that counted toward the contest. She carded 12-under par (eight birdies, two eagles, two pars) on the 12 Challenge holes. For the season, she made birdie or eagle on 80-percent of them.

With four events remaining in the year-long competition, the Aussie took over the top spot at the ShopRite LPGA Classic Presented by Acer in early October. She never relinquished the lead. The Aon Risk Reward Challenge hole, No. 18 at Seaview Golf Club (Bay), is a reachable par-5. In Round 1, Green made eagle on the 507-yard hole. She proceeded to back it up with birdie in Round 3. Both days, she drove it in the fairway and made the decision to go for the green on the second shot. The approach in Round 1 finished pin-high and she rolled in the long eagle putt from across the green. At tournament’s end, the closest pursuers were Charley Hull, Lexi Thompson and Lydia Ko in second, third and fourth place, respectively. Previous leader, Hyo Joo Kim, fell to 5th after recording par-bogey and withdrawing prior to Round 3 due to a reported muscle cramp.

The next week, at the Cognizant Founders Cup in northern New Jersey, the top five spots remained unchanged. In the penultimate Challenge event, the BMW Ladies Championship in late October, Green and Hull both posted a pair of birdies on the 505-yard par-5 11th hole at LPGA International Busan, to remain in 1st and 2nd position, respectively. Green’s tee shot found the fairway in all four rounds and then she hit the green in two each time. She was able to execute her game plan and the calculated approach paid off. “I knew straightaway what I needed to do,” she said. “My caddie, Nate, and I ran all the scenarios. I had to make two birdies to improve my overall score. I was able to do it so quite a big moment for us.” Kim moved into 3rd by virtue of an eagle and birdie. Thompson held down 4th while Ko dropped to 5th.

Since Hannah Green had built a sizable lead and met the requirement for rounds played, she opted not to participate in the final Aon Risk Reward Challenge tournament, the Pelican Women’s Championship, in Belleair, Florida. It was another shrewd decision that paid off. When those trailing Green didn’t go low enough to catch up, the $1 million prize was hers.

Hannah Green showed plenty of moxie and made better decisions throughout the season. And, when it mattered most, she outdistanced the field with near-flawless execution.

CME Group Tour Championship: 18 players to watch in Naples

With $1.5 million on the line, here are 18 players to watch this week in Naples.

It’s all come down to this. The last tournament of the LPGA tour season is this week at Tiburon Golf Course. The CME Group Tour Championship is loaded with star power, including last week’s winner of the Pelican Women’s Championship and World No. 1, Nelly Korda.

Lexi Thompson, who fell short down the stretch at the Pelican and is surely looking to bounce back, is also in the field.

The winner of the CME Group Tour Championship will be walking away with $1.5 million, the largest prize in the history of women’s golf.

Tiburon will play as a par 72 throughout the week, measuring in at 6,556 yards.

Here are 18 players in the field to keep your eye on.

Jin Young Ko

BMW Ladies Championship - Round One
Jin Young Ko of South Korea tees off on the fifth hole during the first round of the BMW Ladies Championship at LPGA International Busan on October 21, 2021 in Busan, South Korea. (Photo by Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)

Age: 26
Home country: South Korea
Resides: Seoul, South Korea
LPGA Career Victories: 11
Race to CME Globe: 1

Nelly Korda

Nelly Korda
Nelly Korda poses with the trophy after winning the Pelican Women’s Championship in a playoff at Pelican Golf Club on November 14, 2021 in Belleair, Florida. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

Age: 23
Home country: U.S.
Resides: Bradenton
LPGA Career Victories: 7
Race to CME Globe: 2

Lydia Ko

Lydia Ko, LPGA

Age: 24
Home country: New Zealand
Resides: Orlando
LPGA Career Victories: 16
Race to CME Globe: 3

Patty Tavatanakit

Patty Tavatanakit waves after putting out on the 10th green during the second round of the U.S. Women’s Open golf tournament at The Olympic Club. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

Age: 22
Home country: Thailand
Resides: U.S.
LPGA Career Victories: 1
Race to CME Globe: 4

Inbee Park

Inbee Park plays her shot from the second tee during the first round of the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship golf tournament at the Atlanta Athletic Club. Mandatory Credit: Adam Hagy-USA TODAY Sports

Age: 33
Home country: South Korea
Resides: Las Vegas
LPGA Career Victories: 21
Race to CME Globe: 5

Ariya Jutanugarn

The Amundi Evian Championship - Day Four
Ariya Jutanugarn of Thailand plays her shot from the first tee during day four of the The Amundi Evian Championship at Evian Resort Golf Club on July 25, 2021 in Evian-les-Bains, France. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

Age: 25
Home country: Thailand
Resides: Bangkok, Thailand
LPGA Career Victories: 12
Race to CME Globe: 6

Lexi Thompson

AIG Women's British Open
Lexi Thompson and her caddie on the first tee during the first round of the AIG Women’s British Open at Carnoustie Golf Links on August 19, 2021 in Carnoustie, Scotland. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

Age: 26
Home country: U.S.
Resides: Coral Springs
LPGA Career Victories: 11
Race to CME Globe: 7

Brooke Henderson

AIG Women's Open
Brooke Henderson of Canada tees off on the 9th hole during the pro-am prior to the AIG Women’s Open at Carnoustie Golf Links on August 18, 2021 in Carnoustie, Scotland. Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images

Age: 24
Home country: Canada
Resides: Smiths Falls, Ontario/Miromar Lakes
LPGA Career Victories: 10
Race to CME Globe: 8

Minjee Lee

AIG Women's Open - Day Three
Minjee Lee of Australia waves at the 18th hole during Day Three of the AIG Women’s Open at Carnoustie Golf Links on August 21, 2021 in Carnoustie, Scotland. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

Age: 25
Home country: Australia
Resides: Perth, Australia
LPGA Career Victories: 6
Race to CME Globe: 9

Nasa Hataoka

Nasa Hataoka
Nasa Hataoka hits her tee shot on the second hole during the second round of the Marathon LPGA Classic presented by Dana at Highland Meadows Golf Club in Sylvania, Ohio on July 09, 2021 in Sylvania, Ohio. Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Age: 22
Home country: Japan
Resides: Japan
LPGA Career Victories: 5
Race to CME Globe: 10

Sei Young Kim

Sei Young Kim
Sei Young Kim tees off at one during the third round of the CME Group Tour Championship, Saturday, Dec. 19, 2020, at the Tiburon Golf Club in North Naples, Florida.

Age: 28
Home country: South Korea
Resides: South Korea
LPGA Career Victories: 12
Race to CME Globe: 11

Danielle Kang

Solheim Cup
Danielle Kang of Team USA reacts during competition rounds of the Solheim Cup golf tournament at Inverness Club. (Photo: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports)

Age: 29
Home country: U.S.
Resides: Las Vegas
LPGA Career Victories: 5
Race to CME Globe: 12

Jessica Korda

Olympic women's golf, Tokyo 2021
Jessica Korda (USA) tees of on the ninth hole during the first round of the women’s individual stroke play of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Summer Games at Kasumigaseki Country Club. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports

Age: 28
Home country: U.S.
Resides: Bradenton
LPGA Career Victories: 6
Race to CME Globe: 13

Moriya Jutanugarn

Moriya Jutanugarn
Moriya Jutanugarn tees off at the tenth hole during the first round of the LPGA’s 2021 Hugel-Air Premia LA Open tournament at Wilshire Country Club in Los Angeles. (Photo: Ashley Landis/Associated Press)

Age: 27
Home country: Thailand
Resides: Thailand
LPGA Career Victories: 2
Race to CME Globe: 14

Jeongeun Lee6

Jeongeun Lee6 of Korea lines up a shot during day three of the The Amundi Evian Championship at Evian Resort Golf Club on July 24, 2021 in Evian-les-Bains, France. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

Age: 25
Home country: South Korea
Resides: South Korea
LPGA Career Victories: 1
Race to CME Globe: 15

Yuka Saso

Yuka Saso
Yuka Saso hoists the US Open trophy after winning in a sudden death playoff following the final round of the U.S. Women’s Open at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. Photo by Kelvin Kuo-USA TODAY Sports

Age: 20
Home country: Philippines
Resides: Philippines
LPGA Career Victories: 1
Race to CME Globe: 16

Leona Maguire

Leona Maguire
Leona Maguire reads a putt on the third green during round two of the Meijer LPGA Classic for Simply Give at Blythefield Country Club on June 17, 2021 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Age: 26
Home country: Ireland
Resides: Ireland
LPGA Career Victories: 0
Race to CME Globe: 17

Celine Boutier

Olympic women's golf, Tokyo 2021
Celine Boutier (FRA) tees off on the ninth hole during the first round of the women’s individual stroke play of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Summer Games at Kasumigaseki Country Club. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports

Age: 28
Home country: France
Resides: France/Dallas
LPGA Career Victories: 2
Race to CME Globe: 18

Greg Hardwig is a sports reporter for the Naples Daily News and The News-Press. Follow him on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter: @NDN_Ghardwig, email him at ghardwig@naplesnews.com. Support local journalism with this special subscription offer at https://cm.naplesnews.com/specialoffer/

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From one former No. 1 to another, here’s the advice that helped change Lydia Ko’s perspective

“You would think she’s so much older than she is,” current No. 1 Nelly Korda said of Ko.

It’s hard to believe that Lydia Ko is only 24 years old.

Walking past a photo from her 2014 victory at the CME Group Tour Championship, Ko was taken aback by how much she’d changed.

“I feel like it’s been more than eight years,” she said, “but then, at the same time, I can’t believe it’s been eight years. Baby face Lydia, maybe I should rock the glasses again.”

The 2021 season felt like the start of a comeback for Ko, who currently ranks fifth in the world. She began winning on the LPGA at age 15 and rose to No. 1 at age 17. She has 16 career LPGA titles, including two majors.

“You would think she’s so much older than she is,” said current No. 1 Nelly Korda, who is 23.

“I had to double-take. Wait, you’re only that old? Only a year and a half or two years older than me? Like what?”

The Kiwi’s closing 62 at the ANA Inspiration last spring put the world on notice that something special was brewing. The next week, she won in Hawaii, ending a three-year drought on the LPGA.

Lydia Ko
Lydia Koposes with the trophy after winning the LPGA Lotte Championship at Kapolei Golf Club on April 17, 2021 in Kapolei, Hawaii. (Photo: Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Two weeks ago, Ko won an event in Saudi Arabia on the Ladies European Tour and last Sunday, she in a four-way playoff to Korda at the Pelican Women’s Championship.

Ko has given credit to instructor Sean Foley for helping to build back her confidence, but she also pointed to a conversation with another former No. 1, Stacy Lewis, with helping to shape her perspective.

When asked to compare her game now – both physically and mentally – to where she was in 2015/2016 at her peak, Ko said there was a point when she was “very comparative” to herself when she was No. 1 in the world, and it didn’t put her in a good place.

“Stacy Lewis was actually somebody that advised me to say, ‘Hey, you got to be the best version of yourself now and not try to be who you were in the past.’ It meant a lot for somebody like her to say that to me, and then I think it really hit me then,” said Ko.

“So I’m different every tournament; every experience changes you. For the good or the bad, I don’t know. That’s why I said age is just a number, but experience is a whole new thing.”

The popular Ko is hitting it longer than she was five years ago. Her approach is different, too. The competition, she believes, might be tougher now than it was when she topped the world.

This week Ko will play alongside Nelly Korda and Jin Young Ko in the first two rounds at Tiburon Golf Club. She must complete one round to be eligible for the Vare Trophy, having then met the minimum number of rounds requirement (70). While she’s ranked fourth on the tour in scoring, the three ahead of her – Nelly Korda (68.845), Jin Young Ko (69.032) and Yuka Saso (69.103) – are ineligible because they did not complete enough rounds. Ko currently has a 69.391 average.

Since 1992, there have been several high-profile names who led the tour in scoring but didn’t win the Vare, including Nancy Lopez (1993), Laura Davies (1996), Annika Sorenstam (2003, 2004) and Sei Young Kim (2021).

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Ko currently leads In Gee Chun by 0.317. Chun would need to average 63.679 at the CME to pass Ko’s current average. She needs to be 23 strokes better than Ko to win the Vare, which carries with it an LPGA Hall of Fame point. Ko currently has 19 Hall of Fame points, eight shy of the number required to qualify.

“I think it’s been a meaningful season for me on and off the golf course,” said Ko. “It’s been a season like, within my game, where I probably played some of the most consistent golf I have in my whole career. …

“I was actually talking to my mental coach about it, but it’s been, I think, some of the happiest moments in my short 24 years.”

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How precious are those LPGA Hall of Fame points? Depends on the player. Three are up for grabs at CME Group Tour Championship.

“There is a league, and there is another league … it’s like the cool ladies club there.”

BELLEAIR, Florida – Every time Jin Young Ko wins a tournament, she does the math to see how many points she needs to qualify for the LPGA Hall of Fame. It has been a goal, she said, since she took up the game as a 10-year-old in South Korea.

“Right now, I have 15 points,” Ko explained midway through the Pelican Women’s Championship, “so 12 points left. It’s going to be tough, but I just play four years, so that means it’s a big accomplishment, and I think I can do that.”

The LPGA’s Hall of Fame is the toughest to get into in all of sports. To date, there are 25 entrants. Players must amass 27 points and play 10 years to gain entry.

In addition to the $1.5 million that’s on the line at next week’s season-ending CME Group Tour Championship, there are three Hall of Fame points at stake. Tournament victories are worth one point, except for majors, which are worth two. Player of the Year and Vare Trophy winners get one point, too. (The Vare Trophy is awarded to the player with the season’s low scoring average.)

With one left in the season, Korda now holds a 10-point lead over Ko in the POY race after her victory at the Pelican Women’s Championship.

Both Ko and Korda have four wins apiece on the LPGA this season, though the young American won both a major and Olympic gold (which does not factor into the points system). Though many might consider Korda’s season to be the most impressive due to the weight of her titles, the LPGA’s cut-and-dry points system leaves no room for subjectivity. And Ko can still win it outright.

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Introduced in 1966, Judy Rankin has said players originally decided to use a points system to keep the award from becoming a popularity contest. Stacy Lewis, a two-time POY, likes it that way. So too, does Inbee Park.

Mel Reid, however, is among those who wouldn’t mind seeing the tour move to a voting system like the PGA Tour, saying that if she had to vote now, she’d pick Korda.

“That’s no disrespect to Jin Young Ko,” said Reid. “She’s a phenomenal player. But I think the pressures that Nelly has being American, you know, I would personally vote for Nelly. I think she’s handled it tremendously.”

The Korda sisters have big goals, of course, but when asked earlier in the week where the Hall of Fame stood, Jessica said it’s nothing that has really been on her radar, noting how difficult it is to amass 27 points. The elder Korda went on to say that the fact that Lorena Ochoa isn’t in the LPGA Hall of Fame is “laughable.” Ochoa, who is in the World Golf Hall of Fame, earned 37 points but retired before meeting the 10-year requirement.

“I think what we focus on is major championships,” said Nelly. “What I always focus on is CME and end-of-the-year Money List. That’s like where my main focus always is every year.”

An American player hasn’t qualified for the Hall of Fame since Juli Inkster in 1999.

Last year’s Player of the Year, Sei Young Kim said the Hall of Fame has been a big-picture goal since junior golf.

“That’s biggest motivation to me,” she said.

With the top three players – Ko, Korda and Park – all ineligible for the Vare Trophy because they won’t meet the minimum number of required rounds (70), Lydia Ko sits atop the standings at 69.391.

The Kiwi, however, almost missed out on the opportunity to win the Vare Trophy because as of late last week, she wasn’t in the field for the Pelican. Without it, she would’ve been one round shy of 70.

“I didn’t realize there was like a minimum round count,” said Ko. “I thought I played enough that I would count, and I thought the other three would, too.”

Ko, who has never won the Vare Trophy, currently has 19 Hall of Fame points. The Vare would get her to 20. Ko said winning the career Grand Slam is her biggest goal, and if she can get there, the Hall of Fame will likely sort itself out.

The 24-year-old said right from the start of her LPGA career that she’d like to retire by age 30.

Still plenty of time to get to 27 points.

“There is a league,” said Ko, “and there is another league … it’s like the cool ladies club there.”

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Nelly Korda and Lexi Thompson co-lead a holy-smokes kind of leaderboard at Pelican LPGA

The leaderboard heading into the final round at the Pelican LPGA Championship is setting up for a can’t-miss kind of Sunday.

BELLEAIR, Florida – The leaderboard at the Pelican LPGA Championship is an absolute dream. World No. 1 Nelly Korda, tied with 11-time winner Lexi Thompson at 16 under, headlines a holy-smokes kind of board in the penultimate event of the LPGA season.

Jennifer Kupcho, the first woman to hoist a trophy at Augusta National, trails by one and rounds out the all-American final group. While Kupcho looks for her first victory on tour, Thompson looks to win for the first time since June 2019, and Korda looks to claim her fourth LPGA victory to overtake Jin Young Ko in the Player of the Year race. No American has won four times in one season since Stacy Lewis in 2012.

Add in the always-entertaining Christina Kim, who is two back at 14 under and looking to save her card, 2020 Pelican champ Sei Young Kim (-14), 2021 Rookie of the Year Patty Tavatanakit (-13), former No. 1 Lydia Ko (-13), Solheim sensation Leona Maguire (-12) and fan favorite Maria Fassi (-10), and it’s a can’t-miss kind of Sunday.

Also on the line: berths in the CME Group Tour Championship for a chance to win $1.5 million and, for players like Lauren Coughlin and Kim, a chance to avoid LPGA Q-Series.

Sunday will mark the first time that Korda and Thompson will compete in the final group together, but don’t look for Nelly to come out of her shoes trying to rip one past Thompson.

“I mean, I feel like in distance, we’re pretty close,” said Korda, who is averaging 308 yards off the tee this week. “I do definitely have another gear, and I don’t like to whip that out because that gear, I never know if it’s going to go right or left. That’s why I like to keep it level, pretty much. But I mean, she’s playing well. I heard she’s putting really well, too.”

Thompson, who is playing in front of her mother Judy for the first time since the 2019 CME, is averaging 26 putts this week and said she has frequently put in three-hour sessions on her stroke of late. That includes evening sessions on the Perfect Practice Putting Mat.

“Oh, it’s right in my living room,” said Thompson, with a laugh. “Just stares at me. So I’m like, I guess I should putt.”

Kim, who is playing this week on a sponsor exemption, played her first competitive round with Korda on Saturday and said she might be her new biggest fan.

“Like in terms of as a human,” she said. “Obviously her golf, you can hand her a frying pan and she’ll be able to do anything with any club.

“But as a human being, like the grace that she has, she was super patient with me because I was like, ‘Let’s talk.’ And she was just totally open to it.”

Maguire, the undisputed “Woman of the Match” at Inverness in September, opened the week with a 62 and thinks she might need another one to contend on Sunday.

“I suppose this golf course sort of demands your attention,” said Maguire, who like Kupcho and Fassi, is looking for her first win on the LPGA.

Ko arrived on the west coast of Florirda on Monday, fresh off a victory on the Ladies European Tour in Saudi Arabia. She went to bed at 1:30 a.m. and woke up at 5:30 a.m. ready to go. It was a rough practice round.

“Kind of didn’t know who I was at that point,” said Ko, who noted that she often sleeps so soundly on long-haul trips that flight attendants sometimes ask if she’s OK.

When she doesn’t have a tournament the next week, Ko often pulls an all-nighter before leaving so that she can sleep through entire international flights.

“To all the flight attendants out there,” she said, “I’m the most probably low-key, hands-off, hands-free passenger onboard.”

Should Ko win on Sunday, she can simply pack up the trophy in the car and head on down to Naples, Florida.

The all-nighter, of course, is optional.

Hannah Green won’t play in next week’s Pelican LPGA, but odds are strong she’ll still clinch Aon $1 million

The odds are good for Green to take home the money, but two players are in striking distance.

There’s only one event left for the season in the LPGA’s Aon Risk Reward Challenge, and it will take something heroic to knock Australia’s Hannah Green out of the top spot.

Green has withdrawn from next week’s Pelican Women’s Championship, which means that she can’t move from her current average of -0.938. Players take their two best scores from each Aon Risk Reward Challenge hole, with the winner having the best average score at the end of the season.

The winner of the award receives $1 million. For perspective, so far, 13 players on the LPGA have crossed $1 million in earnings this season. The total purse for the Pelican is $1,750,000.

Charley Hull, who is currently in second place, is playing next week in the Aramco team Series Jeddah event in Saudi Arabia, taking her out of the running.

The next two players on the list who are in the Pelican field are Lexi Thompson and Lydia Ko. Thompson would have to play the par-5 14th hole in 5 under (an eagle and a double eagle) to overtake Green at -0.941. Ko would have to play the hole (over two rounds) in 6 under (two double eagles) to move her to -0.944.

Hannah Green reacts to a putt on the 18th hole during the second round of the 2019 LPGA Cambia Portland Classic. Photo: Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images

Green, 24, is currently ranked 25th in the world and is 35th on the money list with $531,507. She has $2,262,361 in career earnings.

Earlier this year, Matthew Wolff clinched the 2020-2021 Aon Risk Reward Challenge trophy and the $1 million prize on the PGA Tour.

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Lydia Ko commits to pair of events in Saudi Arabia, leaving her ineligible for LPGA’s Vare Trophy

Ko will be the latest player out of the running for this year’s Vare Trophy.

Lydia Ko will make her debut in Saudi Arabia at next week’s Aramco Saudi Ladies International, followed by the Aramco Team Series Jeddah, the fourth and final leg of the Saudi-backed series that included stops in London, Sotogrande and New York.

The Jeddah event will be held opposite the LPGA’s Pelican Women’s Championship in Belleair, Florida.

With only one event remaining on the LPGA schedule after Pelican – the CME Group Tour Championship – Ko will be the latest player out of the running for this year’s Vare Trophy. To be eligible for the Vare, awarded to the player with the lowest scoring average for the season, players must compete in 70 rounds or 70 percent of official tournament rounds, whichever is less. In this case, that would be 70 rounds. Ko currently has 65 official rounds for the season. The CME would put her at 69, one short.

Ko currently ranks fourth on tour in scoring average at 69.615. The three players ahead of her on the list, Nelly Korda (69.074), Jin Young Ko (69.186) and Inbee Park (69.534) will not meet the minimum number of rounds required.

The next player who is eligible to win: In Gee Chun at 69.794. Chun currently has 68 official rounds.

Players must earn 27 points to be eligible for the LPGA Hall of Fame. Ko currently has 19 points. She has never won the Vare Trophy.

“This will be my first visit to the Kingdom,” Ko said in a release, “but having watched some of last year’s debut Saudi events, the Aramco Team Series tournaments this year, and having heard only good things from the girls on Tour, the Aramco Saudi Ladies International presented by PIF is an event I am really excited to be part of.

“Being able to play in different countries around the world and inspire more young people and young girls especially into golf is something that I never take for granted. I know the impact this event had with Saudi girls last year – with more than 1,000 signing up to learn to play – so it sounds like I’ll be playing in somewhere that’s really starting to fall in love with golf.”

Related: What we know about Saudi-backed rival golf league

Golfweek has reached out to Ko’s agent to see if the former No. 1 was aware of where she stood in the Vare race.

Other LPGA players who will be competing in Saudi Arabia include major winners Anna Nordqvist, Minjee Lee, Georgia Hall and Laura Davies.

Two events will be held over the course of nine days. The first tournament will be staged Nov. 4-7 and the second Nov. 10-12. Both events feature $1 million purses, and Emily Kristine Pedersen will return to defend. Last year marked the first professional women’s event ever held on Saudi soil.

Charley Hull, who won the third leg of the series in New York, will be on hand as well as fellow Solheim Cup teammate Carlota Ciganda.

The LET-sanctioned events are backed by the government of Saudi Arabia’s Private Investment Fund, the same group that’s behind Liv Golf Enterprises, the new men’s series with Greg Norman at the helm that was reported on Friday by various outlets, including ESPN.

Of the 19 events on the LET schedule that are not co-sanctioned with the LPGA, five are backed by Golf Saudi.

While some of Saudi Arabia’s discriminatory laws against women have relaxed in recent years – women can now drive cars and travel abroad without permission from their male guardian – it remains one of the most gender-segregated countries in the world.

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WATCH: Lydia Ko’s fabulous bunker shot from her knees at Carnoustie – ‘at least don’t face-plant’

Lydia Ko pulled off some spectacular shots on Friday at Carnoustie, including one doozie out of the bunker from her knees at the par-4 ninth.

Lydia Ko pulled off some spectacular shots on Friday at Carnoustie, including one doozie out of the bunker from her knees at the par-4 ninth.

When did Ko learn to hit from her knees? Today, she said, after putting the finishing touches on a 1-under 71 at the AIG Women’s British Open.

“I actually had multiple times where I was like, I could do with being left-handed for a few of these shots,” said Ko. “The sand is pretty fluffy, so the ball settles down after it hits a bank or rolls in.

“It’s not easy, but for both of those times, I said, OK, don’t make a fool of yourself and like keep – all of your core exercises are right for this moment. Keep that core tight and at least don’t face-plant.”

Ko missed a boatload of fairways to begin the second round and looked like she might be missing the weekend as well after making the turn in 38. But a solid tee shot on the 11th hole led to the first of three birdies over the next four holes. She’s currently in a share of 32nd, six strokes back of leaders Georgia Hall and Mina Harigae.

“I think because my contact was good, I wasn’t getting too frustrated about it,” Ko said of the early portion of her round.

“I just focused on my keys and put a swing on it, and for me, I think if I hit a committed shot, I think that’s all I can do, and if the ball goes left or right, I can’t do much about it. So yeah, I didn’t really think about something new that made it turn around.”

Ko has had put together a string of special rounds on Sunday this year, including a 62 at the ANA Inspiration, a 65 en route to bronze at the Olympics and a 63 last week at the Trust Golf Women’s Scottish Open that led to a share of second.

“I don’t think you can take yourself out of it, especially around a golf course like this,” said Ko, who said she had never been so excited to come to the British Open as she was this week.

“If you felt confident with a putter and you are hitting it somewhat, pretty solid, you’ve got a good chance. Minjee (Lee) showed that you can be quite a few shots back and be able to be the one lifting the trophy on the end of Sunday.

Ko, of course, is referring to Lee’s recent victory at the Amundi Evian Championship, where she came from seven back to win in a playoff.

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American Ryann O’Toole wins first LPGA title at Women’s Scottish Open in 228th career start

Ryann O’Toole closes in 64 to clinch her first LPGA victory in here 228th career start at Dumbarnie Links.

Ryann O’Toole looked like she’d done this sort of thing – win – a thousand times as she made her way down the stretch at Dumbarnie Links. But this was a first for the veteran American, who captured her maiden LPGA title in her 228th career start.

O’Toole, 34, joined the LPGA in 2011 and in her 11th season on the LPGA clinched the Trust Golf Women’s Scottish Open with a magnificent 8-under 64 to win by three.

“I can’t even describe it,” said O’Toole. “I have obviously been working my whole life for this. I’ve been dreaming about it since I was a kid.”

O’Toole came into the final round tied for the lead at 9 under with former No. 1 and 2018 Scottish Open winner Ariya Jutanugarn and England’s Charley Hull. Atthaya Thitikul, 18, and Lydia Ko put pressure on O’Toole, who never flinched and ultimately pulled away with three birdies on the last six holes and a bogey-free scorecard.

Ko carded a course record-tying 9-under 63 to finish tied for second with Thitikul, who posted a 66 to join her at 14 under. Thitikul, a member of the Ladies European Tour who also finished runner-up on the LPGA earlier this year in Thailand, needed to win to earn her LPGA card.

“So unbelievable to me,” said Thitikul. “I’m not a big fan of links, but I can shoot under par every day.”

O’Toole, a ULCA grad with more than $2 million in career earnings, had never held a share of the lead going into the final round of an LPGA event. She felt nervous about that fact Saturday evening and tried to keep her cell phone time to a minimum.

There was no sweeter call, however, than the FaceTime with her mom after the round when she was drenched in champagne. O’Toole’s fiancé, Gina Marra, happened to be in Scotland to celebrate. The couple plans to wed in December.

There were times when O’Toole wondered if she’d ever win on the LPGA. In fact, she’d been wondering lately if 2021 might be her last season on tour. She wants to start a family with Marra, and playing the tour as a mom never had appealed to O’Toole. The idea of stepping away from the LPGA sometime in the future, perhaps at the end of this year even, helped her to let go of the pressure of trying to make something happen. There’s more to life, she decided.

“I’m Ryann in a lot of different ways rather than just Ryann the golfer,” she said.

Even so, walking away without a title would’ve eaten at her.

“I definitely feel like it would have been unfinished business and something I never would have known what the feeling is,” she said. “Now that I’ve had a taste, I feel like that’s going to be a hard one to give up.”

O’Toole hit 13 fairways and 18 greens in her final round. She clicked well with her new caddie, Michael Curry, who stepped in after her previous caddie, Reid Martin, retired last week. O’Toole said Martin informed her of the decision Sunday at the Amundi Evian Championship, saying he’d grown weary of life on the road.

O’Toole liked the looks of the brand new Dumbarnie Links from the start and got a kick out her mom saying it looked like she was playing on the moon. In her first try at links golf in 2012, O’Toole admittedly had her “butt kicked” at Royal Liverpool Golf Club. She has since learned how to maximize her creativity, hit a low tee shot and play the contours of the greens.

Last year O’Toole had to skip the Scottish Open and AIG Women’s British Open after testing positive for COVID-19. One year later, so much has changed.

“I still think I’m in shock,” said O’Toole. “The hours spent, the grind, the heartache that the sport brings, the constant travel. … For this moment, I hope that it only happens again and again.”