Lydia Ko’s golden finish in Paris is what her career deserved

“I feel like I’m part of this fairytale.”

There’s something raw about the Olympic podium. Cameras get so close to the athletes that fans a world away can watch as a single tear spills out of the eye, rolls down the cheek and hangs at the bottom of a chin. That was the scene for Lydia Ko, who was overcome with emotion at the weight of the moment. The tears appeared to start before she’d even holed her final birdie putt.

Ko didn’t just win Olympic gold, she played her way into the LPGA Hall of Fame, arguably the toughest Hall in all of sports, accomplishing her ultimate goal.

Eight years ago, when she won silver in Rio, she wanted to cry, but then looked over at Inbee Park, who’d won gold, and didn’t see any tears. How could she cry if Inbee wasn’t crying?

Ah, but it was Ko’s party this time. Let it rain.

I mean, Cinderella’s glass slippers are see-through and my podium shoes are also see-through,” noted Ko. “I guess that’s something that we have going for us. I feel like I’m part of this fairytale.”

When Ko won the U.S. Women’s Amateur a dozen years ago, she told the press that she wanted to play college golf. Her idols at the time were Michelle Wie and Lexi Thompson, but she didn’t want to follow their career paths.

Two weeks later, Ko won on the LPGA as a 15-year-old and that college golf dream went poof. She was far too talented for that route. Instead, golf fans watched the bespectacled Ko break records and wins hearts as a young teen, making the game look breathlessly easy.

So much life has transpired for Ko since she earned her first LPGA Hall of Fame point as a wunderkind. Now married and perhaps on the verge of retirement, Ko played her way into the LPGA Hall of Fame at age 27 in perhaps the coolest way possible.

While it looked for a while on Saturday at Le Golf National that it would be a runaway victory, the fight for Ko’s 27th Hall of Fame point went down to the wire on what she called the most difficult Olympic test yet. She won by two over Germany’s Esther Henseleit with a birdie on the 72nd hole.

Now a three-time Olympic medalist, having won silver in Rio and bronze in Tokyo, Ko’s podium sweep might not ever be repeated in the modern game.

Ko becomes the 35th player to qualify for the LPGA Hall of Fame and the first since Inbee Park in 2016. Lorena Ochoa got in two years ago after the tour removed the stipulation that required 10 years on tour, but she reached 27 points in 2008.

How tough is it to get into the LPGA Hall? Consider that legends like Laura Davies, Hollis Stacy, Sandra Palmer and Dottie Pepper aren’t in it.

JoAnne Carner, an eight-time USGA champion who won 43 times on the LPGA, remembers well the difficulty of playing her way into the LPGA Hall.

“I think I choked either three or four tournaments where I had the lead,” said Carner, who remembers one event in particular that she led by eight after 36 holes and couldn’t get it done.

“Then I finally got mad and said I’m going to get this over with.”

At 27 years, 3 months and 17 days, Ko is now the youngest to enter the Hall under its current criteria. Karrie Webb actually reached 27 points at age 25, but had to wait until 2005 (age 30) before she reached the 10-year requirement.

Prior to the final round in France Ko, who’d deleted her social media accounts for the week, re-watched the documentaries of Simone Biles and Mardy Fish. She’d written down a quote from Biles in her yardage book – “I get to write my own ending” – and repeated it throughout the round.

2024 Olympics
Lydia Ko of Team New Zealand reacts following victory on Day Four of the Women’s Individual Stroke Play on day fifteen of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Le Golf National on August 10, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

The fairytale in France won’t be the mic-drop ending it could’ve been. Ko still plans to compete in the Scottish Open next week followed by the AIG Women’s British Open at St. Andrews.

But then what? Ko has said from the start of her career that she won’t play past the age of 30. She told Golfweek last fall that she’d like to finish the psychology degree she started nearly a decade ago, perhaps at Stanford. Her sister and manager, Sura, has noted that Ko enjoys interior design.

Perhaps Ko doesn’t even know herself yet when she might end her career.  What she does know is that this is her final Olympics and she doesn’t want to come to the end of her time on tour and ask herself, what’s next?

“I want to have my second chapter, whatever the career may be, like, ready before I retire from competitive golf,” she said last year, “so that I’m not lost.”

Ko hasn’t won as many majors as one might expect, two in all, but in addition to her 20 wins on the LPGA, she has amassed an incredible record of historic feats, including the youngest to win on the LPGA, the youngest woman to win a major, youngest to get to 10 LPGA victories and now the youngest to enter the Hall.

But more than that, players, fans and media will note that the way she has carried herself as she’s grown in the fish bowl is nothing short of remarkable. So much poise, humility and grace. She cheers for the competition no matter what’s on the line – even the Hall of Fame.

Earlier this year in Bradenton Florida, LPGA officials set some champagne and roses next to the grandstand on the 18th at the Drive On, ready to celebrate Ko’s entrance into the Hall. While Ko’s ball nestled down next to the bubbly, Ko never got the chance to imbibe. Nelly Korda spoiled that party for Ko in a playoff.

Several weeks later in China, it looked like Ko might enter the Hall while much of the world was sleeping, in front of a small contingent of fans. That didn’t seem quite right.

No, Ko needed to enter the Hall on such a grand stage, in front of some of the best crowds these players have ever seen. She deserved to have fans chanting her name as she walked up the 18th.

She was meant to have a golden moment that won’t likely be repeated. For there will likely never be another player quite like Ko.

Photos: Lydia Ko through the years

View photos of former world No. 1 Lydia Ko throughout her career.

Lydia Ko is without a doubt, the best Kiwi to ever tee it up.

She has 28 professional wins with two major championships to boot.

A child prodigy, Ko began playing golf at the age of five and gained national attention at 14 when she became the then-youngest winner of any professional golf tour event. That title now belongs to her colleague, Brooke Henderson, who broke Ko’s record that same year.

Later in 2012, Ko became the youngest LPGA winner at just 15-years-old at the CN Canadian Open. Not looking back, Ko has continued to rack up wins and dominate in spurts on the LPGA.

Three wins in 2014 earned her LPGA Rookie of the Year honors. Winning five times in 2015, Ko climbed to No. 1 in the world which culminated in her first major title at the Evian Championship.

Winning is what Ko does.

All her wins came before being eligible to become a mid-amateur. Her dominance at such a young age is one of the things that make Ko so special. Luckily for us, it looks like she’ll be around for awhile longer.

How Simone Biles inspired Lydia Ko at the 2024 Paris Olympics

“I think for her to have been so vulnerable, I think it inspires a lot of people and it inspired me.”

Lydia Ko deleted her Instagram account this week. That’s how much this event means to the two-time Olympic medalist. She doesn’t want any unnecessary distractions as she competes in what could be her last Olympics, trying to complete her medal set with gold in Paris and epically play her way into the LPGA Hall of Fame.

But what to do with the spare time?

The 27-year-old former prodigy downloaded the Simone Biles documentary and started taking notes. Literally writing inspirational quotes down in her yardage book, such as “I get to write my own ending.”

“I think as an outsider, we never know, like, what the person is going through,” said Ko of Biles, who has 11 Olympic medals and 30 World Championship medals. “I think for her to have been so vulnerable, I think it inspires a lot of people and it inspired me.”

For Ko, it’s always been important that she’s the one who determines her fate. That she decides how her round ends, her season, her career.

Simone Biles of the United States competes on the floor exercise on day three of the gymnastics event finals during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games. Mandatory Credit: Jack Gruber-USA TODAY Sports

Before she even started playing full time on the LPGA, Ko said she wouldn’t compete past the age of 30. Should the 27-year-old win gold tomorrow and qualify for the Hall of Fame, this might be her final season on the LPGA. She enters Saturday’s final round in a share of the lead with little-known Morgane Metraux, who is ranked well outside the top 100 and has never won on the LPGA.

Whatever the case, what comes next will be Ko’s decision, should she find herself with that long-awaited gold at Le Golf National. It’s worth noting that she watched Mardy Fish’s Netflix documentary earlier this year when she won the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions.

“I’m excited to embrace all of this,” she said of what could be an historic and inspirational Saturday.

She can get back to scrolling Instagram next week.

Lydia Ko packs Sunday red for this week in Canada, reveals that her childhood password was ‘mini-Tiger’

Lydia Ko doesn’t keep much around when it comes to memorabilia.

Lydia Ko doesn’t keep much around when it comes to memorabilia. She, of course, has the replica trophies from her historic back-to-back wins as an amateur at the CN Canadian Women’s Open in 2012 and 2013. But that’s basically it.

What she does have is her memories, and she remembers wearing a red shirt and black pants that day, representing the tournament colors and channeling her inner-Tiger Woods. The 27-year-old laid out a Sunday outfit of the same colors for this week’s CPKC Women’s Open in Calgary.

“I remember growing up a lot of my passwords were mini-Tiger,” she said, with a smile.

A three-time winner of this event, Ko marveled at the fact that so many fans came out to watch her play as a one-ball last year on Sunday in Vancouver.

“I honestly thought it would be just like my caddie and I and my sister and husband that was there watching,” she said, “and there were so many more people than I anticipated. I’ve gotten a lot of love in my results but also from the fans.”

Lydia Ko of New Zealand is doused with water by Stacy Lewis, Jiyai Shin and Jessica Korda in celebration of her three shot victory during the final round of the Canadian Women’s Open at The Vancouver Golf Club on August 26, 2012 in Coquitlam, Canada. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

A victory this week would be somewhat fitting for Ko, who earned her first two LPGA Hall of Fame points in Canada. She needs only one more to get to the 27 required to reach the LPGA Hall of Fame.

Ko’s play has cooled down of late. After starting off the season with a victory near her home in Lake Nona at the season-opener, Ko compiled a 70.04 scoring average in her first seven events of 2024. In her last six starts, however, her average jumped to 72.88.

Ko reports that she’s made a lot of progress since May, when she had a lot of questions.

A dozen years ago at Vancouver Golf Club, Ko simply wanted to make the cut and enjoy her time playing amongst the pros. Looking back, she almost wishes that first victory would’ve come a little later, because now she finds that every win is a bit more meaningful than the one before it.

“I wish, in ways, I could go back to that moment and really enjoy it and that feeling of walking down the 18th hole,” said Ko, who has now won this event three times. “But, yeah, if I can get my – not that it would be my last event – but like the last point to get into the Hall of Fame here at the Canadian Women’s Open, it would be very special.

“At that point, if I win one more time here, I should get like free citizenship or something.”

Brooke Henderson, Lydia Ko return to KPMG Women’s PGA at Sahalee, where they dazzled as teens

Eight years ago, Henderson hit a dagger to 3 feet on the first playoff hole to top Ko.

SAMMAMISH, Washington – It was an instant classic. Two hotshot teenagers, both ranked in the top 4 in the world, dazzling beneath the majestic firs on a course that’s name translates to “high heavenly ground.” The tree-lined fairways of Sahalee Country Club are so tight players have taken to calling it “Sa-hallway.”

Eight years ago, Brooke Henderson hit a dagger to 3 feet on the first playoff hole at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship to deny World No. 1 Lydia Ko a third consecutive major title. Ariya Jutanguarn, a 20-year-old who’d won three consecutive events coming into that week, finished solo third.

On Tuesday, the club honored Henderson with an honorary membership and a commemorative plaque on the 18th, which will play as a par 5 rather than a par 4 this year. It was after that life-changing Sunday at the KPMG, Henderson said, that she felt like anything was possible.

“Honestly, everything just went so perfectly that week,” said Henderson, who even won a car with an ace during the first round. “I felt like it was meant to be.”

Henderson actually gave the Kia K900 to her sister, Brittany, who still drives it.

Brooke Henderson swaps clubs on the T-Mobile 5G range during the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship practice round at Sahalee Country Club on Monday, June 17, 2024, in Sammamish, Washington. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/PGA of America)

While Henderson went on to become the winningest Canadian player in history with 13 wins, Ko — a 20-time LPGA winner — now sits one point away from qualifying for the LPGA Hall of Fame.

The pair, who are now friends, competed in the same CN Canadian Women’s Open when Henderson was 14 and Ko was 15. Ko, of course, went on to win that week in 2012, when Henderson thought she was doing well just by being in the field.

“Her career has been phenomenal,” said Henderson of the Kiwi, “and winning here in 2016, being able to beat the No. 1 player in the world at the time, somebody that I looked up to, it was a huge turning point in my career.”

Henderson put a new putter in the bag the week that she won at Sahalee, and she’s hoping to rekindle that same magic as she makes another putter switch this week. It’s been a weak point of her game this year.

“I feel like this year I’ve kind of tried a few different things with my putting,” she said, “pin in, pin out, left-hand low, more of a traditional grip. So just kind of trying to feel it out and trying to find something that works.”

Ko has been switching things up a bit as well, adding another coach to her stable in Holton Freeman, who’s a short drive from her home in Lake Nona, Florida. She’ll still working with Siwoo Lee, too, but isn’t able to connect with the South Korean-based instructor in person as much as she’d like.

Now a good 10 yards longer than she was in 2016, Ko will tackle Sahalee in different ways this time around.

“I’m pretty sure there are things I was probably better at when I was a teenager,” she said, “and now I have a bit more experience, so I think how I handle some situations is probably a little bit better.

“I hope it’s better.”

After that magnificent 7-iron from 155 yards on the first playoff hole, the shot that sticks out the most from Henderson’s final-round 65 was the 90-foot eagle putt she drained from off the green on the par-5 11th. That cut Ko’s lead down from three to one.

“My caddie, Paul, and I were joking that you could drop like 100 balls and not get it within 5 feet,” said Ko. “For her to have holed that, wow.”

Lydia Ko of New Zealand looks on while playing a shot on the 11th green prior to the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Sahalee Country Club on June 19, 2024, in Sammamish, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

Of the 156 players in the field, 46 have prior experience at Sahalee. World No. 1 Nelly Korda is not among them but has already taken to the place, noting that it’s easy to get lost in the beauty. She had her phone out on Wednesday during a practice round to capture a family of ducks.

“Overall, I think every hole looks a little different,” she said during a particularly upbeat press conference. “They’re all intimidating and great in their own way.”

Korda has missed her last two cuts coming into the KPMG but has already won six times this season.

On Thursday, it will be a reunion of sorts as the top 3 finishers from 2016 – Henderson, Ko and Jutanugarn – tee it up together for the first round. Together, they’ve won 28 LPGA titles since the 2016 KPMG.

Each has had their share of ups and downs.

A now-married Ko, who’s also a dog mom, said on Golf Channel’s Golf Central set Wednesday that she sometimes forgets she’s a major champion after winning both the ANA Inspiration and Evian as a teenager. Much has changed for Ko over the years within her team and her game as she’s grown up on tour.

For Henderson, though, much has stayed the same. Big sister Brittany is still on the bag. Her father, Dave, still looks after her on the technical side. Even so, a lot of miles, a lot of life has transpired since she first tasted major championship success on high heavenly ground.

“I’ve grown up a lot,” said Henderson, “have more victories out on tour now. A lot of good things have happened.”

With, no doubt, more good to come.

LPGA all-time money list top 20 topped by Annika Sorenstam

This list is updated through the 2024 JM Eagle LA Championship at Wilshire Country Club

The LPGA has three members of the $20 million club, five who have won at least $17 million in on-course earnings, 24 with $10 million or more and 81 who have earned at least $5 million.

Annika Sorenstam leads the way. Sorenstam, Karrie Webb and Cristie Kerr are the three golfers who have surpassed $20 million.

Nellly Korda, with her win the 2024 Chevron Championship, her second major, surpassed $11 million. Jin Young Ko has become the 20th to reach the $12 million mark.

Let’s take a closer look here at the top 20 of all-time.

This list is updated through the 2024 JM Eagle LA Championship at Wilshire Country Club.

Nelly Korda, Lydia Ko back in the same LPGA field at Ford Championship for the first time since January showdown

Ko/Korda showdowns are massive for a tour in need of star power.

Nelly Korda celebrated her second playoff victory of the year with an In-N-Out burger and “animal style” fries as she drove east from Palos Verdes Estates, California, to the suburbs of Phoenix. The World No. 1 split the six-hour drive with fellow tour player Olivia Cowan after draining a 15-foot birdie putt on the first extra hole against Ryann O’Toole at the Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship four days ago.

At this week’s inaugural Ford Championship at Seville Golf and Country Club in Gilbert, Arizona, Korda faces a stacked field as she tries to become the first player since Ariya Jutanugarn to win three consecutive starts on the LPGA. Jutanugarn’s hot streak eight years ago included a Ricoh Women’s British Open title.

“First win as an auntie,” beamed Korda, whose older sister Jessica is on maternity leave. “My parents say I try to kill them every single time. I don’t purposely try to, but, yeah.”

Nine out of the top 10 players in the world are in the Ford field and all five winners from 2024. It’s the first time Korda has been in the same tournament as Lydia Ko since the two pals squared off against each other in January in Korda’s hometown of Bradenton, Florida, at the LPGA Drive On Championship in January. Korda beat Ko on the first hole of a playoff, denying her entry into the LPGA Hall of Fame. The celebratory champagne and flowers were left sitting by the 18th green.

2024 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions
Lydia Ko smiles on the 18th green after winning the 2024 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club. (Photo: Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

Ko needs only one more point to reach the 27 required to enter the LPGA shrine. She went into the final round of the Blue Bay LPGA last month tied for the lead in China, but ultimately took a share of fourth as American Bailey Tardy bulldozed the field with a final-round 65 to win by four and claim her first LPGA title.

“I don’t think I fall asleep or wake up in a day thinking about the Hall of Fame,” said Ko. “I think people around me think about it more than I do. To be honest, last year I thought a lot about it, just because you’re so close.”

Ko went on to say that being in the LPGA Hall of Fame was never a big goal because she didn’t think she was capable of it. Humble words from a player who rewrote LPGA record books before she could legally drive a car.

Korda said she’s been good friends with “Lyds” for years thanks to the friendship that already existed between Ko and her older sister Jessica. Even though Ko’s time on tour predates Nelly, she still had a front-row seat to Ko’s brilliance as she followed Jessica’s career. Korda, 25, is only one year younger than Ko, who first won on the LPGA at age 15.

“I think she’s super resilient,” said Nelly. “I know in golf and sports, there are so many ups and downs, and she’s always bounced back.”

This season, Ko leads the tour in both bogey avoidance and scrambling, two statistical categories that she ranked outside of the top 50 one year ago, her worst season on tour.

The week before Korda won in front of a hometown crowd, Ko won quite literally where she lives and practices at Lake Nona Country Club at the season-opening Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions in Orlando. It was her 20th career LPGA title.

https://www.instagram.com/p/C48Zj5Up_Hy/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

Ko/Korda showdowns are massive for a tour in need of star power.

Four of Korda’s 10 career titles have come in playoffs, and she’s now beaten Ko in two of them. The victory moved Korda ahead of Laura Davies on the all-time career money list to No. 28 with $9,523,989. Ko ranks fifth on that list at $17,438,722. This week’s purse of $2.25 million pays out $337,500 to the winner.

As Ko looks to become only the 35th player to enter the LPGA Hall of Fame and only the 25th to earn 27 HOF points, Korda, who took off seven weeks in between her two wins this year, said she never even thinks about making it in the HOF. She currently has 12 points.

“If I get there, then great,” said Korda, “but that’s not something that I put on my goal sheet.

“As I said, I think small goals then eventually lead to your bigger goals.”

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A win away from the Hall of Fame, Lydia Ko tied for lead at Blue Bay LPGA

Sunday could be historic.

Sunday could be historic on the LPGA.

Needing one win to secure the final point to earn Hall of Fame status, Lydia Ko is tied for the lead at the Blue Bay LPGA at Jian Lake Blue Bay Golf Course in China. Ko shot 6-under 66 on Saturday to move into a tie with Bailey Tardy (66) and Sarah Schmelzel (69) with 18 holes to go.

Ko, a 20-time winner on the LPGA, is one point away from meeting the minimum threshold to be inducted into the LPGA Hall of Fame. The 26-year-old could earn her 21st win on Sunday, making herself the youngest player to ever be inducted into the LPGA Hall of Fame.

“Still a lot of golf to be played, and it seems like someone shoots a really low score at least one of the rounds,” Ko said. “We all know the pin positions dictate the scores, so I just got to stay patient and keep giving myself good looks and see where that puts me.”

Ko’s round featured five birdies, an eagle and a lone bogey. For Tardy, who played alongside Ko in the third round, she had a clean scorecard with four birdies and an eagle.

Meanwhile, after a player tied the course record in each of the first two rounds, Canadian Savannah Grewal set a new one on Saturday, shooting 8-under 64.

“Feels kind of surreal. Still soaking it all in,” she said. “Just wanted to come out and play my best. I was joking with my brother yesterday that I shot 2 over that today is moving day. I got it.”

However, the focus on Sunday will be Ko, who nearly earned that last point earlier this season. After winning the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions to open the year, she lost in a playoff against Nelly Korda at the LPGA Drive On Championship the next week.

Come Sunday in China, Ko can make LPGA history.

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10 things to know about the women’s Rolex Rankings, which debuted on this day in 2006

Get to know the Rolex Rankings.

The Rolex Rankings debuted less than 20 years ago on Feb.  21, 2006. For context, the men’s Official World Golf Ranking has been around since 1986.

In that time, 18 different women from nine different countries have risen to the top, giving fans from all over the world reason to celebrate.

The rankings are used to fill fields at the majors, determine teams like the Solheim Cup and International Crown and decide which top players qualify for the Olympics.

Both amateurs and professionals are eligible and the rankings are updated every Monday.

Here are 10 interesting things to note about the Rolex Rankings, which are now 18 years old:

Is LPGA dominance a thing of the past? Here’s the history of the most wins by players in a single season

It’s tough to see how these numbers get matched.

True dominance on the LPGA might be a thing of the past. There was a time when Mickey Wright won a staggering 10 times or more over the course of four consecutive seasons.

It’s been a decade since a player has won more than five times in a single season. Yani Tseng was the last player to win seven times in 2011.

Compare that to Annika Sorenstam’s double-digit years or when Lorena Ochoa won six, eight and seven times from 2006 to 2008.

Is anyone capable of matching those efforts in the modern game?

As the tour gets deeper by the decade, here’s a closer look at most wins by year on the LPGA: