How Sahith Theegala and Rose Zhang’s trainer led to their Grant Thornton Invitational pairing

“I think this is what golf needs is more team events, especially mixed men and women’s, and I think fans will really love it.”

Sahith Theegala and Rose Zhang both grew up in Southern California and share a trainer, who it turns out deserves most of the credit for their teaming up at this week’s Grant Thornton Invitational in Naples, Florida.

Theegala, who played his college golf at Pepperdine, has been keeping track of Zhang’s exploits during her college career at Stanford, and when the Grant Thornton Invitational was announced as transforming into a mixed-team event this year, he remembers thinking, “I need to find a way to get her out to play with me this year.”

That’s when their mutual trainer started a text thread between the three of them early this year, where he declared they were going to team up in the event.

“Rose was like, ‘Well, I’ve got to turn pro first,’” Theegala recalled. “So yeah, I like casually brought it up. Kind of like not really jokingly but kind of jokingly. She just turned pro and killed it right away, and I was like, ‘Am I good enough to still be your partner?’”

Indeed, he is. The 26-year-old Theegala won this event at Tiburon Golf Club last year with Tom Hoge as his partner when there were just two mixed-team pairings. Zhang turned pro this summer and is proving to be a force to be reckoned with, and likely a hot commodity for this event. The inaugural Grant Thornton Invitational is the first mixed-team co-sanctioned event between the PGA Tour and LPGA Tour since John Daly and Laura Davies won the final JCPenney Classic in 1999, and a revival of the concept has long been in the making.

“This week is really special for not only me but everyone in this event,” Zhang said. “I don’t get to play with PGA Tour players often, so being able to play with Sahith, and from afar you always watch these players on TV, and you always admire their games, how far they hit it, how precise they are, how creative they are with their shots. It’s just kind of cool to just be inside the ropes to see that, let alone teaming up. Yeah, it’s going to be a fun ride.”

Lexi Thompson, 28, who had played in the QBE Shootout previously and competed against the men in the PGA Tour’s Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas in October, echoed that sentiment.

“I think this is what golf needs is more team events, especially mixed men and women’s, and I think fans will really love it,” she said.

Women’s golf is on the rise, and Theegala said an event like the Grant Thornton Invitational will showcase just how talented they really are.

“I didn’t realize how far Lexi hits it or how good Nelly’s iron game is and stuff like that,” he said. “They’re the best players in the world. They stack up to the Tour guys, if not better than the Tour guys, in a lot of areas.”

Rickie Fowler, 34, is teaming with Thompson. Originally, he was supposed to play with Jessica Korda, but she had to back out for a very good reason – she’s expecting her first child.

“I tried to talk her into it like you can still do it, but yeah, she ultimately bailed,” Fowler said with a smile. “It was a pretty easy decision from there.”

Fowler and Thompson couldn’t pinpoint the first time they met but figured it was at a Cobra-Puma shoot, the equipment and apparel makers they both endorse, around 2010.

“Team events are always a good time just because you can kind of lean on each other, but it’s also some added pressure, as well, because you want to perform and execute when it comes down to alternate shot (the format used during Sunday’s final round),” Fowler said. “Yeah, we have a pretty strong field both on the men’s and the women’s side. No one has come in here just to enjoy December offseason. There’s a lot of pride at stake.”

The bond between these teams may have been forged over text strings and at photo shoots, but this week they are thicker than blood.

“If you hit it in the weeds, I won’t be mad,” Fowler said to Thompson. “It’s fine.”

Ready for the Vu-Tang Clan and Team FiNelly? The Grant Thornton Invitational finally brings some of the best of the PGA Tour and LPGA together

Lilia Vu said she’s so pumped to play in the co-ed event that she’s actually nervous.

Lilia Vu didn’t meet Joel Dahmen until Tuesday night, but they’ve been part of a text string with their caddies called the Vu-Tang Clang for about a month.

Vu, the No. 1-ranked female golfer in the world, knows the name is a play off the group the Wu-Tang Clan but when Dahmen declared they would listen to some of the musical group’s greatest hits on the way to the first tee, she wondered, “Is that hip hop?”

“Yeah, it’s the best era in history,” Dahmen said.

Vu and Dahmen, the No. 166-ranked male player in the world, may not have a lot of history playing golf together yet, but that is about to change this week at the Grant Thornton Invitational.

They are partners in the first mixed-team co-sanctioned event between the PGA Tour and LPGA since John Daly and Laura Davies won the final JC Penny Classic in 1999. There’s been talk about reviving a co-ed team event seemingly since the previous one went away and it has attracted some top talent in its debut at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida.

“It means a lot. We’ve been kind of wanting this type of tournament for a long time,” Vu said. “It’s a really big deal for us to actually be on a stage to showcase both women’s and men’s golf together at the highest level, so it’s an honor to be here and showcase that.”

As a matter of fact, Vu said she’s so pumped to play in the co-ed event that she’s actually nervous.

“What is there to be nervous about?” Dahmen said. “It’s the offseason, you’re the best player in the world, we’re just goofing off and we’re going to beat most players here.”

Yeah, you’re right. I’m going to need that a lot,” Vu said.

But in the next breath, Dahmen got Vu’s nerves jangling when he reminded her, “my paycheck depends on you this week.”

No pressure, right?

Oh, no,” Vu said. “I just started sweating.”

Our team’s going to have more fun than everyone else, that’s the number one thing,” Dahmen said. “I mean, she’s won four times this year. I haven’t won four times since I was like 12. To watch her kind of handle everything that comes out of this week is going to be awesome.”

Dahmen noted that Vu’s putting prowess was going to be fun to watch.

“Yeah, I’ve got you,” Vu said.

“Love that,” Dahmen said.

Vu-Tang Clan isn’t the only team with a funky name. Nelly Korda and Tony Finau are Team FiNelly.

“And Certified Fresh, and that comes from Finau Fresh, and she’s Certified Finau Fresh,” Finau, a six-time Tour winner said.

“Yeah, I got certified yesterday,” said Korda, an eight-time LPGA winner. “I was pretty happy.”

Korda and Finau are both ambassadors for the tournament title sponsor and thus made a natural fit. But they had yet to play golf until pairing up for a nine-hole practice round Tuesday.

“Everything that I thought about her game, it was even better up close,” Finau said.

Korda’s response: “You’re already making me blush.”

The mutual admiration session continued.

“She’s good at everything. Sometimes my game can be a little rough around the edges, so she’ll clean up for that,” Finau said. “Nelly is not a hard partner to play with, and then she’s got an incredible attitude, and she’s obviously extremely competitive, as well.”

I’m just getting compliments left and right,” Korda said. “I love this.”

And what part of Finau’s game is she most impressed with? “I can’t wait to see all the bombs out there,” she said. “Hit it close for me.”

Team FiNelly and the Vu-Tang Clan may just be getting to know each other before the 54-hole tournament begins in earnest on Friday, but they already sound as if they are BFF’s.

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2023 Grant Thornton Invitational Friday tee times feature must-watch pairings

Everything you need to know for Friday’s first round in Florida.

Who’s ready for a little mixed-team golf?

Sixteen teams comprised of PGA Tour and LPGA players will tee it up at the inaugural 2023 Grant Thornton Invitational this week at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida.

Friday’s first round will be a scramble format, followed on Saturday by a round of foursomes (alternate shot). A new format will enter the fray on Sunday, a “modified fourball” session that will see both players hit a tee shot, then switch balls for their second shots. The players will then play the second ball until they complete the hole, and the lowest of the two scores will count for the team.

Check out the tee times, as well as TV and streaming info, below for the first round of the 2023 Grant Thornton Invitational. All times Eastern.

Grant Thornton: Odds, picks to win | Meet all 16 teams

Friday tee times

Tee time Teams
9:10 a.m. Mel Reid and Russell Henley
Allisen Corpuz and Cameron Champ
9:25 a.m. Leona Maguire and Lucas Glover
Madelene Sagstrom
9:40 a.m. Rose Zhang and Sahith Theegala
Lilia Vu and Joel Dahmen
9:55 a.m. Megan Khang and Denny McCarthy
Cheyenne Knight and Tom Hoge
10:10 a.m. Brooke Henderson and Corey Conners
Ruoning Yin and Nick Taylor
10:25 a.m. Andrea Lee and Billy Horschel
Celine Boutier and Harris English
10:40 a.m. Lydia Ko and Jason Day
Charley Hull and Justin Rose
10:55 a.m. Nelly Korda and Tony Finau
Lexi Thompson and Rickie Fowler

How to watch

Friday, Dec. 8

Golf Channel: 1-4 p.m.
Peacock (streaming):
1-4 p.m.

Saturday, Dec. 9

Golf Channel: 2-3 p.m.
NBC: 3-5 p.m.
Peacock (streaming): 2-5 p.m.

Sunday, Dec. 10

Golf Channel: 1-2 p.m.
NBC: 2-4 p.m.
Peacock (streaming): 1-4 p.m.

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Which Grant Thornton Invitational team has best combined ranking of PGA Tour and LPGA players?

The Nelly Korda-Tony Finau duo is the highest-ranked team based on the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings.

This is going to be fun.

The inaugural Grant Thornton Invitational is Friday through Sunday this week at the Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida, with 32 golfers – 16 from the LPGA and 16 from the PGA Tour – playing in two-person teams and competing for a $4 million purse.

The field features nine PGA Tour players and 12 LPGA players ranked in the top 50 in the latest men’s and women’s Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings.

The highest-ranked PGA Tour golfers are Ludvig Aberg at No. 7, Rickie Fowler at No. 8 and Tony Finau at No. 16.

Meanwhile, four of the top 10 LPGA players will be there: No. 3 Ruoning Yin, No. 8 Nelly Korda, No. 9 Megan Khang and No. 10 Celine Boutier.

Who has the best combined ranking?

Here’s a look at the highest-ranked combos for the mixed-team event:

Nelly Korda (8) and Tony Finau (16) = 24

Megan Khang (9) and Denny McCarthy (29) = 38

Brooke Henderson (22) and Corey Conners (22) = 44

Rose Zhang (19) and Sahith Theegala (39) = 58

Madelene Sagstrom (57) and Ludvig Aberg (7)  = 64

Charley Hull (23) and Justin Rose (42) = 65

Lydia Ko (45) and Jason Day (27) = 72

Lexi Thompson (67) and Rickie Fowler (8) = 75

Celine Boutier (10) and Harris English (75) = 85

Mel Reid (75) and Russell Henley (14) = 89

Ruoning Yin (3) and Nick Taylor (94) = 97

Leona Maguire (16) and Lucas Glover (119) = 135

Cheyenne Knight (33) and Tom Hoge (115) = 148

Andrea Lee (72) and Billy Horschel (139) = 211

Allisen Corpuz (30) and Cameron Champ (266) = 296

Lilia Vu (11) and Joel Dahmen (304) = 315

Stacked resumes

There will be a combined 141 career victories – with 25 of those wins occurring this year – converging at Tiburon. There are 11 major champions in the field, including all five major winners from the 2023 LPGA season.

There are three 2023 Ryder Cuppers (Justin Rose and Ludvig Aberg from Europe; Rickie Fowler from the U.S.).

There are 12 members of the 2023 Solheim Cup teams (Madelene Sagstrom, Celine Boutier, Leona Maguire and Charley Hull from Team Europe; Lilia Vu, Lexi Thompson, Nelly Korda, Allisen Corpuz, Andrea Lee, Cheyenne Knight and Rose Zhang from Team USA).

Format for the three days

Friday, Dec. 8: Scramble

In this round, each player hits a tee shot and then the team selects the ball to be used for the next stroke. From there, both players hit their next shots from that spot. This process continues until the ball is holed.

Saturday, Dec. 9: Foursomes

This is the most traditional of the three days, adhering to a format that is consistently featured in both the Ryder Cup and Solheim Cup. Each team’s players alternate hitting shots with the same ball until the ball is holed. One player will tee off on the odd-numbered holes, and the other tees off on the even-numbered holes.

Sunday, Dec. 10: Modified fourballs

This final round will feature a format new to team play and a twist on traditional fourball. In the modified format, both players tee off, and then they switch balls for their second shots and play that same ball until it is holed. The lower score of the partners is then counted as the team score for the hole.

How to watch

Friday, first round, 1-4 p.m. ET, Golf Channel and Peacock

Saturday, second round, 2-3 p.m. ET, Golf Channel and Peacock

Saturday, second round, 3-5 p.m. ET, NBC and Peacock

Sunday, final round, 1-2 p.m. ET, Golf Channel and Peacock

Sunday, final round, 2-4 p.m. ET, NBC and Peacock

Did you know?

The Grant Thornton replaces the QBE Shootout, which Greg Norman founded more than three decades ago and had been played in Naples since 2001.

2023 Grant Thornton Invitational format, odds and picks to win

Everything you need to know for the week in Naples.

The inaugural Grant Thornton Invitational is here and it’s sure to be a great week at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida.

PGA Tour and LPGA stars have teamed up and are ready to do battle over the course of three days. The first round will be a scramble, the second foursomes (alternate shot) and there will be a new format in play on Sunday. The “modified fourball” consists of both players hitting a tee shot, then switching balls for their second shots and playing that ball until they complete the hole. The lowest of the two scores will count for the team.

Here are some of the notable pairings: Tony Finau/Nelly Korda, Rickie Fowler/Lexi Thompson, Sahith Theegala/Rose Zhang and Lydia Ko/Jason Day. The No.1-ranked Lilia Vu will play alongside fan-favorite Joel Dahmen.

This will be the first co-sanctioned event between the Tour and LPGA since 1999.

Golf course

Tiburon Golf Club | Par 72 | Home to LPGA’s CME Group Tour Championship

2023 CME Group Tour Championship
The 18th hole at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida. (Photo: Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

Format, teams and betting preview

Meet the 16 teams of LPGA, PGA Tour players competing in the 2023 Grant Thornton Invitational

The 16-team, 32-player field features 24 of the top 50 in the world from the LPGA and PGA Tour.

For years golf fans have been asking for a high-profile mixed-team event to be on the schedule, and soon they’ll get their wish.

The inaugural Grant Thornton Invitational is set to tee off Dec. 8-10 at the Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida, where the 32-player field of 16 teams will feature 24 of the top 50 in the world from both the LPGA and PGA Tour competing for a $4 million purse.

There are 11 major champions in the field, including all five major winners from the 2023 LPGA season. The format consists of a scramble, foursomes and modified fourball over three days of play.

GTI: Friday tee times, how to watch info

Get to know all 16 teams comprised of LPGA and PGA Tour players below, and also see the format and the TV/streaming information.

Amy Yang wins LPGA season finale at 2023 CME Group Tour Championship

This is Yang’s first win since 2019.

NAPLES, Fla. – Amy Yang battles something she calls “ego talk.” It’s the stuff she tells herself that gets in the way when the pressure is on. She dealt with it early on Sunday at the CME Group Tour Championship, when she doubted herself and wondered if the day would end with just another close call.

This time, however, Yang shut down that ego talk.

“This is very meaningful,” said Yang in her new bright blue blazer, the CME trophy by her side and a $2 million cardboard check somewhere nearby.

Yang, 34, stayed strong down the stretch mentally at Tiburon Golf Club, where she holed out for eagle on the 13th hole and birdied the last two to win by three over Alison Lee and Nasa Hataoka. It was Yang’s first LPGA title since 2019, her fifth overall, and her first on U.S. soil.

Amy Yang of Korea celebrates with the CME Globe trophy and her check during the trophy ceremony after winning the CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club on November 19, 2023 in Naples, Florida. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

For Lee, finishing runner-up in her last three LPGA events felt bittersweet. While she’s playing the best golf of her life, that elusive first LPGA victory remains out of reach.

Good friend Megan Khang, who finally broke through with her first victory earlier this year at the CPKC Women’s Open in her 191st career start, sat in on Lee’s post-round press conference.

“This isn’t really a question,” said Khang as she took the mic, “but as a friend, I am a proud of you. You’ve been playing so good, Alison. It’s coming.”

An emotional Lee, who made her 179th career start at the CME, has credited new friend Fred Couples with helping instill the confidence she’s felt in recent months, noting that he texts her daily with words of encouragement.

“So many times I would joke around saying I’m just never going to win out here,” said Lee, who was a standout amateur player at UCLA before turning professional. “I really didn’t think I could ever do it.

“But to play the last three weeks just continuously putting the pressure on everyone on the leaderboard and putting myself in contention has just been really cool for me and been a really awesome experience.”

It wasn’t long ago that Yang, who suffered from tennis elbow after too much rock climbing, wondered if her career might come to an end earlier than expected. She also wondered how much longer she wanted to keep grinding through tour life.

Longtime coach Tony Ziegler told her life’s too short to keep playing if she wasn’t happy. She needed to make a decision.

Two weeks later, Yang came back and told him that she wanted to keep playing and she wanted to win. Ziegler repeated what he’s said to her often in recent years: “Your best golf is ahead of you.”

“Back in the day,” said Ziegler, “when she played really good golf, she had a lot of pressure and expectation, and she didn’t know how to deal with it.

“As she’s gotten older, she knows how to deal with it.”

The woman who had a smiley face stitched on the front of her visors beamed after that final-round 66. She finished at 27-under 261 for the tournament, shattering the event’s previous record by four shots.

For a long time, Yang was always in the best-to-never-win-a-major conversation on the LPGA. With 21 top-10 finishes at the majors, including two top 5s this season, she mostly flies under the radar at big events now.

“She’s just at ease with herself, no pressure, no expectation,” said Ziegler. “Basically playing for herself.”

Yang enjoyed a champagne bath on the 18th green after many of her friends came out to celebrate. Even before the injury, a burned-out Yang wondered if it might be best to retire. In time, she learned how to create a more balanced life, and wrapped up her 16th season on tour looking like a woman who has more time to shine.

 You know,” said Yang, “I still can’t believe I did it.”

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After rock climbing injury nearly derailed her career, Amy Yang back on top at CME

“Feel quite nervous being in contention,” said Yang.

NAPLES, Fla. – It wasn’t all that long ago that Amy Yang wondered if her LPGA days were numbered. She’d taken her new hobby of rock climbing – at the gym – a bit too far and suffered from tennis elbow in her left arm. She lost distance as it hurt too much to get through the ball.

Now 34-year-old Yang, a four-time winner on the LPGA who joined the tour in 2008, is fully healed and back to playing some of the best golf of her life as she co-leads the CME Group Tour Championship with Nasa Hataoka at 21-under 295. Yang followed Friday’s 63 with a smooth 64. She hasn’t made a bogey at Tiburon Golf Club since the first hole of the opening round.

“Feel quite nervous being in contention,” said Yang, “but I never thought like I have to follow the 9 under par yesterday, because golf, you never know.”

Yang, who shot 61 in the third round of The Annika last week, is no stranger to low scores. She holds a share of the LPGA’s nine-hole record in relation to par at 9 under as well as a share of the lowest nine-hole raw score (27).

In 2015, she tied Annika Sorenstam’s record for total birdies in one round at 13. (Sorenstam’s 13 birdies came during her historic 59.)

Yang also shares the record with Beth Daniel for most consecutive birdies in one round at nine.

Alison Lee of the United States plays her shot from the third tee during the third round of the CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club on November 18, 2023 in Naples, Florida. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

While Hataoka and Yang combine for 10 LPGA titles, Alison Lee, who sits alone in solo third three shots back, would give just about anything to collect her first.

The former UCLA standout is on the hot streak of her life right now with a pair of runner-up finishes in her last two LPGA starts as well as a recent victory on the LET in Saudi Arabia. Lee credits her turnaround in part to the encouragement of new friend and mentor Fred Couples, who texts her every day.

Before Saturday’s round, Couples messaged: “OK, kid, today just keep using your swing to carry you. You’re putting great, playing like the champ that you are. Head high and brain clear, go get ’em.”

After excelling at every level as an amateur, Lee had resigned to the fact that she wouldn’t be the player she thought she’d be growing up.

Now, she’s starting to believe that maybe she can.

“I felt like it was so unattainable for so long,” she said. “For it to be like so close, I want it so bad. I just want it so bad.”

World No. 1 Lilia Vu, currently T-7, has all but formerly locked up the Rolex Player of the Year Award, which is worth one LPGA Hall of Fame point. Celine Boutier needed to win this week to have a chance. She currently trails by 14 strokes.

In the Vare Trophy race, it will take a special round from Hyo Joo Kim to knock off Atthaya Thitikul. Kim needs a round of 64 or better to match Thitikul’s current average. Thitikul can better her current average with a 69.

The winner of the Vare Trophy also receives one Hall of Fame point. A total of 27 points are needed to qualify for one of the toughest Halls in all of sports.

ADHD revelations bring life into focus for former CME champ Charley Hull

“Sometimes you feel like you’re a prisoner in your own head.”

NAPLES, Fla. – There are times when Georgia Hall goes out to breakfast with her best mate Charley Hull and finds herself dining alone midway through her meal. Hull isn’t one to stay in one place for very long. When she’s done eating, she leaves.

“That’s just Charley,” said a smiling Hall, who isn’t bothered one bit.

Hull can’t remember the last time she watched a movie in the theater.

“I’d have to go to about 10 toilet breaks,” she said, “and just keep coming in and out. It’s just crazy.”

Hull, 27, told the BBC back in July that she’d been unofficially diagnosed with ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder). The realization came earlier this year after playing a casual round of golf with a doctor. Hull has been learning more and more about the disorder ever since.

Photos: Charley Hull through the years

At the LET’s Aramco event in London this summer, Hull slept for 2½ hours over the course of four days. She eventually crashed, sleeping for 16 hours straight.

“I had Georgia ringing my phone,” she said, “checking if I was OK.”

Charley Hull of England looks on during the second round of the CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club on November 17, 2023 in Naples, Florida. (Photo by Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

Now the eighth-ranked player in the world, Hull views golf as her therapy but can’t be away from home for too long because she’s a self-described “overthinker.” It’s the downtime at tournaments that she finds most difficult. Hull tries to fill the time as much she can at the gym or with Hall, her friend of 17 years. She enjoys coloring books and cold showers.

Things began to take a turn for the worse last spring after she missed the cut at the Chevron Championship and went to a friend’s house in Los Angeles. She was averaging about an hour of sleep per night at that point and felt completely drained as her mind raced relentlessly.

In late April, Hull abruptly pulled out of the Hanwha Lifeplus International Crown and went home, leaving Team England scrambling to fly in a replacement. Hull eventually decided to open up about her diagnosis after receiving criticism for how she’d handled the Crown.

When Hull won the CME Group Tour Championship seven years ago, she knew nothing about anxiety.

“I used to laugh at people who had it because I didn’t understand it,” she said.

It wasn’t until 2018 that something in her personal life, which she doesn’t want to talk about, triggered a change.

She’s been finding ways to cope ever since.

“Sometimes you feel like you’re a prisoner in your own head,” said Hull, who describes herself as moving at one speed: 100 mph. Her coping strategy is to leave the house at 7 a.m. and not come back until 11 p.m.

“I can’t sit down,” she said.

Anyone who has watched Hull compete can’t help but notice her speed, particularly the way her blonde ponytail whips about as she lashes after a golf ball. Everything Hull does feels like it’s on a fast-forward setting, from the way she walks to how she talks.

Hull isn’t one to dwell on a poor shot or an unlucky bounce. Her mind won’t allow it.

Charley Hull of England celebrates with Georgia Hall in the 18th green after winning The Ascendant LPGA benefiting Volunteers of America at Old American Golf Club on October 02, 2022 in The Colony, Texas. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

“She’s just so exciting to watch,” said Hall. “She plays really carefree, and it’s just great to see. A lot of players wish that they could play as free as her.”

Not surprisingly, slow play is Hull’s enemy. She tries to combat boredom by soaking in the views and drinks plenty of water to keep her brain sharp.

“I drink a lot of water, and I’ve never understood why I drink a lot of water,” said Hull. “I found out it’s actually a big thing with ADHD.”

Pia Nilsson and Lynn Marriott, co-founders of Vision54, have noticed that many young people they work with these days struggle to stay focused during a lesson.

They’ve found attention training to be a helpful practice for many of their students, asking them to, for example, make a swing and feel the pressure of their grip. Can they get to 15 seconds of following their own breath? Can they keep their eyes softly focused on a target for 10 seconds? It’s like training a muscle.

When working with someone with ADHD, Nilsson and Marriott might change activities at a faster rate or ask a student to teach them what they’re working on to create a more lasting impression.

“As little talking as possible,” said Marriott, “and more doing.”

It’s estimated that, as of 2020, more than 366 million adults worldwide have been diagnosed with ADHD.

Hull’s ability to take certain medications for ADHD is restricted by LPGA anti-doping policies, though she worries that too people many have become reliant on pills.

“I feel like doctors just handing out tablets willy nilly is disgusting,” said Hull, “because it can actually make the person worse.”

A two-time winner on the LPGA, Hull has finished runner-up four times this season and entered the weekend inside the top 20 at the season-ending CME. Perhaps her most memorable on-course moment from the season came at the U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach, when she took an aggressive line under a tree with a 3-wood trying to reach the iconic 18th green in two to put pressure on leader Allisen Corpuz.

“You know the saying, shy kids don’t get sweets?” Hull asked her caddie shortly before taking a mighty big swing.

Hull works fast and aggressively in all parts of life, which is what makes her so much fun to watch. When she won her second LPGA title in Texas last year, she celebrated by buying herself not one but two Rolex watches.

And while Hull isn’t shy about sharing the details of her daily struggles, she isn’t looking for sympathy or offering any excuses.

“I’ve learned that with life you’ve just got to ride it out, because you have good days and bad days,” she said while signing autographs in Naples.

“I feel like people are way too soft these days. You can’t say certain things and this and that. And a lot of people do blame it on mental health. But at the end of the day, go back 50 years ago … times were a lot harder, and people just got on with it.

“People just need to get on with it these days.”

Nelly Korda makes hole-in-one at the 2023 CME Group Tour Championship

That’s gonna be expensive, Nelly.

During the third round of the CME Group Tour Championship, Nelly Korda made a hole-in-one at the par-3 eighth at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida.

Korda opened her day with a birdie four at the par-5 first and added another at the par-5 sixth. After striking her tee shot on the eighth, she stared down the ball knowing it was good — but it’s hard to believe she thought it was going to be that good!

CME: Leaderboard | Photos

After landing 10 feet short of the flag, Korda’s ball rolled end-over-end like a putt right into the hole. The cheer from the crowd was huge as Korda and her playing partners celebrated her ace.

Korda was 4 under through eight holes Saturday, tied for sixth at 12 under, four back of the lead.