Lydia Ko wins 2022 CME Group Tour Championship, Vare Trophy and Player of the Year to complete comeback season with fiancé by her side

It was a bona fide comeback season for Lydia Ko.

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NAPLES, Fla. – Tears welled up in Lydia Ko’s eyes on the 18th green Sunday as she wrapped up a monumental comeback season. Soon after, she wrapped her arms around a tall, slender man wearing black and khaki, who wiped tears of his own. This marked the first time Jun Chung had seen his soon-to-be-bride win in person. Most of their golf together is casual, with dinner on the line or a fun dare.

Chung, son of Ted Chung, vice chairman and CEO, Hyundai Card, Hyundai Commercial, works in finance for Hyundai and has a home in San Francisco. Because of the pandemic, they were pen pals for six months before meeting for the first time. Shortly after, Ko broke a three-year victory drought in Hawaii. Friends started calling him her good-luck charm. His presence in her life, however, brought a lot more than luck.

Ko’s older sister and manager, Sura, said that she could tell a significant difference in Lydia after Jun came into her life.

“Since she met him,” said Sura, “she finds her own peace.”

That peace translated to bona fide comeback season, with Ko winning for a third time on the LPGA in 2022 at the CME Group Tour Championship, collecting her second Rolex LPGA Player of the Year Award and second Vare Trophy for lowest scoring average in the process.

And, after a record $2 million payday at the CME Group Tour Championship, she also clinches the LPGA money title with $4,364,404. That’s $591 shy of Lorena Ochoa’s all-time record in a single season.

“He puts a smile on my face,” said Ko, now a 19-time winner on the LPGA. The couple will marry Dec. 30 in Seoul.

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Ko came into the final round tied at 15 under with Leona Maguire, five shots clear of the field. Maguire took the lead early as Ko bogeyed the first hole on a blustery, overcast day at Tiburon Golf Club.

By the time they made the turn, the standing had flipped, with Ko on top by a stroke. After both made shocking bogeys on the par-5 14th, with each finding the hazard, other players popped into the conversation. As Anna Nordqvist posted a final-round 67 to get to the clubhouse at 14 under, Ko hit the gas, making birdies on Nos. 16 and 17 to pull two clear of the field. She closed with a 70 to finish at 17 under.

“Lydia is a class act,” said Maguire. “She always is. She was really steady, really solid. She obviously putts phenomenally well, so any time she got a chance, she took it, and that’s what you have to do.”

2022 CME Group Tour Championship
Lydia Ko poses for a photo with the Vare Trophy, the Rolex Player of the Year trophy and the CME Globe trophy after winning the CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club on November 20, 2022 in Naples, Florida. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Chung played tennis in high school and took up golf during the pandemic. He admits having to Google Ko’s career in those early stages of their relationship. Their favorite thing to do together is play golf. He carries his bag; she uses a push cart. They play Lake Nona in Orlando, Florida, where Ko has a home, and around California.

“I try to make it entertaining for her,” Chung said with a smile.

Ko’s instructor, Ted Oh, said the most impressive thing about the former phenom is her relentless work ethic. They’ll have day-long practice sessions together in San Francisco, and then Ko will head to the gym at night.

“People just don’t know the behind-the-scenes stuff she does,” said Oh. “It’s crazy.”

Chung, who flew into Naples on Saturday, agrees.

“Sometimes it’s really annoying because it makes you feel so bad,” he said, laughing. “She just won’t sit down and take a breather, but it’s really inspiring to see her.”

From Ko’s point of view, the balance in her life has never been better. For a while, she said, her identity felt so connected to her score. Chung has given her a new perspective of golf and life, knowing that her performance has no bearing on how Chung perceives her. Though she really did want to win this one with him by her side.

“After meeting him,” said Ko, “I’ve actually wanted to like work harder during the times that I am working. And then also enjoy, you know, time off. And I think I probably had a few more breaks than I did like two, three years ago, but I think that’s just only helped me to be more focused and be more on when I’m actually doing my work.”

After Ko won at the BMW Ladies Championship in South Korea last month, she broke down bawling when she phoned Chung, wanting nothing more than to celebrate that special moment with him. She’s always dreamed on winning on South Korean soil.

“I think he motivates and inspires me to become a better person and a better player,” she said.

2022 CME Group Tour Championship
Lydia Ko poses for a photo with her family, and the Vare Trophy, the Rolex Player of the Year trophy and the CME Globe trophy after winning the CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club on November 20, 2022 in Naples, Florida. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

With Sunday’s triumphs, Ko, 25, moves within two points of the 27 needed to qualify for the LPGA Hall of Fame. The youngest player to qualify for the Hall is Inbee Park, who was 27 back in 2016.

Ko said earlier this week that she wouldn’t hang around to chase one Hall of Fame point if she knew it was time to leave the game. From the moment she turned pro, Ko has said that she won’t play past the age of 30. Sura believes that if her sister gets to 27 points, she might start to shut it down soon after.

Competing in the 2024 Olympics in Paris, however, is high on the priority list. Should she win two more points  before Paris, Sura said her sister would press to play in one final Olympics.

“She wants to do so many things after golf,” said Sura. “She said she wanted to be an interior designer at some point. I’m like, you’re not from the arts.”

The first thing Oh noticed when he started working with Ko earlier this season was how much more relaxed she seemed. Chung is a kind, easygoing fellow, who is quick to laugh and stay in the background. Sura said they often mirror each other.

“Nothing is going to change too much next year,” said Chung, standing on the back of the 18th green, away from the cameras. “She’s going to keep playing. I don’t want to interfere with that. I want her to give all she’s got for the time she has left.”

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Carefree Lydia Ko in command by five at season-ending CME Group Tour Championship, where the winner earns $2 million

Lydia Ko is in position to finish her season strong.

NAPLES, Fla. – Leona Maguire took a vastly different road to the LPGA than Lydia Ko, ruling the women’s amateur scene for years as a standout at Duke. A dozen years ago, a 27-year-old Maguire teed it up with a 13-year-old Ko at the World Amateur Team Championship in Argentina.

“She was a phenom then getting ready to turn pro,” said Maguire. “I remember her short game was incredible. A wedge shot didn’t go outside 3, 4 feet.”

Players still marvel at Ko, who at 25 is enjoying a magnificent career resurgence. After a second-round 66, Ko leads the field by five at the CME Group Tour Championship at 13-under 131. A victory here would shore up her first LPGA Player of the Year award since 2015, not to mention a $2 million payday.

Ko said she wanted to finish the season with no regrets, playing freely.

“I think when I play freely,” said Ko, “I’m not being tentative. I’m controlling how the shot is going to go. I think that way it’s just a little bit stress-free.

“If I do miss it, hey, like, I’m going to miss one here and there. So it’s just a better place for me to be at. And obviously when the nerves kick in, that bit is a lot harder, but I think when I was struggling, I got more and more tentative and trying to control the ball and trying to make it work.”

While she hasn’t mathematically clinched the Vare Trophy for low scoring average, it’s basically a done deal. To rise to No. 1 in the world again, she’d have to win and have Nelly Korda finish solo 21st or worse. In 2015, Ko became the youngest player to ever reach No. 1 in the world ­– male or female – at age 17.

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Korda sits in a share of third with Anna Nordqvist, Gemma Dryburgh, and Nasa Hataoka, six strokes back. Hyo Joo Kim sits alone in second at 8 under. Maguire, a first-time winner this season, is at 6 under with Amy Yang and Jeongeun Lee6.

Top-ranked Korda, who is wearing her new signature line with J.Lindeberg this week, made four birdies on the front nine and then parred the last nine holes after the putter went dry.

“They’ve kind of used a lot of the Sunday pins,” said Korda, who won last week’s Pelican LPGA Championship.

“I would say, 16, 17, they kind of put them in the back just over a bunker. When you kind of get on one of those ridges that it can break either way, like, it just happens that occasionally you don’t roll them in.”

Nelly Korda gives a smile on the 18th green during the second round of the CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club on Nov. 18, 2022 in Naples, Florida. (Photo by Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

Ko, a two-time winner on tour this season and the 2014 CME champion, leads the LPGA in strokes gained total per round and strokes gained putting per round this season. Coming into this event she had made 201 putts of 10 feet or longer this season, eight more than any other player on tour.

Ko tops the tour in putts per green in relegation with a 1.72 average. She did the same in 2016 (1.71).

“I think during the times when I wasn’t hitting it as good, my short game improved,” said Ko. “So it’s good and bad, but I don’t feel like I’m the best putter in the world. I feel like there is so much room for improvement.”

Minjee Lee trails Ko by one point in the POY race. The Aussie bogeyed the last hole to shoot 68. She’s 5 under for the tournament in a share of 10th.

Coming into the event, Ko was 26 under at the CME over the past two years compared to Lee at 24 under.

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Here’s what’s on the line at this week’s CME, including a jam-packed LPGA Player of the Year race

Several awards are on the line on top of the $2 million first-place prize.

The drama that surrounds the CME Group Tour Championship typically centers around much more than the mega-money awarded to the winner. In addition to the $2 million payday that’s on the line, the Rolex Player of the Year and Vare Trophy winners will also be decided this week. Both awards come with one LPGA Hall of Fame point.

Atthaya Thitikul, a two-time winner this season who also spent a brief time as world No. 1, clinched Louise Suggs Rolex Rookie of the Year honors last week. Minjee Lee already has locked up two awards – the Rolex Annika Major Award and Aon Risk Reward Challenge, which comes with a $1 million prize.

Here’s what’s yet to be decided this week in Naples, Florida:

Lydia Ko on pace to win Vare Trophy for lowest scoring average for second straight year, calls this her most consistent season yet

Ko, 25, has eight top-five finishes in her last 11 starts.

Lydia Ko won five times on the LPGA in 2015 and four times in 2016. Yet she calls this season, in which she has won only once, her most consistent yet.

The proof is in her scoring average. Heading into this week’s BMW Ladies Championship, Ko’s 69.176 average led the tour. Minjee Lee, her nearest competitor, would need to average 68.389 in her remaining events to pass the Kiwi. Xiyu Lin and Brooke Henderson would have to average rounds of 66.480 or better to have any chance.

Ko, 25, has eight top-five finishes in her last 11 starts dating to the U.S. Women’s Open. During that stretch, she has gained 2.84 strokes against the field per round.

“Even when I was No. 1, I had won more frequently in that season and didn’t have as many top 10s or the percentage of top 10s compared to how many events I was playing,” said Ko. “I’m getting older, so I am playing less events than my rookie year or my first few years on tour, but it’s definitely nice to be in contention a little bit more frequently, and I think that just boosts the confidence levels.

“I think at the end of the day, it’s a momentum thing. You know, when you start playing well, it would defeat off the good energy, the good things that went on from the week before and trying to feed on the week after. I think I’ve been able to do that pretty well.”

Ko currently holds a share of fifth at the BMW, four strokes back of leader Andrea Lee, after matching rounds of 68.

A 17-time winner on the LPGA, Ko won the Vare Trophy for the first time last season. The award comes with an LPGA Hall of Fame point. A player must earn 27 points to enter the LPGA HOF. Ko currently has 21 points.

“I think especially at this last kind of from the middle of the season to where it is now,” said Ko, “I don’t think I’ve ever gotten too hyped up about it or too down and that’s just allowed me to play more freely. That’s a good place for me to personally be at.”

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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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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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