Korda
sisters follow in father's footsteps on sports path
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[July 04, 2017]
By Andrew Both
OLYMPIA FIELDS, Illinois, July 4
(Reuters) - Jessica and Nelly Korda are friends as well as
competitors on the LPGA Tour, where the sisters are showing similar
proficiency with a golf club as their father Petr demonstrated
wielding a tennis racket.
With Wimbledon in full swing, former world number two Petr is at the
All England Club to support his son Sebastian in the Wimbledon boys’
competition, while the Korda sisters keep each other company and
keep up the family passion for sports on the golf circuit.
Jessica, a four-times LPGA winner, is long established, while this
is the rookie season for Nelly, who at 18 is nearly six years
younger than Jessica.
They are a close-knit family, as was evident after the first round
at the Women’s PGA Championship last Thursday, where Nelly stopped
on the way from the 18th green to the scoring area to call out to
Jessica, who was extracting her clubs from her car on arriving for a
later tee time.
“She’s my best friend and having her out here means a lot,” Nelly
told Reuters. “She just guides me and having her out here makes me
feel really comfortable so it definitely helps.”
Asked for an example of how Jessica helps, Nelly said: “Little
things here and there that are really tiny.”
Jessica, speaking to Reuters the next day, was more specific: “She’s
always forgetting things,” Jessica said, a rueful smile on her face.
“Where do you want me to start? Phone. She’s always forgetting her
phone.”
Jessica then told of a time her teenaged sister left some fruit in
her car.
“We get inside and (she says) ‘OK, I forgot my fruit,'" related
Jessica. "It was two seconds ago. I told you, your freakin' fruit
was right there.”
Nelly and Jessica both played tennis among many sports when they
were children, but their father’s post-career passion for golf
rubbed off.
“We love sports, very sport-oriented. (We) figure skated,
gymnastics, occasionally tennis, skied. We did all sorts of things,”
said Nelly.
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“When my dad retired he started golfing and my sister
started and I just followed in their footsteps. Dad’s really good.
He shoots around even-par. He was a scratch (golfer). He still beat
me two or three years ago.”
Nelly decided to focus on golf after qualifying for the 2013 U.S.
Women’s Open as a 14-year-old amateur.
She is having a solid first season, 45th on the LPGA money list,
while Jessica is 27th. Both of them performed well at the Women's
PGA with Jessica equal 14th, a stroke ahead of Nelly, who tied for
20th.
Jessica, Nelly and Sebastian all hold dual U.S. and Czech
citizenship, due to their parents’ heritage.
“I’m more Czech than my sister and my brother in a lot of the things
I do and say and think, considering I lived there until 2008,” said
Jessica.
“Nelly and Sebastian are very American. I’m a good split, in-between
personality wise.”
But Jessica makes clear her allegiance to the U.S. -- and not just
for team golf.
“America is my chosen country for everything,” she said. “I’m very
patriotic. Nobody can ever take that away from me.”
Both are fully aware of their father’s tennis achievements, even if
the 1998 Australian Open champion is not one to boast.
“We don’t really talk about it much but I know everything,” said
Nelly, who has watched clips of her father on YouTube and notes how
skinny he was back then.
“We used to have a trophy room so all his trophies were there,” said
Nelly.
“It was cool growing up seeing that. We’re very proud.” (Reporting
by Andrew Both; Editing by Larry Fine) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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