Nelly Korda outlasts Lydia Ko in
playoff to win Drive On Championship
Send a link to a friend
[January 29, 2024]
Nelly Korda made a downhill par putt on the second playoff
hole to defeat Lydia Ko of New Zealand and win the LPGA Drive On
Championship on Sunday at Bradenton (Fla.) Country Club.
Korda, a Bradenton native, nabbed her ninth career LPGA victory
despite squandering a four-shot lead to start the day.
After both Korda and Ko returned to the par-4 18th hole for the
playoff, and made par the first time through, Korda's approach shot
on the second go-round at the hole rolled off the back of the green
toward the hospitality tent. Ko landed her shot on the green, but
after Korda chipped on, Ko's long birdie putt stopped several feet
short.
Ko then watched her uphill par putt lip out. Korda calmly delivered
her 6-footer to the center of the cup before celebrating with the
home crowd.
"Even when I was down, they were so, so positive and keeping me in
it," Korda said on the Golf Channel broadcast. "It was just such a
grind out there, so back and forth. ... I can't even believe it
right now."
Korda and Ko took much different paths to finish 72 holes in
11-under 273. Ko posted a 2-under 69 Sunday and Korda signed for a
2-over 73.
Korda went 1 over on the front nine, and her hopes took a blow with
a bogey-double bogey-bogey stretch at Nos. 14-16.
Ko then made a remarkable eagle at the par-5 17th hole to grab sole
possession of the lead. Her second shot narrowly avoided water,
bounced up onto the green and rolled to inside a foot of the hole.
[to top of second column] |
Shortly after Ko's tap-in eagle, Korda made her own
eagle putt at No. 17 from nearly off the green. Ko parred No. 18,
meaning Korda needed birdie to tie, and she dialed up an approach
shot that nestled within inches of the pin, necessitating the
playoff.
"I honestly thought that the tournament was over
going into 17," said Korda, 25. "I just kinda gave myself a chance.
I knew that if I got that eagle in, I'd have to birdie the last
hole. I always seem to make it very dramatic and interesting.
There's no better feeling to do it in front of a home crowd."
Ko won last week's season opener and continued her
red-hot start to the season. Had she won Sunday, she would have
bagged her 20th career LPGA victory -- qualifying for the LPGA Hall
of Fame. The second playoff hole did her in.
"I actually hit a good stroke on (the second putt), it just broke a
little bit more than I thought," the 26-year-old Ko said. "The first
putt, it's difficult, I think, when there's a lot of grain. I
honestly didn't think I hit it that far short but obviously I
misjudged the slope and the grain of it. But I played really solid
today."
Megan Khang made three birdies in her first seven holes to 12 under
for the event but bogeyed Nos. 9, 14, 15 and 16. She settled for a
1-over 72 and finished alone in third place at 8 under.
Lucy Li (69) and Japan's Ayaka Furue (73) tied for fifth at 7 under.
--Field Level Media
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely
responsible for this content.
|