Ashleigh Buhai leads on LPGA Tour
and Nelly Korda shows no sign of Solheim fatigue
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[September 20, 2024]
MAINEVILLE, Ohio (AP) — Nelly Korda had a tough time getting
out of bed Thursday morning. Any Solheim Cup fatigue had no bearing
on her standard of golf, a bogey-free 67 in the Kroger Queen City
Championship that left her two shots behind Ashleigh Buhai.
Korda and Leona Maguire, who also had a 5-under 67, are among 11
players who competed in the Solheim Cup last week and got right back
to work at the TPC River's Bend.
Buhai, a former Women's British Open champion from South Africa,
isn't part of the Solheim Cup and had a few weeks to rest from an
injury-plagued season. She ran off eight birdies for her 7-under 65,
giving her a one-shot lead over Jeeno Thitikul and Yan Liu.
“Just shows that rest is just as important,” Buhai said. “I know if
I give myself five days to warm up, with my coach coming in, we did
good work, and, yeah, it was nice to actually just see it pay off
today.”
Korda at least had the afternoon for nap time after her early start.
She went 3-1 in her matches last week in the Solheim Cup as the
Americans defeated Europe for the first time in seven years.
“I’m looking forward to the stay-in-bed-all-day vibe today. It was
definitely tough kind of waking up this morning, but I do love
competing and I love being out here,” Korda said. “Everyone that
played last week is going to be tired. I’m just trying to take it
one step at a time, know that my energy levels aren’t the greatest,
but I’m still motivated.”
She found additional motivation not so much from her five birdies
but keeping a clean card.
“There is just no greater feeling than minimized your mistakes, or
making no mistakes,” Korda said. “Whenever you get to play a
bogey-free round I feel like it motivates you, and hopefully I can
take that energy into the next three days.”
Maguire only played two matches last week, having played all five
matches her previous two appearances. She wasn't pleased about being
sat out, especially after she easily disposed of Ally Ewing (4 and
3) in singles.
But maybe there was one upside.
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United States' Nelly Korda holds the winner's trophy after the
United States defeated Europe in the Solheim Cup golf tournament at
the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club, Sunday, Sept. 15, 2024, in
Gainesville, Va. (AP Photo/Matt York)
“Last couple of Solheims I've played five matches,
been exhausted after the Solheim,” she said. “So nice to be a little
bit fresher time around.”
Korda and Maguire were part of a large group at 67 that included
Lydia Ko, who last played three weeks ago and had every reason to be
floating on air. Along with winning Olympic gold just over a month
ago, she captured the Women's British Open at St. Andrews.
Ko said her big summer — winning the gold medal got her into the
LPGA Hall of Fame — still hasn't sunk in. She arrived in the
Cincinnati area having to learn a new course. The tournament was
held at Kenwood Country Club the last two years, which is going
through some improvements.
“It's a new golf course, so all of us are just trying to get used to
this TPC course and just putting ourselves in position,” Ko said.
“And sometimes I think when you do see low scores, you try and chase
it too much, but I just tried to stick to my own kind of routine and
my strategy.”
Rose Zhang went 4-0 in her matches at the Solheim Cup — needing only
58 holes — and finished with three straight bogeys for a 73. Esther
Henseleit had a 74, and the other seven Solheim Cup players were at
par or better.
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