2024-04-09 00:41:15
Won T-Mobile Match Play Finals
4 consecutive wins, the last being Ochoa in 2008
Only 2 people achieved the ‘most ever’ 5 consecutive wins
Nelly Korda (26, USA), world number one in women’s golf, left a record of winning four consecutive tournaments on the LPGA Tour.
Korda kissed the championship trophy in the T-Mobile Match Play final held at Shadow Creek (par 72) in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA on the 8th, ahead of Liona Maguire (Ireland) by 4 holes with 3 holes remaining. Korda, who received $300,000 (about 400 million won) as the winning prize, exceeded $10 million in total prize money ($10,161,489, about 13.8 billion won).
This tournament was conducted in a manner that the first to third rounds were played in stroke play, and then the top eight players competed in match play over the weekend. Korda, who defeated Korea’s Anna Lin in the semifinals and advanced to the finals, took the lead by three holes in the first nine holes. Korda maintained his pace in the second half and decided the game early on at the 15th hole (par 4). With this, Korda follows her Drive On Championship, Firhills Pak Championship and Ford Championship, setting a record of winning all four of her last competitions she has competed in. This is the first record in 16 years since Lorena Ochoa (Mexico) in 2008.
If Korda wins the Chevron Championship, the first major tournament of the season starting on the 18th, she will be on par with the record of 5 consecutive wins, the most in LPGA tour history. Nancy Lopez (USA) set the first record in 1978, her debut season on the LPGA Tour, and Annika Sorenstam (Sweden) tied the record in 2004 and 2005. Just as Korda skipped three competitions in Asia after winning the Drive On Championship, Lopez and Sorenstam also missed some competitions in between.
If you don’t skip a single competition, the most you’ll win is four times in a row. If Korda reaches the top of the Chevron Championship, he can tie the record in this category as well. Mickey Wright (USA) won four games in a row twice in 1962 and 1963, followed by Cathy Whitworth (USA) in 1969. In 2001, 32 years later, Sorenstam left a record. In 2008, Ochoa became the last person to record this record.
Korda, who won her 12th LPGA Tour career, said, “It is an honor to be named alongside legendary players. He personally does not drink alcohol. “I want to go to a burger joint with his teammates and celebrate by filling our bellies with carbohydrates,” he said.
Reporter Lee Heon-jae [email protected]
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2024-04-09 00:41:15