Atthaya Thitikul had a chance to rise to No. 1 in the world last week at the BMW Ladies Championship with a fourth-place finish. The 19-year-old Thai teen held the lead heading into the final round in South Korea but struggled to a 74 in the final round, dropping her to solo sixth.
Thitikul, who will compete next week in Japan, remains No. 2 in the world and still has a chance to become only the second teenager to rise to No. 1.
Jin Young Ko, the current top-ranked player, withdrew from the BMW with a wrist injury and plans to return for the last two events of the year in Florida.
The Rolex Rankings debuted in February 2006 with Annika Sorenstam on top. Here’s a closer look at the youngest players to reach the game’s pinnacle:
Lydia Ko rose to No. 1 for the first time on February 2, 2015, at the age of 17. She stayed there for 19 weeks during that first stint, and a total of 104 weeks through June 2017. She hasn’t been ranked No. 1 since that stretch.
Ko rose to No. 3 on Monday after clinching her 18th career victory last week at the BMW Ladies Championship. She hasn’t been outside the top 5 all season.
Ariya Jutanugarn became the first Thai player to rise to No. 1 on June 12, 2017, supplanting Ko. She stayed there for only two weeks and spent a combined 23 weeks in the top spot through March 2019.
She has since dipped to 58th.
Jiyai Shin became the third player to rise to No. 1 and the first from South Korea on May 3, 2010. Shin spent a total of 25 weeks at the top over the course of the next year.
Shin, a two-time major champion, stopped playing the LPGA full-time after the 2013 season and moved to the Japan LPGA, where she has won 28 times.
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