Golf News

Lydia Ko gold medal would put her in LPGA Hall of Fame

2016 Olympics

Lydia Ko’s fairytale finish awaits. A gold medal at the Paris Olympics would secure Ko’s spot in the LPGA Hall of Fame, the toughest Hall in all of sports to get into. It would also put her in rarified air as the only golfer to boast all three medals, a feat that might not ever be matched.

Currently, she’s the only golfer to have two: a silver from 2016 and a bronze from 2020.

“I think it’s going to be the toughest Olympics as of yet,” said Ko of the test presented by Le Golf National.

The competition for the 60-player field gets underway on Wednesday, giving the women a limited amount of time to practice. Ko played the front nine on Sunday with Japan’s Yuka Saso as the men’s competition finished up. She arrived on Saturday and watched a little golf late in the afternoon, cheering on her fellow Kiwis.

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler took home the gold in the men’s competition and Nelly Korda, the women’s No. 1, looks to add a second gold medal to her collection this week.

Korda won six of her first eight starts in 2024 before her game left her for a brief stretch over the summer, when she missed three straight cuts. She took some time off visiting with friends in Croatia before grinding in the weeks leading up to Paris.

“As a kid, I watched so many athletes and all their raw emotions on that podium when their flag goes up and the National Anthem,” said Korda.

“And when I finally got to do it myself, there was a massive rush of emotions that went through me.”

2016 Olympics

Silver medalist Lydia Ko of New Zealand, gold medalist Inbee Park of Korea and bronze medalist Shanshan Feng of China pose on the podium during the medal ceremony at the 2016 Olympics at the Olympic Golf Course in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Scott Halleran/Getty Images)

Ko’s season started off strong with a victory at the season-opening event at her home course, Lake Nona, in Orlando, Florida, followed by a playoff loss to Korda in her hometown of Bradenton.

Like Korda, the 27-year-old’s momentum hit the brakes, however, and she only just started rounding back into form in Canada two weeks ago. Ko’s feeling more confident but playing it cool.

“I’m not trying to push it,” she said, before admitting that it would be a “hell of a way” to get into the Hall of Fame.

An Olympic gold medal is now worth one Hall of Fame point, a criteria change that was implemented in 2022. Ko has 26 of the 27 points needed to become the Hall’s 35th member. Inbee Park, the 2016 gold…

..

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Golfweek…