Vancouver Sun

Ko pays price for big changes

Former world No. 1 winless in 2017 after firing coach and caddy, sponsor switch

- DOUG FERGUSON The Associated Press

Lydia Ko blasted out from in front of the steep edge of a bunker and raised her arms playfully when it dropped for par. She ended the first round of the CME Group Tour Championsh­ip one shot out of the lead and she looked like the Ko of old.

Her comments immediatel­y after the round reflected what kind of year it was.

“It would be good to finish the season with a top 10. I would be pretty happy with that,” Ko said. Top 10?

This from someone who reached No. 1 in the world at age 17, who won her first LPGA Tour event as a 15-year-old amateur and won every year since then. That streak ended in one of the most surprising developmen­ts of the year on the LPGA Tour.

Ko failed to win a single tournament. She finished 13th on the LPGA money list, after earning more than US$2 million each of the last three seasons.

She paid a steep price for making so many changes all at once. Ko left coach David Leadbetter for Gary Gilchrist, she sacked her caddy late last year (she once went through seven caddies as a rookie) and she left Callaway for PXG.

“I think she has handled it extremely well,” said Judy Rankin, a hall of famer and television analyst. “But I can’t imagine that she doesn’t lay her head on the pillow at night and think: ‘What happened? Where did I go? Was that not real?’ Part of it is just growing up. Part of it is in golf, and maybe all the way through life, I’m not sure you come to that point where you’ve grown up just enough to know things can go wrong. And then they begin to.”

Ko had three runner-up finishes this year, losing the final-round lead to Lexi Thompson in Indianapol­is. She failed to register a top 10 in the traditiona­l majors until tying for third in Evian, the major reduced to 54 holes.

Ko never thought it was that bad.

“Obviously, winning a championsh­ip is a huge deal, but sometimes it’s overrated when you haven’t won,” Ko said.

“You’re still playing well, but just haven’t won. I feel like it’s been that kind of year. I think everybody has little ups and downs. To me, I think it was important to finish on the higher note, which I feel like that’s what happened.”

She tied for 16th in Naples and soon was on her way to South Korea for three weeks of fun (mainly concerts) and no golf.

BRITISH OPEN QUALIFYING STARTS DOWN UNDER

Geoff Ogilvy has been playing the Australian Open every year since he was low amateur in 1995, with the exception of 2000, when he was going through Q-school on the PGA Tour. Lately, it has brought him nothing but heartache.

Along with being his national open, this is the first in the “Open Qualifying Series” to earn a spot at Carnoustie next summer.

The leading three players at the Australian Open not already eligible will qualify for the British Open.

A year ago, Ogilvy was poised to win the tournament until a tee shot into the trees on the 16th led to double bogey. He tied for fourth and missed the British Open spot because Aaron Baddeley had the higher ranking.

The previous year, Ogilvy again was in good shape until he hit into the water on the 17th. He missed the spot in the British Open by two shots.

Meanwhile, the British Open will have similar qualifiers at the Joburg Open on Dec. 7-10 (three spots) and the Singapore Open on Jan. 18-21 (four spots).

DIVOTS: Mike Whan wore a Miami Dolphins jersey (No. 23) to celebrate an announceme­nt last week that CME Group has agreed to extend its title sponsorshi­p of the Tour Championsh­ip and the Race to the CME Globe through 2023. ... Austin Cook made only two bogeys (or worse) over 72 holes to win the RSM Classic. The only other player to do that in 2017 on the PGA Tour was Justin Thomas, who made two bogeys at the TPC Boston . ... Four of the eight winners from the fall schedule had never won on the PGA Tour — Ryan Armour, Patrick Cantlay, Patton Kizzire and Austin Cook. ... Elaine Farquharso­n-Black has been appointed captain for the second time of the Britain and Ireland team for the Curtis Cup. The matches are June 8-10 at Quaker Ridge in New York . ... Nine of the top-20 players from the final Race to Dubai standings are playing the Hong Kong Open this week, led by Tommy Fleetwood, Justin Rose and Sergio Garcia.

 ?? SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY IMAGES ?? Former world No. 1 Lydia Ko didn’t win an event on the LPGA Tour in 2017, on the heels of three straight seasons of earning US$2 million.
SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY IMAGES Former world No. 1 Lydia Ko didn’t win an event on the LPGA Tour in 2017, on the heels of three straight seasons of earning US$2 million.

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