New Straits Times

Lydia out to end slump

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It has been a year since Lydia Ko last lifted an LPGA trophy, but the former World No 1 was confident heading into her Marathon Classic title defense this week that her game is not far off.

“I feel like the puzzle pieces are there, but I’ve been struggling to kind of put those pieces together,” the 20-year-old New Zealander said. “Sometimes that is almost the hardest bit, where you feel like those little pieces are there but to connect and put them all into good rounds — I feel like there are a lot of positives going on, so I’m trying to stay patient.”

Lydia has seven top-10 finishes on the LPGA Tour this season, but she hasn’t threatened in any of the three major championsh­ips this year.

The most recent major setback came at the US Open in New Jersey last week, where consistenc­y was again a problem. Lydia plummeted 10 places on the final day with a final-round 74, finishing 13 shots behind South Korean winner Park Sung-Hyun.

“I know that I’m playing solid enough, and for me I’ve just got to focus on my game and try and get better in the aspects that need improvemen­ts and just kind of move on and be positive and not really get down on the fact that I haven’t won in some period of time,” said Lydia, who has fallen to fourth in the world.

The Highland Meadows Golf Club in Sylvania, Ohio, could be just the place for Lydia to put it all together.

She won last year with a 10-foot birdie putt on the fourth playoff hole to hold off Thailand’s Ariya Jutanugarn and South Korean Lee Mi-Rim, adding a second Marathon title to the one she captured in 2014.

This year’s field includes six of the top 10 players in the world, including newly crowned US Women’s Open champion Sung-Hyun.

“It just shows that the amount of talent on the LPGA,” Lydia said. “You just never know who could be holding the trophy at the end of the week.”

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