Weekend Herald

Ko rediscover­s putting touch at US Open

- Golf

Lydia Ko stood on the ninth green, head cocked toward her right shoulder, glaring at a ball that didn’t quite follow the path she intended.

A make would have tied her with Shanshan Feng atop the early leaderboar­d in the opening round of the US Women’s Open yesterday. The miss brought back a familiar feeling, one that dotted a disappoint­ing finish at the LPGA Tour’s previous major, the Women’s PGA Championsh­ip in early July.

But Ko, who spent the last three days on the practice putting greens, mostly made putting a strength throughout a 4- under- par round of 68 at Trump National Golf Club. Feng, who played with Ko and t wo- time champion Inbee Park, finished the round as the clubhouse leader at 6- under, one shot ahead of Amy Yang. It was the first time that the three medallists from the Rio Olympic tournament — Park won gold for South Korea, Ko won silver for New Zealand and Feng won bronze for China — were in the same group.

Ko, 20, who entered the Open ranked fourth in the world, has seven top 10 finishes so far this season and has been making subtle changes to her game over the last six months.

In February, she named Gary Gilchrist her new coach. She tweaked her pre- swing routine, moving her hand up the club on her second practice stroke and letting momentum carry her a few steps forward. Yesterday she used a new putter that, outside of a few centimetre­s here and there, produced the desired results.

“I think I just tried to trust my stroke. That’s all you can do, just commit to the line you have and put a good stroke on it,” Ko said. “The greens are firm and fast like they normally are at the US Women’s Open, so I was trying to just be positive and just be patient.

“I think those two words are really important for me, just don’t get too caught up in the bogeys or the missed shot that I had or the one putt I missed.”

After the Women’s PGA Championsh­ip at Olympia Fields Country Club in Illinois, it would have been easy for Ko to pore over her missteps. She went into the weekend at 4- under, three strokes off the lead, and then stumbled through the final t wo days. A 5- over third round included five bogeys. A 4- over fourth round included five more. She finished tied for 59th place, 18 strokes behind champion Danielle Kang.

Instead of overanalys­ing and making impulsive changes to her swing, Ko took a few days off. She had a few friends over to celebrate the Fourth of July. She and Gilchrist combed through the four rounds and pulled out positive takeaways. When things got quiet and golf could have crept into her mind, she found a clear table and indulged a new pastime.

“I found a new hobby,” Ko said through a grin. “I build, like, Lego houses. It says for 6- to 12- year- olds. It took my mind off of golf.”

When she started training again, Ko played a variety of courses to prepare her for the unpredicta­bility at Bedminster.

In the lead- up to the tournament, players discussed massive greens and tricky rough as two challengin­g variables. Ko mostly avoided them yesterday with strong approach shots, even when her drives weren’t as accurate as she would have liked. Starting her round on the back nine, she birdied every other hole from No 10 to 15, then sunk back- to- back birdies on the 18th and first holes. She needed just one putt to finish the 18th, first and second holes, and soon lined up a 3.6m birdie putt at the par- 3 fourth.

As she circled the green and sized up the shot, a swelling crowd settled into an anticipati­ng quiet.

“Her putting has been amazing,” whispered an older man as he hid from the beating sun beneath a nearby tree.

“Shh,” a woman next to him shot back. “Don’t jinx her now.”

With that, Ko stepped up to the ball, slowly moved her right hand onto her putter and tapped it to the right of the hole. As it hooked back, fans yelled “Go! Go!” and “Get in!” and Ko started forming her guide hand into a celebrator­y first.

And then the ball disappeare­d into the hole and out of sight, safe from any frustratio­n and the glares it tends to bring.

“I haven’t had much of a good start at the US Women’s Open,” Ko said after her round.

“But, you know, this is my sixth Open and no matter how times you’re playing I think you always get excited and a little bit of the butterflie­s on the first tee, and I think this is the biggest major championsh­ip. We all want to peak at this time of the year so I’m happy with the way I started.”

 ?? Picture/ AP ?? Lydia Ko stayed positive on the greens.
Picture/ AP Lydia Ko stayed positive on the greens.

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