Former coach: Tough to watch Ko's fall from grace
Golf
Lydia Ko’s former coach David Leadbetter says it’s tough to watch the deterioration in the Kiwi’s game and places a lot of the blame on her dad.
Writing on his website, Leadbetter said he was responding to the many stories circulating about the state of Ko’s game over the past year.
The coach, who worked with Ko from 2013 to 2016, said he and colleague Sean Hogan might not have had all of the answers, but she was on track to become one of the greatest LPGA players of all time.
“Hopefully, Lydia is able to resurrect her game. She obviously still has the talent, but it’s not always an easy task to climb back up the mountaintop.
“Lydia is a great young lady, we only wish the best for her. We honestly felt that if the decision was left entirely up to her, that she would still be with us.
“Not only did Lydia change her swing and putting coaches, but also her equipment company, caddy, workout coach, sports psychologist, and putting grip company.
“So many changes can be extremely hard to absorb. This year, she even changed her swing coach and caddy once again.
“Lydia can certainly win more tournaments, even majors, but there’s no possible way that she can play better than she played for those first three years. It just goes to show, that not always is the grass greener on the other side of the hill.”
Leadbetter suggested that Ko’s father played a part in the golfer’s loss of form.
“Her father, a non-accomplished golfer, heard rumours that she needed to change her swing and made suggestions to Lydia to change it — independently of her coaches”.
“Sean Hogan travelled with her to the LPGA KEB HanaBank Championship during the last part of the [2016] season and observed Lydia being very confused [with her swing].”
Leadbetter also argued that Ko’s poor end to 2016, the catalyst to leave the Leadbetter camp, was due to fatigue rather than swing problems.
“In this day and age, we have ways of measuring energy output in the swing. In the last quarter of the year, she had lost 20 per cent of her energy which could only mean one thing — complete fatigue. “Unfortunately, to the unknowledgeable, this can be misconstrued as experiencing swing issues. Well, you will have swing issues when you’re too fatigued to workout, practice, and are mentally drained. At the end of the year, she and her ‘team’ decided that even though she had won five tournaments including a Major earlier in the year, that they wanted to move on.
“This was obviously perfectly within their rights to do so, but it was a shame considering the success that she had with Sean and I. We were very close with Lydia and we were sad about the separation.”
Ko’s current world ranking is 16 and in the seven tournaments she has played this year, she has missed the cut once with his best placing being tied for 10th in the HSBC World Championship in Singapore last month.
She shot a one-under par 70 to be tied for 15th in the Los Angeles Open yesterday to be four shots off the lead held by Inbee Park.
Her father, a nonaccomplished golfer, heard rumours that she needed to change her swing and made suggestions to Lydia to change it — independently of her coaches. David Leadbetter