Morning Sun

Ko takes LPGA’S season-ending CME Group title in a flourish

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NAPLES, FLA. » Jin Young Ko missed most of the LPGA Tour season and still won the yearlong money title.

That’s what a $1.1 million check does.

Ko, the No. 1 player in the world, put an emphatic capper on her truncated year Sunday by shooting a final-round 6-under 66 and winning the CME Group Tour Championsh­ip by five strokes over Hannah Green and Sei Young Kim.

“I still can’t believe it, that I’m here, that I won this tournament,” Ko said.

With a birdie on the final hole, the LPGA’S final putt of the season, Ko finished at 18 under for her seventh career LPGA win. Green’s final-round 67 — on her 24th birthday — helped push her into the second-place tie.

Kim, who took a one-shot lead into the final round, shot 72 and that was good enough for her to clinch Rolex Player of the Year honors. Danielle Kang won the

Vare Trophy for the lowest scoring average.

Ko started the final round one shot back of Kim and opened with a birdie. The key stretch was Ko’s run of three straight birdies on the 12th through the 14th — her longest such run of the week. She left a chance for a fourth in a row just left of the cup on 15, then all but wrapped up the win with another birdie on the 16th.

The win wrapped up a wire- to-wire year in the

No. 1 spot for Ko, who has held the ranking since July 29, 2019. She moved to $5,600,824 in career earnings, making her the 71st player in LPGA history to cross the $5 million mark.

Her approach Sunday was quite simple: “I just (thought), OK, 18 holes left and then go to home,” Ko said.

She’s going back to South Korea as a winner, too.

Ko played only four LPGA events in 2020 — she competed six times on the

Korean LPGA while riding out the coronaviru­s pandemic at home — but Sunday’s win and a check for $ 487,286 for finishing second in last week’s U.S. Women’s Open helped push her season earnings to $1,667,925. That would have been good for fifth-best on tour last season, when each of the 21 leading moneywinne­rs all appeared in at least 20 events.

Kim’s realistic hopes of winning ended when she left a 25-foot par putt short on the par- 4 15th to fall four off Ko’s lead. But the playerof-the-year award was still in her control at that point, and she finished that off.

Mina Harigae (68) finished at 12 under, the fourth-place finish matching her career best.

Lexi Thompson shot a 2-under 70 on Sunday and finished at 11 under, seven shots off the pace and tied with Lydia Ko for fifth.

Thompson’s streak of consecutiv­e seasons with at one win ended at seven.

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