Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Ko works through adversity with a smile

Hey, I feel like the winner’s already chosen but we obviously don’t know, so I’m just going to go out there and play the best golf I can and see where I finish at the end of the day

- LYDIA Ko

Sometimes sudden success obscures the difficulty of the road traveled. When winning is all you’ve known, mediocrity can feel like a bottomless swamp — especially when social media gives anyone with a keyboard the instant expertise to second guess.

All that makes the delayed gratificat­ion of Lydia Ko’s 16th LPGA Tour victory at the LOTTE Championsh­ip extremely satisfying.

Ko knows the price paid and the fact she’s traveled the road to redemption with a smile and a kind word for all — even her critics — makes her triumph Saturday proof that goodness is rewarded.

“I said to myself trust my training, and this morning Sean texted me: ‘Hey, just trust and conviction,’ and I wrote that on my pin sheet today,” Ko said about her pre-round pep talk with instructor Sean Foley.

Then Lydia closed with a 65 to finish at 28-under-par 260, seven strokes clear of Inbee Park, Sei Young Kim, Nelly Korda and Leona Maguire for her first win in nearly three years and second in five.

“I said to myself, ‘Hey, I feel like the winner's already chosen but we obviously don't know, so I'm just going to go out there and play the best golf I can and see where I finish at the end of the day,’” Ko said.

I was putting more pressure on myself and doubting myself.

The problem with success at an early age is that it makes winning look easy.

In May 1997, when Tigermania raged following the Masters victory a month earlier by 21-year-old Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus was asked if Woods is the best ever.

After appropriat­e praise, Nicklaus offered these words of caution: “Let’s see how he handles it when he has to struggle.” Woods was so good for so long, it was more than a dozen years before adversity cluttered his road to success.

Then, Woods was hit by a perfect storm of physical, technical and personal challenges. His body broke down; his swing broke down; and the aura of invincibil­ity surroundin­g his seemingly superhuman abilities was shattered by all-too-human revelation­s.

All that made Tiger’s victory at the 2019 Masters — 11 years after his last major championsh­ip and 14 years after his most-recent Green Jacket — one of the more compelling achievemen­ts in the history of sports. Like Woods, Ko knew success early. Her first LPGA Tour victory at the 2012 CN Canadian Women’s Open came at 15.

In February 2015, at 17, she was the youngest to reach No. 1 in the Rolex Rankings and that September the youngest to win a major at the Evian Championsh­ip.

While still a teenager, Ko had 14 victories, including two majors, in 81 LPGA Tour starts plus a silver medal at the 2016 Olympic Games.

Then someone turned off the spigot. Ko went 43 starts before victory No. 15 at the 2018 Mediheal Championsh­ip and another 59 starts before victory No. 16 at the LOTTE Championsh­ip.

“I was putting more pressure on myself and doubting myself,” Ko said. “I've been very fortunate to have a very supportive family and team and friends that have just built the confidence in me. Sean gives me so many great wisdoms and builds that confidence in myself where at times I didn't feel like I had it.”

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF RIANNE MIKHAELA MALIXI ?? RIANNE Mikhaela Malixi
PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF RIANNE MIKHAELA MALIXI RIANNE Mikhaela Malixi
 ?? CHRISTIAN PETERSEN /AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ??
CHRISTIAN PETERSEN /AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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