The Wingo Network
Nelly Korda Goes for Three Straight Majors at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship Get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at square.com/go/WINGO #squarepod #sponsored Head to cozyearth.com and use code WINGO for an exclusive 20% off. While the PGA Tour was making headlines at the Travelers Championship, Justin Ray was at Hazeltine National in Minnesota for the KPMG Women's PGA Championship — and the story there starts and ends with one player. Nelly Korda is going for her third consecutive major championship of the season. She won the Chevron Championship. She won the US Women's Open at Riviera. Now she arrives at Hazeltine as the overwhelming favorite to do something only four women in history have ever done — win three majors in the same season. And based on everything Justin Ray has seen on the ground this week, the conditions at Hazeltine and the state of Nelly's game, she is going to be very difficult to beat. The Numbers Are Almost Impossible to Comprehend Nelly Korda has played eight stroke play events this season. She has been beaten by a combined ten players across all eight of those events. That is not a typo. Ten players total, across eight tournaments, have finished ahead of her. She is gaining nearly four strokes per round on the field — a number Justin describes as peak Tiger territory in terms of dominance over your peers. The comparison is not hyperbole. At his most dominant, Tiger Woods was gaining roughly four strokes per round on the field. Nelly Korda is doing that right now on the LPGA Tour. She has four wins, three runner-up finishes, and a tied for eighth as her only result outside the top two all season. The one week where something went slightly sideways — and she was still inside the top ten. What Three Straight Majors Would Mean If Nelly Korda wins at Hazeltine she joins an extraordinarily small group. Only four women in LPGA history have won three majors in the same season. The names on that list are some of the greatest players the sport has ever produced. Adding her name to it would be one of the defining achievements of her career — and she still has two more majors left on the schedule after this one. The conversation about a calendar slam — all five LPGA majors in one season — is premature, but it is no longer absurd. Justin is not ready to put her on full slam watch yet, noting that the Evian Championship has its own unpredictable character and the Women's Open Championship adds a different set of variables. But three in a row is entirely within reach, and the way she has played this season, she deserves to be the heavy favorite every time she tees it up. The $13 Million Purse This week's KPMG Women's PGA Championship carries a purse of $13 million — the largest in the history of women's golf. The last time the KPMG was held at Hazeltine in 2019, the purse was just under $4 million. KPMG has more than tripled their investment in this championship over seven years, and Justin makes sure to note that credit is due — this kind of financial commitment is what grows the sport and attracts the best players in the world to compete at the highest level. The shot-by-shot data presence at this championship is also the strongest it has ever been, with KPMG introducing new statistical infrastructure through the broadcast. For someone like Justin Ray, who lives and breathes golf analytics, this is a significant development for how the women's game gets covered and understood. Who Can Beat Her Justin names three players worth watching if you are looking beyond Nelly. Gino Titicaka — one of the most intriguing athletes in professional sports right now according to Justin. She has been world number one, she has five or six top-five major finishes, she is only 22 years old, and she still has not broken through with a major championship victory. She was the 36-hole leader at last year's KPMG and could not make a putt on the weekend. She is the Xander Schauffele of the LPGA — a player whose game is perfectly suited for major championship conditions, and it feels inevitable that it happens eventually. Could be this week. Charlie Hull — five major runner-up finishes and no wins, but nobody who watches her play gets the feeling of heartbreak. The sense of inevitability around Hull is real. She would be probably the most popular winner at Hazeltine behind Nelly herself, and after what she did at Riviera — shooting 65-67 on the weekend and still losing — she has proven she can play at this level under maximum pressure. Hannah Green — the defending KPMG champion from when it was last held at Hazeltine in 2019 knows this course. She has four worldwide wins this season and is playing arguably the best golf of her career. She is the name Justin circles as a genuine threat to Nelly this week. Minjee Lee — the defending champion from last year's KPMG in Frisco. One of the most consistent and exceptional ball strikers on the LPGA Tour, particularly when the tests get toughest. Worth keeping an eye on. Mio Yamashida — the reigning AIG Women's Open champion just beat Lottie Wode in a playoff last week and is in excellent form. Justin's one question mark is whether her length is sufficient at Hazeltine, noting she is exceptionally skilled from tee to green and around the greens but may face a distance disadvantage on a course this demanding. Better suited for softer links-style conditions than a big demanding American layout. The State of the LPGA Trey and Justin both agree — LPGA commissioner Craig Kessler has to be thrilled with where the tour is right now. The US Women's Open at Riviera was one of the best major championships Justin has covered — Nelly holding off Charlie Hull and Gabby Lopez in primetime on a world-class golf course. The KPMG purse at $13 million signals sponsor commitment. The rivalries are building. The storylines are compelling. And Nelly Korda going for three straight majors at one of the game's great venues on a weekend that already has the Travelers Championship and the World Cup competing for sports attention — women's golf is holding its own. The Bottom Line Nelly Korda arrives at Hazeltine as the most dominant player in golf right now — men's or women's. The numbers say so. The results say so. And if she wins her third consecutive major championship this weekend, the conversation about where she fits in the history of the sport is going to get very interesting very quickly. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
193 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the The Wingo Network community!