x
Skip to main content
Golf Logo
InsideGolf Join Now  / Log In
Nelly Korda just seized the lead. Here’s why this time’s different
SHARE
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share by Email
Golf Logo
  • News
    • Latest
      • News
      • Features
      • Shows
      • PGA Tour Schedule
    • Series
      • Tour Confidential
      • Monday Finish
      • Hot Mic
      • Rogers Report
    • Shows
      • The Scoop
      • Subpar
      • Seen & Heard
  • Instruction
    • Game Improvement
      • Driving
      • Approach Shots
      • Bunker Shots
      • Short Game
      • Putting
      • Rules
      • Fitness
    • Series
      • Top 100 Teachers
      • Rules Guy
      • The Etiquetteist
    • Shows
      • Warming Up
      • Play Smart
      • Short Game Chef
      • Pros Teaching Joes
  • Gear
    • Clubs
      • Drivers
      • Irons
      • Hybrids
      • Fairway Woods
      • Wedges
      • Putters
    • Other Gear
      • Balls
      • Shoes
      • Apparel
      • Golf Accessories
    • Series
      • ClubTest
      • Winner’s Bag
    • Shows
      • Fully Equipped
  • Travel & Lifestyle
    • Travel
      • Course Finder
      • Courses
      • Resorts
    • Lifestyle
      • Accessories
      • Celebrities
      • Food
      • Style
      • Betting Advice
    • Shows
      • Super Secrets
      • Destination Golf
  • Shop
    • Shop
      • Clubs
      • Shafts
      • Training Aids
      • Balls
      • Bags
      • Technology
      • Apparel
      • Accessories
      • Our Picks
      • Shop All
    • Collections
      • The GOLF Collection
      • The Birdie Juice Collection
      • The Fully Equipped Collection
      • Shop All
  • Newsletters
    • Sign Up for GOLF’s Newsletters
      • Hot Mic
      • Monday Finish
      • Play Smart
      • Our Picks
      • Top Stories
      • Sign Up for All
  • News
    • Latest News
    • Features
    • Shows
    • PGA Tour Schedule
  • Instruction
    • All Instruction
    • Driving
    • Approach Shots
    • Bunker Shots
    • Short Game
    • Putting
    • Rules
    • Fitness
  • Gear
    • All Gear
    • Drivers
    • Irons
    • Hybrids
    • Fairway Woods
    • Wedges
    • Putters
    • Balls
    • Shoes
    • Apparel
    • Golf Accessories
  • Travel & Lifestyle
    • All Travel
    • All Lifestyle
    • Course Finder
    • Courses
    • Resorts
    • Accessories
    • Celebrities
    • Food
    • Style
    • Betting Advice
  • Series
    • Tour Confidential
    • Monday Finish
    • Hot Mic
    • Rogers Report
    • Rules Guy
    • The Etiquetteist
    • ClubTest
    • Winner’s Bag
  • Shows
    • The Scoop
    • Subpar
    • Seen & Heard
    • Warming Up
    • Play Smart
    • Short Game Chef
    • Pros Teaching Joes
    • Fully Equipped
    • Super Secrets
    • Destination Golf
  • Shop
    • Clubs
    • Shafts
    • Training Aids
    • Balls
    • Bags
    • Technology
    • Apparel
    • Accessories
    • The GOLF Collection
    • The Birdie Juice Collection
    • The Fully Equipped Collection
  • Newsletters
    • Hot Mic
    • Monday Finish
    • Play Smart
    • Top Stories
    • Our Picks
    • Sign Up for All
InsideGolf Join Now  / Log In
InsideGolf

Over $140 of value - Just $39.99

InsideGOLF
News

Nelly Korda just seized the lead. Here’s why this time’s different

By: Sean Zak
  • Follow on Twitter
  • Follow on Instagram
August 23, 2024
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share by Email
Nelly Korda

Nelly Korda and her caddie survey a shot during Friday's second round of the AIG Women's Open.

Getty Images

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — Nelly Korda doesn’t want to think ahead. She’s a graduate of the same school as Scottie Scheffler. Sunday? We’ve got Saturday first. One shot at a time. Results don’t define me. They come from trusting my process. 

“I’m just trying to stay very present,” she offered Friday afternoon.

Yes, but … she has a 3-shot lead at halftime of the AIG Women’s Open at the Old Course in St. Andrews. Legacy-defining moments don’t just manifest suddenly on the final hole of a tournament. They percolate, from Tuesday to Thursday to Saturday morning and Sunday night. Korda’s moment is percolating.

That the 26-year-old, undisputed best-golfer-on-the-planet sits atop the leaderboard may not surprise you. That’s been a theme of the entire season. That Korda has ripped around with just a single bogey is impressive. That she’s doing it with a putter she picked up Wednesday is, too. But when it’s happening and where it’s happening and what’s happened before this is important. It’s been a very weird summer for Korda. And it’s blowing a hoolie, as the Scottish say. 

Three months ago, Korda won the Mizuho Americas Open for a barely-believable sixth victory in seven events. She played three times in the next five weeks and missed the cut in all three. She failed to break 80 in two different majors. She went on vacation. She contended for a medal at the Olympics before a puzzling ejection down the stretch. Then she spent a week in Prague with her family, “recharging” her batteries and showed up to St. Andrews no longer the betting favorite. The reason for that isn’t so much about recent play as it is the setting. Her best finish in a Women’s Open came five years ago —  her only top 10 — when she finished T9 at Woburn Golf Club, an inland, parkland course north of London. It was about 20 degrees warmer. No one talked about the wind. 

News
wind aig women's open
‘My head’s pounding’: 40-mph winds push Women’s Open field to brink
By: Sean Zak

A tournament like this in a place like St. Andrews — where gusts are regularly breaching 35 mph and greens are being slowed down just to make them playable — is golf’s closest thing to the way grand slam tennis championships are played on different surfaces. In order to be an all-timer in tennis, you have to win on hard courts, grass courts and clay courts. In Melbourne and Paris and London and New York. In golf you can win on the Bermudagrass comforts of sweaty Florida, but to be an all-timer you have to do it at an Open, in the wind and the rain and the unpredictable bounces of a firm links. 

Roger Federer won just one French Open on the slippery clay of Roland Garros but damnit he figured out a way to do it, just the once, in 2009. (Rafael Nadal took over from there.) It took Andre Agassi 13 tries to win there but he got it done, too. Iga Swiatek, the No. 1 women’s player in the world, is aptly nicknamed the Queen of Clay, but she can’t cut it on the Wimbledon grass. In the other three slams, she wins at an 85% clip. In southwest London, she wins just 69% of the time. If it confuses you, imagine what it does to her. 

Korda would understand the comparison better than most; both her parents were professional tennis players. As she travels from tournament to tournament, Nelly tunes in to watch her brother, Sebastian, play the various stops of the men’s tennis tour. Seb is really good, not-yet-great, ranked 16th in the world. The instant he wins a slam — on any surface — the next question will be, can he win on another one?

His big sister has won basically everywhere. Still, the whole family knows a win in St. Andrews would be different.

I asked Nelly about that idea Friday. Winning is great everywhere, but could it be more validating to do it right here, right now?

“For sure,” she replied. “I think just this year in general, I’ve won on just so many different types of grasses in different types of conditions that you just kind of always have to adapt. That’s the same thing in tennis, same thing in life. You’re always adapting to your situations at hand, and I think that’s what’s so fun about links golf is you’re literally starting it 30 yards left of your target. I’m not a fade player but I’m hitting massive fades. I think it’s fun hitting these little low drivers, too.

“I’m having fun, and I enjoy links golf a lot. Obviously every year that I get to play it, I learn a little bit more about it, too.”

Korda sounds like other golfing greats when she talks like that. Like Rory McIlroy missing three straight U.S. Open cuts before five straight top 10s. Or Phil Mickelson taking two decades to learn how to control the ball along the ground in linksland. When it finally all came together in a win at Muirfield in 2013, he called it his greatest achievement. Because triumph after repeated failure feels better than triumph on its own.

Latest In News

18 minutes ago

PGA Tour's visit to throwback venue a reminder that game never stands still

1 hour ago

1 scene after Sepp Straka's Truist Championship win perfectly sums up his rise

3 hours ago

Sepp Straka wins Truist Championship after Shane Lowry's 72nd hole collapse

4 hours ago

2025 Truist Championship money: Here’s how much every player made

Sean Zak

Golf.com Editor

Sean Zak is a writer at GOLF Magazine and just published his first book, which follows his travels in Scotland during the most pivotal summer in the game’s history.

  • Author Twitter Account
  • Author Instagram Account

Related Articles

News
Nelly Korda

Nelly Korda's role in my greatest loss, and a Ben Hogan gem | Weekend 9

By: Nick Piastowski
News
Nelly Korda looks on after a shot during the final round of the 2025 Chevron Championship.

Nelly Korda cites 1 regret from up-and-down Chevron week

By: Josh Schrock
News
LPGA pro Nelly Korda hits tee shot on 1 during the first round of the 2025 Chevron Championship at The Club at Carlton Woods.

Nelly Korda eyes unlikely Chevron repeat after epic cut line charge

By: Kevin Cunningham
News
nelly korda hits a shot at the chevron championship in blue shirt and blue skirt

Nelly Korda's major season starts with Chevron dud

By: James Colgan
News
LPGA pro Nelly Korda smiles at golf tournament

Why Nelly Korda is using a children's toy for her golf game

By: Sean Zak
News
Nelly Korda

Who will win my golf madness?! And Nelly’s persimmon test | Weekend 9

By: Nick Piastowski
News
nelly korda carries her putter during the 2025 founders cup

Nelly Korda's dishes on slow play — and trickiness of a shot clock

By: Zephyr Melton
News
Tiger Woods, Nelly Korda, Charley Hull, Rory McIlroy

Tiger Woods, Charley Hull and foolish mistakes: 24 wishes for the holidays

By: Nick Piastowski
News
nelly korda swings during the 2024 cme group tour championship

Nelly Korda had a dominant — and strange — 2024

By: Zephyr Melton
Sign up for GOLF's Newsletters
Get the latest news, the hottest instruction tips, new product releases, golf media insider reports and more delivered directly to your inbox. Choose your favorites now.
Sign Up
Categories
  • News
  • Instruction
  • Gear
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
Services
  • Masthead
  • GOLF Media Kit
  • GOLF Magazine Customer Service
  • TERMS OF SERVICE
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • Opt-out of Ads/Sharing
  • Your Privacy Choices
Social
  • facebook
  • x
  • instagram
  • youtube
Membership
InsideGOLF Logo
More than $140 Value for JUST $39.99

INCLUDES 12 SRIXON Z-STAR XV GOLF BALLS, 1 YR OF GOLF MAGAZINE, $20 FAIRWAY JOCKEY CREDIT - AND MUCH MORE!

LEARN MORE

© 2025 EB Golf Media LLC. An 8AM Golf Affiliated Brand. All Rights Reserved. All of our market picks are independently selected and curated by the editorial team. If you buy a linked product, GOLF.COM may earn a fee. Pricing may vary.

Go to mobile version