OK, I'll admit it, a "Back in the Saddle" header might have been more appropriate.... It has been a while, I'll concede.
Even allowing for my back-sliding into a once-a-week golfer, my absence requires some explanation. Two factors involved, a family matter of some urgency required my focus, then a trip to Portland, OR to see the bride's family. No promises going forward, but this is an attempt to give you a reason to check my homepage.
I did actually watch some golf yesterday, flipping between the finish in Ohio and the drama on the Pacific. The latter being the far more significant....
Nelly In Full - It's trite to note that the hardest thing to do in golf (or any endeavor, really) is to win when you're supposed to do so, but it's triteness is a result of its accuracy. I don't think we can appreciate the weight that is on this slender woman's shoulders, as there is no one else that can move the LPGA dial even a hair.
It's similarly trite to note that venues matter, and this was quite the get for the USGA, with the added benefit of those prime time viewing windows. With Nelly in contention and beautiful California weather, those ratings have to be boffo, no? We'll see, the worry is that the combination of Nelly's slow start and an audience that doesn't know how to spell USA might not have stumbled upon the early round coverage....
As usual, Geoff has much to offer, including his numerical summaries:
Nelly Korda By The Numbers
- 73-67-67-69: Korda’s four rounds
- 276: Nelly Korda’s winning total
- 276: Ben Hogan’s winning total in the 1948 U.S. Open at Riviera
- 7: Stroke deficit after the first round, tying the largest ever to go on and win (Park, 2017), Mallon, 2004, Berning, 1972, Mann, 1965).
- 2: Major titles, four LPGA Tour wins in 2026
- 39 of 56: Fairways hit (T18)
- 263.5: Avg yards of all drives (11th)
- 270.3: Avg. yards on measuring holes (11th)
- 42 of 72: Greens in regulation (32)
- 39’11: Proximity average of
- 24 of 30: Scrambling (1st)
- 107: Total putts
- 253’4”: Putts made (3.560: Strokes gained putting)
OK, perhaps a tad antiseptic, but is you recast those numbers for only the final three days, you'd see some even more impressive stats. Again, I blame Lebron's shoes.....
Amusingly, Geoff ledes with that nervy final putt:
But with all due respect to the advanced metrics provided by the PGA Tour’s brilliant ShotLink system, Nelly Korda’s winning putt in the 81st United States Women’s Open traveled another 10 inches after wrapping around most of the cup’s 13.35-inch circumference. When it finally dropped, the 27-year-old recorded a second consecutive major victory. But this one came in a championship the red-white-and-blue-blooded Bradenton, Florida native wanted the most.“A nice ice cream swirl to cap off the day,” Korda said through a mix of tears and laughs. “Why did I leave myself such a long putt?”
That's what we were all thinking, even father Petr as he mimicked the length to Nelly's mother. But her reaction was priceless, and serves as an apt synecdoche for the entire week, all of which was a struggle.Big sister Jessica gets a fair share of the credit:
The driving that plagued Korda in the opening rounds became machine-like on the weekend thanks to a grip change suggestion from her sister Jessica.“It’s the hardest thing in the game of golf is to change your grip,” Korda said. “I was fiddling with it so much even on the range my sister was like, I just saw you regrip your grip four times before you hit that one shot, and I’m like, yeah, ‘because it feels awful.’“I do not recommend changing your grip during a major championship.”Nelly’s final round iron play lacked the crisp sound heard during Saturday’s 67. On a kikuyu golf course with hard greens measuring 13 on the Stimpmeter, the approach struggles meant Korda’s chipping and putting would make the difference in holding off runners-up Hull and Lopez.
And that's exactly where she won it, around and on the greens. I thought her chances were slim when she failed to birdioe either of Nos. 10 and 11, the last real opportunities, excluding the Par-5 17th. There she left herself way more than she wanted with a so-so chip, but the putt found the center of the hole. Her putt on No. 18, well that fond more of a corner of the round hole....
Geoff captures that 17th hole pivot point:
By Sunday, it was the incredible play and persistence of her peers that created the most stress. There were multiple four-way ties throughout the sunny, windy final round. But none more tense than when Korda stepped up to her second shot for a go at the par-5 17th.A roar from the packed crowd around the famous amphitheater 18th green filtered down Santa Monica Canyon when Gaby Lopez made a 15-footer for birdie to join Charley Hull (65-67 weekend) in the clubhouse lead at seven-under-par.Following a 285-yard drive on the penultimate hole, Korda’s approach fell in line with many of her other less-than-crisp final-round approaches. She advanced the 223-yard shot only 205 yards. But she missed this one short and left of a pin cut 19 paces into the green and only three paces over the pronounced tier. Korda wedged to nine feet and faced a deciding downhill putt. It’s a strange one because it doesn’t break as much to the right as it looks or as Riviera’s natural tilt toward the Pacific would dictate. But Korda had been sinking three-footers all day on the “poa” greens that her male counterparts whine about. The steady hands and smooth stroke came through again for her third birdie.“What I’ve been doing with my putting is just really looking at my intermediate target right in front of the ball where I want to roll it over and I knew that I needed to make it,” Korda said. “I knew it was going to be a really fast putt so I needed to put decent pace on it with how much I was playing it left-to-right.“And I don’t really throw out fist pumps too often, but I did this weekend. I threw out a couple fist pumps here and there and I threw out a double fist pump on that hole because I knew what it meant.”
She still had to get it to the house, which she barely pulled off. Nelly reflected on her path here:
“That 14-year-old girl that stepped on the range at Sebonack in 2013, I mean, her dream has just come true sitting next to this trophy right now,” Korda said. “This week was definitely a grind. I don’t even feel like I had my B game (laughing). I was just grinding out there. And that’s what I guess major championships are all about, right? It doesn’t matter if you have your B or C game, you have to be there mentally.”Korda’s on-course growth into an uber-steady presence is one of the more incredible career evolutions in the long history of the game. Always a fast player, Korda could get easily annoyed at slow-playing partners and rounds. She often pulled the trigger on shots too quickly. Fast forward a few years, and the quiet energy she exudes never goes full Hogan at the expense of remaining in touch with the course and crowds who adore her graceful presence.“L.A. definitely showed up and it was a lot of fun to play in front of amazing crowds,” Korda said. “It’s amazing to see how much our Tour has grown in that standpoint of dads, parents, coming out with their little kids. I mean, that’s kind of what makes what we get to do so much sweeter.
To this observer, the key bit is Nelly winning with pars.... If she can grind it out with her C-game, then it's going to be fun seeing her upside, because her firepower has never been in doubt.
Geoff started on a truncated version of his Champions, Cut-Makers and Bufoons (that last one might not be exactly how he phrases it), which allows for some credit to the two ladies that missed by "this much":
Charley Hull. Whatta character, whatta swing, and whatta third round 65 that kept going Sunday with a 67. But Charley. The Malibu hate? Here’s guessing if you stayed in a house on Broad Beach you might think a tad differently about The Bu.Gaby Lopez. Look out: she just birdied the last hole at Riviera to join the clubhouse lead of the U.S. Women’s Open. A brilliant performance that started with early trips to Riviera, scouting out its intricacies. But it’s another thing to translate the studying into an A performance.
They both made great pars at No. 18 to post -7.... Hull in particular is piling up the near-misses, although I'd find it easier to root for her if she'd lose the Malbon duds.
Shall we sample the Tour Confidential panel's insights? Yeah, it's been a few weeks, but that query is still rhetorical:
1. Nelly Korda continued her dominant 2026, winning the U.S. Women’s Open at Riviera for her fourth win of the season, fourth major title and, most importantly, first U.S. Women’s Open title. What did you learn about Nelly as she outlasted the field during a thrilling Sunday in LA?Josh Berhow: She’s continuing to do what is one of the hardest things to do in any sport, which is to win when everyone expects you to win. She’s now finished first or second in seven of her eight starts this season and has kept one really fun storyline — the season-long grand slam — alive for another few weeks. It’s just really impressive how she continued to plug along Sunday, kept hitting fairways and didn’t make any mistakes. That puts a ton of pressure on the people playing around you, as they know they have to make a move because it’s unlikely Nelly Korda will mess up. And it’s really difficult to make a lot of birdies in U.S. Opens.
Nick Piastowski: I guess this isn’t “learned,” but maybe more confirmed — that she’s willing to reassess. In her press conference on Saturday night, Korda talked about a recent “mindset shift,” saying that “instead of saying, you know, I’m screwed in this position, oh, here we go again, I’m just going to embrace the challenges and I’m not going to walk off the golf course; I’m just going to figure it out.” It’s maybe a smaller thing, but clearly something has clicked, and the fact that she did the work here is impressive.
Josh Schrock: I don’t know if I learned anything new about Nelly Korda, but watching her navigate what was undoubtedly the scariest round of her life on Sunday showed me that she is exactly who a lot of us thought and hoped she’d be. Her talent was always undeniable, but winning Chevrons and KPMGs is different than winning a U.S. Women’s Open on a course like Riviera. Everything always pointed to this being her destiny, but even she admitted she had doubts it would ever arrive. There’s something rewarding about watching someone reach their destiny, and now we get to find out where it leads her.
Josh Berhow's bit about Nelly not messing up is the point, methinks. nelly has been a bit of a mistake-prone golfer, posting a ten on her first hole of a recent Open. Her grinding as she did yesterday is the revelation, as we now have to check to see which of the LPGA's fourteen majors each year is up next...
It doesn't take them long to get to the tough one:
2. Charley Hull put together a record-breaking weekend at Riviera, Gaby Lopez got hot late on Sunday and In Gee Chun hung around to keep the pressure on the contenders. What played a bigger part in making this one of the most memorable U.S. Women’s Opens in years: Some of the game’s biggest stars fighting down the stretch, or the famous stage that hosted the event? And how can women’s professional golf replicate it?Berhow: You can have one and not the other and still produce good golf tournaments, but when they both come together it makes it must-watch TV, which is the goal for every major golf tournament. Korda and Hull are arguably the two most famous players in the women’s game, and I love how different they are. Charley is twitchy and aggressive with that fast-swing tempo while Nelly is just so smooth and methodical. It’s a great, friendly rivalry if we could see them atop leaderboards together more often, but what I really enjoyed was seeing how the women played Riviera versus what we see when the PGA Tour stops there. It’s a fabulous private course, but viewers at home can relate to it and appreciate it much better watching how the women play it.Piastowski: I think they work hand in hand — great courses bring out great play, and subpar courses, well, you know the rest. This week also “felt” big, didn’t it? Prime time! L.A.! Riv! There’s history there. There are challenges. Hell, places like Riv just look cool. And when given a proper spotlight, more folks care — though we do have to talk about how the broadcast was just three hours on Sunday. I think this is the LPGA’s next step — secure more regular-season events at big-name courses. And yes, the majors should continue the recent trend of doing that. And, yes, somehow, someway, the women should be playing at Augusta National.Schrock: You need both, but I think Michelle Wie West nailed it pre-tourney when talking about the importance of the women playing the same courses as the men. It adds context and elevates everything. What really works is when we have the same venue host the men’s and women’s U.S. Open in the same year, like when Wie won at Pinehurst in 2014 after Martin Kaymer did. It’s incredibly important for the women to get to create their own moments on iconic holes and at golf’s cathedrals. The cream also tends to rise to the top at the cathedrals as it did this week and at St. Andrews in 2024. Venues matter.
OK, Nick, perhaps a little less caffeine might be in order.... This is really a tough one for the LPGA, and Nick shows what a halfwit he is. The lady professionals are never playing ANGC, those folks made the decision to support the amateur game, and did so in a manner designed to hurt the LPGA. Has anyone except your humble blogger noticed that the "Chevron" isn't exactly the "Dinah".
The question obviously overstates the quality of the leaderboard, but does so in a way the explicates the LPGA's dilemma. Sure, Charlie is a name brand, but the girls has won exactly nothing. To be real, the only name of the leaderboard that mattered was N. Korda, and perhaps we should talk through why that is.
Any professional sports undertaking needs to be strong in the U.S. market, the economics don't work otherwise. So, how has American women's golf been doing? Well, Lexi was supposed to save us, but it turned out that she's a delicate flower, so it's all on Nelly's shoulder. The real problem is the foreign dominance of women's golf, but perhaps not in the xenophobic kind of way.
American audiences have embraced Anika and Inbee, the real problem lately has been that no one, two or three players from the foreign contingent have separated themselves and allowed the audiences to become familiar with them. Jeeno, Patti and In Gee are all great, or could be if we saw them more often.
Of course Riviera was also a big part of the story, although I come down differently on the subject of playing were the men play. I think this week came off better than some, if only because No. 10 played as George Thomas designed it to do.... It really doesn't work so well for the men, but in other circumstances the ladies risk showcasing their weaker play.
3. What’s your final takeaway from U.S. Women’s Open week?Berhow: Nelly is really good and will dominate the conversation later this month at the KPMG Women’s PGA — as she tries to make it three in a row — but another storyline is starting to emerge as well: Charley Hull now has five runner-up major finishes without a win. Her last three: T2, T10, T2. She’s gotta break through at some point.Schrock: We’re entering the summer of Nelly. She’ll dominate KPMG week but also will arrive at the Evian with a chance to win the LPGA Grand Slam (four of five) and also have a chance to do so at the AIG Women’s Open. If she wins both, she gets what Lydia Ko, and other ball knowers, would call the real career Grand Slam. And she’s about to kick down the door to the Hall of Fame. It’s all Nelly, but the biggest question is: Can the LPGA capitalize on a moment that feels much bigger than Nelly’s run in 2024?Piastowski: That we’re watching a historic run. And, as Schrock said, above, the LPGA powers-that-be must capitalize on it.
So, remember how important venues are? I mean we've touched upon it several times already...... You might want to take notes. So, do we have a suitably exciting venue for that KPMG, where all eyes will be on Nelly? Per Grok:
The 2026 KPMG Women's PGA Championship is being held at Hazeltine National Golf Club in Chaska, Minnesota.
Thud! The LPGA, once again snatching defeat from the jaws of victory....
The Postman Delivers - Wow, this is as close to acknowledging that there was a tourney in Ohio as the Tc gang gets:
5. We had all sorts of good golf over the weekend (in Spain, California, Ohio and elsewhere), but who won the weekend without winning on Sunday?Berhow: Hmmmm. J.T. Poston, Memorial winner, can now skip U.S. Open Final Qualifying on Monday so he has to be psyched, but that doesn’t answer the question. How about Kiara Romero? A 20-year-old amateur just tied for sixth at the biggest professional women’s golf tournament on the planet. That’s pretty good! (Oh, and honorable mention: Maria José Marin, another amateur, tied for 8th.)Schrock: Four amateurs — Romero, Marin, Asterisk Talley and Aphrodite Deng — all acquitted themselves well at Riviera. Talley made U.S. Women’s Open history with her Saturday 66, and Romero took home low-am honors (Go Ducks!). The future of women’s golf is in great hands.Piastowski: We all did, right? What a weekend. Here’s your pass to take off on Monday.
Does Josh Berhow not read the questions.... Although I do love that Poston was scheduled to play in Sectional today, although they no longer hold qualifying in Columbus, OH, because the Signature Event fields are too small to include guys that aren't exempt. That fact alone should tell us something....
I'm not going to blog Poston's win, except to note my pleasure at recent events. Aaron Rai's win at the PGA and a J.T. Poston-Ryan Gerard playoff at Jack's Place are helpful reminders of the nature of our game. We can't script the outcomes and the best players in the world win less than 5% of the time, so just suck it up and deal with it. I love the chaos, but I know how much Patrick Cantlay hates it....Play better, Patrick, but stop trying to keep guys that might be beat you out of events.
The other bit to note is what a mess our game has for a schedule. Obviously the Women's Open should be scheduled against inferior Tour events, the Nelson or Colonial. This diminished both the Open and Jack's event, and is completely unnecessary, except that our game is run by idiots.
The Wider World - Of course I don't have time to blog it right now, but interesting doings in our game. That other tour has hit a speed bump, and the PGA Tour is dramatically restructuring its own schedule. This may be as good as we get for today:
4. With the Saudi PIF no longer funding LIV Golf beyond this season, the league is in search of investors. A couple of weeks ago, Bryson DeChambeau said he’s “giving all I can to make it happen” in terms of potential investments but admitted his role as a player might be limited. Meanwhile, Jon Rahm said this past week he knows little about the business side of things and his “job is to play golf.” Should LIV’s stars feel obligated to help keep LIV afloat? Do they hold much power?Berhow: Noooo. I mean, yes, if they have wealthy investors in their Rolodex, sure, reach out to them. But Rahm should not be scrutinized for his comments — he’s right. His job is to play. I’m sure promises were made to him when he joined the league, and I would assume one was never to help them find future funding in a few years. That’s why they pay the execs the big bucks.Schrock: No. If you really, really want to help keep the league alive because you believe in team golf or want some place to play that isn’t the PGA Tour, then by all means, go for it. But I think Rahm has the right idea. Play golf and see what happens when the dust settles.Piastowski: Maybe. If DeChambeau and Rahm tell whomever that they’ll be playing LIV Golf for the next decade and that they’ll work on bringing in other stars in, that’s a pretty good pitch. But yes, at the end of the day, the product is golf, so the golfers should play compelling golf.
In the pantheon of horrible Tour Confidential questions, this is a worthy conte4nder. Not even clear what they're going for, but isn't the bigger issue whether anyone cares? Obviously it's about what their options are, but it's pretty obvious that there are two guys the PGA Tour will want back, and then there's everyone else.
But don't take anything for granted. Two Golfweek headers, first the feeding frenzy:
Don't spend it all in one place, boys, because the paydays might be in jeopardy:
Really? But I thought those guys only cared about growing our game..... It's so disillusioning!
I do hope to blog further on these changes, but that will have to keep for now. Have a great week and I'll see you when life permits.





















