World No. 1 Nelly Korda grabs share of lead at Mizuho Americas Open

Nelly Korda hits from a bunker toward the seventh fairwaya t the Mizuho Americas Open golf tournament in Jersey City, N.J. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 10 May 2025
Follow

World No. 1 Nelly Korda grabs share of lead at Mizuho Americas Open

  • Similar to Scottie Scheffler on the men’s side, Korda had a white-hot 2024 but is still searching for her best play this year
  • Canada’s Brooke M. Henderson, a two-time major champion and a former top-10 player in the world rankings, missed the cut by one shot after a tough closing nine

REUTERS JERSEY CITY, N.J.: Nelly Korda used a late birdie spurt to claw her way into a tie for the lead at the Mizuho Americas Open on Friday in Jersey City, N.J.

The world No. 1 shot her second straight round of 68 at Liberty National Golf Club to move to 8-under-par 136 for the event, tied with South Korean Somi Lee, who shot a 67 Friday, and Andrea Lee, who also carded a 68.

The trio is a stroke ahead of six players tied at 7 under: Stephanie Kyriacou of Australia (69 Friday), Spaniards Julia Lopez Ramirez and Carlota Ciganda (both 70), Jenny Bae (70), France’s Celine Boutier (71) and Thailand’s Jeeno Thitikul (73).

Similar to Scottie Scheffler on the men’s side, Korda had a white-hot 2024 but is still searching for her best play this year. Scheffler did not win on the PGA Tour until last week at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson; Korda is looking for her first title of 2025.

She started her day on the back nine and erased two birdies on par-3 holes with back-to-back bogeys at Nos. 17 and 18. After a birdie at the first, Korda made three more over her last five (Nos. 5, 6 and 8) to make a late move up the leaderboard.

“After making two bogeys in a row you (need) to reset and just know that you have nine more holes to go and there is some opportunities out there even with the tricky conditions,” Korda said. “So just had a little bit of a mental reset and it worked.”

Somi Lee was 7 under through her first 15 holes to get as low as 10 under for the event, but she made consecutive missteps at Nos. 7 and 8 to come back to the pack.

She and Korda are tied with Andrea Lee, who played earlier in the day and posted a simple, bogey-free round with four birdies to set the clubhouse lead at 8 under.

“I was kind of mentally preparing for the worst today,” Andrea Lee said. “The radar didn’t look great for the rain and it was dumping on us pretty hard for probably about 12, 13 holes honestly.

“So I knew that I just had to stay really patient out there, know that fairways and greens and pars were a good score, and stay really positive.”

Thitikul, the No. 2-ranked player in the world, led after the first round and had three birdies in her first four holes Friday to move to 11 under. She came undone the rest of the way with four bogeys and no additional birdies, including a water ball as her day wound down.

Tied for 10th just two back at 6 under are Kristen Gillman (69), Yealimi Noh (71) and Australia’s Hira Naveed (69).

Canada’s Brooke M. Henderson, a two-time major champion and a former top-10 player in the world rankings, missed the cut by one shot after a tough closing nine. She made four birdies through her first nine holes to get to 3 under, then had just one birdie and four bogeys — including on her finishing hole, the ninth — the rest of the way to drop to even par, one below the cut line.

Other notables to miss the cut included Sweden’s Madelene Sagstrom (2 over) and 2023 champion Rose Zhang (4 over).


‘Riyadh is our showcase event,’ says LIV CEO O’Neil as 2026 season tees off

Updated 25 min 12 sec ago
Follow

‘Riyadh is our showcase event,’ says LIV CEO O’Neil as 2026 season tees off

  • Thomas Detry and Peter Uihlein top individual leaderboard on 7 under after 1st round at Riyadh Golf Club, while Joaquin Niemann’s Torque GC lead team standings on 15 under
  • Smash GC captain Talor Gooch and LIV Golf newcomer Elvis Smylie sing the praises of the atmosphere in the Kingdom surrounding the event

RIYADH: The 2026 LIV Golf season teed off under the lights at Riyadh Golf Club on Wednesday night, as stars including Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm and Dustin Johnson got the league’s fifth season underway.

Thomas Detry and Peter Uihlein topped the individual leaderboard after 18 holes, with both carding 7-under-par 65s.

Joaquin Niemann’s Torque GC led the team standings at 15 under. Sebastian Munoz led the way for the team with a 5-under round of 67, though he was unable to match his opening-round performance from last year when he shot 8 under.

“The start of the season is a bit like that first day of school when you were a little kid,” LIV Golf CEO Scott O’Neil told Arab News.

“It was wonderful to be out on the course and on the range, seeing the players. A lot of us haven’t seen each other for quite some time, so it was like the first day of school meets a family reunion.”

O’Neil also highlighted the significance of starting the season in Riyadh.

“Riyadh is our showcase event and I couldn’t imagine a more fitting place to open,” he said. “There’s something special about LIV at night; it’s something you can’t really describe, you actually have to come and see it.”

LIV Golf has experienced significant growth since its debut in 2022, and despite preseason concerns after Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed confirmed they would not be returning for the 2026 campaign, O’Neil said the league’s broader mission remains unchanged.

“We’re so mission-driven,” he explained. “I believe if you stick to your values, good things happen. All these incredible stars — DeChambeau, Rahm, (Phil) Mickelson, Cam Smith, DJ (Johnson) — they wake up every day thinking, ‘How can I grow the game of golf overall?’”

That influence is also helping to shape and guide LIV’s younger players.

“We’re excited to see all these generations coming together and growing the game,” O’Neil said.

He highlighted 21-year-old Michael La Sasso, the league’s youngest player, as an example of this.

“Think about it from his parents’ perspective,” O’Neil said. “Is this a good place for him? To be mentored by Phil Mickelson? To learn how to practice, how to travel, how to eat, sleep and take care of your body? How to get through jet lag?”

Travel remains a defining feature of LIV’s global model.

“This notion of playing on five continents is something I couldn’t imagine years ago,” O’Neil added.

Heading into Wednesday’s opening round of the season, a major talking point was Official World Golf Ranking’s decision to award points to players who finish in the top 10 at LIV events. While LIV officials welcomed the move, they expressed disappointment that the points were limited to only the top 10. Smash GC captain Talor Gooch addressed the issue in his post-round press conference.

“I don’t think the right thing was done, which is what we’ve experienced at LIV for the last four or five seasons,” he said.

“Anyone who says the fair thing was done, I don’t think they’re in tune with reality.”

Despite the debates off the course, Gooch nonetheless praised the atmosphere in Riyadh.

“It’s amazing being here in Saudi Arabia, playing at night,” he said. “Then going to Australia and playing in the day (next week at LIV Golf Adelaide) — it’s pretty special.”

Australian youngster Elvis Smylie, who impressed in his LIV Golf debut with a 6-under 66 that put him in third place on the leaderboard, also had positive thoughts about his first visit to the Kingdom.

“I’ve really enjoyed my first trip to Saudi Arabia,” the 23-year-old said. “Adjusting my body clock was a challenge, but it was great to be here. It was also nice to meet His Excellency Yasir Al-Rumayyan (the governor of the Saudi Public Investment Fund) out there.”

Round two tees off at 6:05pm local time on Thursday with a shotgun start.