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Country: gb Page generated at: Tuesday, 30 December 2025 at 23:54:22 Greenwich Mean Time
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LPGA
We will never forget Lydia Ko stealing the show at an amazing AIG Women’s Open

published: Aug 25, 2024

We will never forget Lydia Ko stealing the show at an amazing AIG Women’s Open

Matt ChiversLink

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Lydia Ko emerged from a world-class leaderboard to win the Women’s Open at St Andrews. NCG’s Matt Chivers pays tribute to the legend of New Zealand plus the star cast that created an amazing Sunday on the Old Course

lydia ko womens open

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  • Lydia ko: womens open win marked an unforgettable sunday of action

First of all, some Thank You’s are in order. Thank you to Lydia Ko.

The clutch birdie on the 18th hole of the Old Course, the driver off the deck on 14, the pin-point approach to the Road Hole and the up-and-down on 10. She is a worthy AIG Women’s Open champion, now a three-time major winner, and has joined Lorena Ochoa and Stacy Lewis as winners of this great championship at this great arena.

Thank you to Nelly Korda.

She might have double-bogeyed the 14th hole when leading by two shots at St Andrews, but Korda’s quartet of birdies in the final round was scintillating. The ups and downs on Sunday were symptomatic of a year where the superstar from the States won six times in a seven-event stretch, becoming the dominant force in the women’s game, yet also missed three cuts in a row after that historic run.

Thank you to Lilia Vu.

The defending champion was close to becoming the first back-to-back Women’s Open winner since Yani Tseng and she was as steady as a rock in the run-in, making 10 pars in 14 holes and lingering until the end. We’ll forgive the bogey on the 72nd hole after the crucial birdie putt fell short. Vu didn’t play on the LPGA Tour in April and May while injured and has still almost bagged two wins.

lydia ko womens open

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Lydia Ko: Womens Open win marked an unforgettable Sunday of action

Thank you to Jiyai Shin.

A legend already and as hungry as ever to win the AIG Women’s Open for a third time. The 36-year-old held a narrow one-shot lead after 54 holes, 16 years after winning this tournament for the first time at Sunningdale. Only the second time she’s played the AIG Women’s Open since 2017, crucial bogeys on 15 and 17 meant she couldn’t keep up with Ko.

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Thank you to Ruoning Yin.

China’s second-ever major champion entered the final round in Scotland four shots behind Shin on three-under and played an almighty round. In the windiest wind and the wettest rain, Yin played her final 16 holes in three-under-par and finished two shots behind Ko in a tie for second with Korda, Vu and Shin.

At one stage, Jeeno Thitikul was part of a group of six players at the top of the leaderboard that was either World No.1 or had been World No.1. The top five players on the final leaderboard had 10 majors between them and over 50 LPGA Tour trophies.

When the final group of Vu and Shin had four holes left, this pair were part of a four-way tie for the lead on six-under with Ko and Korda, before Ko separated herself with a clutch three in front of the compelled crowd braving the conditions at golf’s most famous venue.

Oh, and thank you Lottie Woad.

The 20-year-old won the Augusta National Women’s Amateur in April and she proved again why she is the world’s best amateur by becoming this year’s Smyth Salver winner as the highest-performing amateur. Better yet, in a tie for 10th, she was England’s closest challenger and Europe’s too, along with Linn Grant and Nanna Koerstz Madsen.

Thank you for the Old Course as well.

Allow us to forget the pace of play issues that often dominate conversation during tournament weeks at this venue. It might’ve taken the final group two hours to play the first five holes of a course famous for double greens and crisscrossing fairways, but R&A HQ presented a superb challenge that combined the elements to identify a world-class winner that emerged from a world-class pack.

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I can think of no better end to the major season of 2024 than to watch a multi-major winning Hall of Famer win The Open at St Andrews against the best of her contemporaries. The quality was untouchable and the tension was palpable.

“It’s been a crazy past few weeks,” Ko said, fresh from winning the Olympic Gold Medal in Paris. “Something that was too good to be true happened, and I honestly didn’t think it could be any better and here I am as the AIG Women’s Open Champion this week Obviously being here at the Old Course at St Andrews, it makes it so much more special.

“I just loved being out there this week. I had a lot of family members here with me. I played here when I was 16 in 2013, I think I was 16. I was 16. I don’t think I got to really enjoy and realise what an amazing place this is, and now that I’m a little older and hopefully a little wiser, I just got to realise what a historic and special place this golf course is, and it’s honestly been such a fairy tale.”

Lydia Ko: Womens Open champion and Golf Hall of Famer! What was your favourite moment from the week? Tell us on X!

NOW READ: How did Lottie Woad get to World No. 1? “She worked her backside off”

NOW READ: What’s in Lydia Ko’s bag?

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