SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, France – Lydia Ko couldn’t hold back the
tears when her national anthem began to play. After all the close calls
and near misses and bad breaks, she had finally become a gold medalist
and earned her place in the LPGA Hall of Fame.
At long last.
“It would be a hell of a way to do it,” said Ko when asked what it
would mean to secure a spot in one of sport’s most exclusive Halls of
Fame by winning a gold medal on Saturday at the Olympic women’s golf
competition. Little did she know that come the end of the final round,
that premonition would have become reality, a sweet, sweet dream finally
realized for the 27-year-old superstar.
“I repeat those words,” Ko said of becoming a Hall of Famer. “It's a
hell of a way to do it. You say those kind of things, and until it
happens, it's not really factual. For it to have happened here at the
Olympics, unreal. I do feel like I'm a mythical character in a
fairytale. It really couldn't have gotten any better than I could have
imagined, and I've had so many grateful things that happened in my
career so far, and this really tops it. I couldn't have asked for
anything more, to be honest.”
Early in the week, it wasn’t immediately apparent that the New
Zealander would wind up in this position. She kicked off her bid for the
medal trifecta with a quiet, even-par 72, making up some ground on
Thursday with a 5-under 67 to sit three back of the lead with 36 holes
to play.
A Friday 68 saw Ko share the top of the leaderboard with
Switzerland’s Morgane Metraux through three rounds, and when Saturday’s
final round got underway, Ko hung tough and held steady as her
competitors ran one after one into the buzzsaw that is Le Golf National,
with not even a double bogey on the par-4 13th hole derailing her gold
medal hopes.
She came to the last with a one-shot lead over eventual silver
medalist Esther Henseleit of Germany at 9-under, and like the 20-time
LPGA Tour winner has done so many other times before, she calmly found
the fairway, laid up, knocked a sand wedge to 7 feet and drained the
birdie putt. But this time, it meant so much more.
“Being tied for the lead going into today, I knew that the next 18
holes were going to be some of the most important 18 holes of my life,”
Ko said. “One of the things that I had said earlier in the week was I
don't know if there is another Olympics for me, and I will say, this is
my last Olympics. I think that was at the back of my mind. I didn't want
to publicly tell anyone because I knew that being in this kind of
position, it was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
“I kept telling myself, I get to write my own ending and that Simone
Biles had said (that) and I had heard in her documentary. I kept telling
myself that, and I wanted to be the one who was going to control my
fate and the ending to this week. To have ended this way, it's honestly a
dream come true.”
Ko took the silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics and claimed bronze
after losing in a playoff to silver medalist Mone Inami of Japan at
Tokyo 2020, always just a few shots here or a missed putt there from
finding the top spot on the Olympic podium. Her quest for gold was
something that had continued to propel Ko in her professional golf
career, and now that she can finally call herself an Olympic champion,
there’s another achievement to add to her laundry list of
accomplishments.
The LPGA Hall of Fame didn’t feel within reach for Ko until she won
the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions in January to earn
the 26th of 27 total points she needed for automatic qualification. She
nearly got the job done the very next week at the LPGA Drive On
Championship, losing in a playoff to Nelly Korda at Bradenton Country
Club, a win that Ko was “gutted” by as she knew it would take another
monumental effort to win for a 21st time on the LPGA Tour.
Ko then lost her way a bit, finding herself oh-so-close to another
victory on numerous occasions, but always coming up just a touch short.
The doubts that had plagued her at different points throughout her
career began to creep in once again.
Would she get that 27th point? Was the Hall of Fame in the cards? Would she qualify? Could she? Was time running out?
Paul Cormack, Ko’s caddie, knew his player’s goals when he picked up
her bag at last year’s CPKC Women’s Open. After seeing the Hall of Fame
pressure weigh on her throughout the latter half of the 2023 season and
the first portion of this year, Ko seemed a little bit different this
week, much calmer about it than she had previously appeared.
“(Lydia) very relaxed all week, very focused,” said Cormack. “The big
thing was the Hall of Fame, but then I knew that with the Olympics
coming up, there was gold to complete the set. She was just very relaxed
and very focused (this week). That’s when she plays her best golf.”
With a whirlwind of Hall-of-Fame and medal-trifecta fanfare swirling
around her, Ko kept her cool in the eye of the storm, and to the victor
go the spoils, rewards that are twofold for the now the only three-time
medalist in the history of Olympic golf.
And while she answered many of the questions she has been asked with
her triumph on Saturday, there’s a new one that will be on everyone’s
lips in every press conference and interview she does from now until the
end of the season: When will she retire?
“I know I'm playing the Scottish Open next week and the (AIG Women’s)
Open the week after. There's still so much golf to be played this
season,” Ko said. “I have great days and I'm like, ‘I want to play as
long as I can,’ and then I have days where I wake up with a sore low
back, and I'm like, ‘I don't think I can make it anymore.’
“I don't think there is a specific date, and now that I've got in the
Hall of Fame, I don't know if that affects anything. Golf has given me
so much, and I know that my ending is sooner than when it first started.
So, I wanted to really enjoy it, and while I am competitively playing, I
want to play the best golf I can. I think this takes a little bit of
weight off my shoulders.”
But that eventuality isn’t on Ko’s mind right now. That’s a tomorrow, next week, next month Lydia problem.
For now, it’s time to soak in this gold-medal moment and celebrate her Hall of Fame qualification with those who love her most.
She might even dry her tears with the ribbon of her gold medal.