Latest news with #HSBCWomen'sWorldChampionship

NBC Sports
23-04-2025
- Sport
- NBC Sports
Lydia Ko dealing with injury ahead of LPGA's first major of year
Lydia Ko is battling a right-arm injury ahead of the LPGA's first major championship of the season. According to Golfweek's Beth Ann Nichols, Ko woke up Sunday morning with a neck spasm and a tingling sensation in her right arm. Ko said she's had the issue before and that she's getting 'a lot of treatment' in hopes of being 100% by Thursday's opening round at Carlton Woods' Nicklaus Course. 'It's better than yesterday, but still doesn't feel like my normal arm,' Ko told Golfweek after Tuesday's nine-hole pro-am. 'It was playable,' Ko added, 'but I could feel it at the top of my backswing and my finish.' Ko, the current world No. 3, won the HSBC Women's World Championship in Singapore earlier this season. She tied for 17th last year at Carlton Woods, a year after missing the cut in the inaugural Chevron in The Woodlands, Texas. Ko won this major in 2016 when it was played at Mission Hills in Ranch Mirage, California.


USA Today
23-04-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
Lydia Ko woke up with an injury days ahead of LPGA's first major championship
Lydia Ko woke up with an injury days ahead of LPGA's first major championship Show Caption Hide Caption Nelly Korda ready for LPGA's Chevron Championship, major season The LPGA star said this is the most exciting time of the year. Lydia Ko is experiencing a neck spasm and right arm discomfort ahead of the Chevron Championship. Ko previously won the Chevron Championship in 2016. THE WOODLANDS, Texas — Lydia Ko woke up on Sunday with a neck spasm and since then, her right arm hasn't felt quite right. "I've been getting a lot of treatment on it," Ko told Golfweek after finishing up her nine-hole pro-am on Tuesday afternoon at the Chevron Championship. "It's better than yesterday, but still doesn't feel like my normal arm." Ko said a simliar thing happened to her some time ago while playing an event on the LET. In that instance, her right arm became quite numb. She's currently dealing with a tingling sensation. "It was playable," said Ko, "but I could feel it at the top of my backswing and my finish. My coach was like 'Oh, you kind of finish like Mr. Palmer.' I was like well that's good news, of all the people, I would love to be like Mr. Palmer." Ko, who won her third start to the season at the HSBC Women's World Championship in Singapore, said she wants to be careful not to make any compensations in her swing. Not just for this week but going forward. "It's unfortunate timing," she said, "but I think by Thursday it will be OK." The LPGA Hall of Famer also noted she was stung by a bee on her right hand Tuesday, joking she might need a bionic arm for the week. Currently ranked third in the world, Ko turns 28 years old on the opening round of the season's first major. Ko won this event in 2016 at Mission Hills at the age of 18. She missed the cut at the first edition at the Club at Carlton Woods in 2023 and tied for 17th last year.


USA Today
22-03-2025
- Business
- USA Today
Sophia Popov asked LPGA to clarify her status before playing, still had points stripped
Sophia Popov asked LPGA to clarify her status before playing, still had points stripped Sophia Popov reached out to the LPGA in January to clarify her status after coming back from a medical and maternity leave. She received confirmation from the tour that her priority number of 57th was correct and she was good to go. "Trusting that, I left my 20-month-old at home for two weeks to compete halfway across the world," Popov told Golfweek in a text on Saturday. "Two days ago I was notified about the administrative error and stripped of all my CME points earned this year." The LPGA released a memo to players on Friday evening informing them of an error that resulted in Popov being placed in the wrong spot on the original 2025 Priority List. As a result, the major champion competed in three tournaments for which she was not otherwise qualified: Founders Cup, Honda LPGA Thailand and HSBC Women's World Championship. To correct the error, the memo, written by Chief Tour Business and Operations Officer Ricki Lasky, said the member's CME points, earnings and Aon Risk Reward Challenge points will be removed from official standings. "Even though I believe the right decisions were made," said Popov, "it is very frustrating that this error occurred, after I specifically reached out to clarify my status situation. It is very unfortunate for me and the girls that didn't get into these events and missed out on guaranteed points in Asia." The HSBC and Thailand events are limited fields and don't have a cut. Popov earned a paycheck in all three starts as well as CME points, which determines a player's status for the season. Popov said her priority number dropped from Category 1 (full card, 57th) to Category 19, which is Nos. 126 to 150 on the list. The German competed in 17 events in 2024 and finished 136th on the CME points list. She went to the final stage of LPGA Q-School in December and finished T-58th, which means she failed to improve her status. Because Popov won the 2020 AIG Women's British Open, she's exempt into all the majors this year. She can't still play out of the winner's category, however, because she wasn't a tour member at the time she won at Royal Troon. That rule has since been changed to allow non-members who win majors a five-year exemption on tour. The LPGA did not release the names of any of the players involved, but according to the Final Entry Lists for each of the events in question, the three players listed as the first alternate for each field include Saki Baba (Founders Cup), Hira Naveed (Thailand LPGA) and Peiyun Chien (HSBC). Baba, the 2022 U.S. Women's Amateur champion, posted a note on Instagram Saturday that said, "In golf, you have to accept bad luck and mistakes as part of the game. But I believe that opportunities will always come around again." A rookie on the LPGA, Baba has reed it up once so far this season in China at the Blue Bay LPGA, where she took a share of 17th. An LPGA official said the error was discovered during the review of another member's maternity leave. "We will share more details as we work internally to best remedy the situation for the three players who were inadvertently impacted and left out of these tournament fields," said Lasky. "We apologize to those that have been directly affected and sincerely regret the error."


USA Today
22-03-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
LPGA error puts wrong player in three events, keeping three out. Who was impacted?
LPGA error puts wrong player in three events, keeping three out. Who was impacted? The LPGA released a memo to players on Friday evening that was obtained by Golfweek, informing them of an administrative error that resulted in a member being placed in the wrong spot on the original 2025 Priority List. As a result, the member competed in three tournaments for which she was not otherwise qualified: Founders Cup, Honda LPGA Thailand and HSBC Women's World Championship. To correct the error, the memo, written by Chief Tour Business and Operations Officer Ricki Lasky, said the member's CME points, earnings and Aon Risk Reward Challenge points will be removed from official standings. The member has also been moved to the correct position on the Priority List, which determines how fields are filled. The domino effect of such an error means, of course, that the first alternate for each of these events missed out on an opportunity she had rightly earned. "We will share more details as we work internally to best remedy the situation for the three players who were inadvertently impacted and left out of these tournament fields," said Lasky. "We apologize to those that have been directly affected and sincerely regret the error." The LPGA did not release the names of the players involved, but according to the Final Entry Lists for each of the events in question, the three players listed as the first alternate for each field include Saki Baba (Founders Cup), Hira Naveed (Thailand LPGA) and Peiyun Chien (HSBC). Sophia Popov confirmed to Golfweek that she was the player who was improperly placed on the Priority List. Popov was listed as 57th on the LPGA Priority List to start the season with a double asterisk by her name for maternity leave. Popov, however, competed in 17 events in 2024 and finished 136th on the CME points list. She went to the final stage of LPGA Q-School in December and finished T-58th, which means she failed to improve her status. A player is entitled to the equivalent of one full season of events upon returning from maternity leave. While the LPGA wouldn't confirm any of the players involved, the tour did say in a statement to Golfweek that the error was related to a calculation of return to play following a combined medical and maternity leave absence. Popov had taken a medical leave in 2022 to heal her right shoulder and, not long after, found out she was pregnant. The error was discovered during the review of another member's maternity leave. The HSBC and Thailand events are limited and don't have a cut. Popov earned a paycheck in all three starts as well as CME points. The tour noted that it is "immediately implementing additional layers of audit and review."
Yahoo
20-03-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
LPGA back in action next week at Ford Championship, where Nelly Korda, Lydia Ko headline
For the first time this season, the top 10 players in the world will gather in one place at the LPGA's Ford Championship. World No. 1 Nelly Korda took a month-and-half-long break, skipping the tour's entire Asia swing, and returns to defend her title March 27-30 at a new site, Whirlwind Golf Club, in Chandler, Arizona. World No. 2 Lydia Ko is back in action after clinching her 23rd career LPGA title at the HSBC Women's World Championship in Singapore. Rounding out the top 10 are Jeeno Thitikul, Ruoning Yin, Hannah Green, Lilia Vu, Ayake Furue, Jin Young Ko, Haeran Roy and Charley Hull. Australia's Minjee Lee is the only top-20 player who won't be in the field. Another player returning from a long break is Rose Zhang, who competed in the season-opening Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions and then went back to Stanford to finish up the winter quarter. A semi-retired Lexi Thompson is in the field as is Arizona resident Cristie Kerr, who's teeing it up for the first time since last summer's KPMG Women's PGA. A total of 18 rookies from the class of 2025 will be at Whirlwind, including Rio Takeda of Japan, who won her second LPGA title at the Blue Bay LPGA event in China. The two sponsor exemptions for the Ford are Mexico's Maria Fassi and Gabby Barker, the first female Native American professional golfer. Barker's selection comes from the Thunderbirds, who run the PGA Tour's WM Phoenix Open and who are a founding partner of the Ford. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: LPGA: Top 10 players in the world headline Ford Championship in Arizona