LANCASTER, Pa. (news agencies) — Nelly Korda was not even three holes into the U.S. Women’s Open when she dropped to a crouch and bowed her head in disbelief after her third straight shot — all of them from inside 70 feet away — tumbled into a stream.
She walked off the par-3 12th hole at Lancaster Country Club with a 10.
It didn’t get much better from there.
“Making a 10 on a par 3 will definitely not do you any good at a U.S. Open,” Korda said when her nightmare start to the biggest championship in women’s golf ended with an 80.
“Just a bad day in the office.”
Korda came into the U.S. Women’s Open as an overwhelming favorite, with six victories in her last seven tournaments, including a major that tied an LPGA record for five wins in a row.
That’s what made the most imperfect 10 so shocking.
It didn’t help that two groups were on the tee at the 161-yard 12th hole — Korda had about a 25-minute wait — and she watched trouble unfold before she pulled a club. In the group ahead, Gaby Lopez came up short of the water. Ingrid Lindblad’s tee shot rolled into the water.
Korda curiously chose 6-iron — most players not as long as her hit 7-iron — and it took a hard hop into a back bunker. And then the trouble began.
Korda said she had a leaf under her golf ball, and the bunker shot came out a little hot and rolled — and rolled — past the front pin, off the false front and disappeared into the stream.
“Couldn’t really do anything about that,” she said. “Yeah, just hit some really bad chips, over and over again.”
She played a low pitch up the slope, but it banged into the hill and rolled back down into the water. She took another penalty drop, played another low pitch that was only slightly better, still not nearly enough to avoid rolling back into the water.
She got it right the third time, only to miss an 8-foot putt and take septuple-bogey 10. Korda walked off the green, removed her visor and placed her hand over her forehead for a few seconds, then headed to the 13th tee.
A video crew kept the camera fixed on the walking scorer as “+1” was changed to a “+8” next to her name.
She still had 15 holes ahead of her on a course that didn’t present a lot of scoring chances. Only three players from the morning wave broke par at 1-under 69. Her objective?
“I just didn’t really want to shoot 80,” Korda said. “And I just kept making bogeys.”
It was her second straight round of 80 in the U.S. Women’s Open, separated by 11 months and some 3,000 miles — Korda shot 80 in the final round at Pebble Beach last summer.
The only higher rounds in her career were 81 — one at the 2014 Kraft Nabisco Championship when she was 15, the other at the 2013 U.S. Women’s Open at age 14.
The 12th hole was playing the toughest for the opening round. The tee was moved forward and the pin was in the front of a green that slopes from back to front, with a slightly more severe pitch that sends balls into the creek.
It was playing nearly a full stroke over par as the afternoon groups began play. There also was some suspect execution on Korda’s part, starting with the club selection.