Is a strange feeling to feel the need for Prove yourself. Like there is a pit in your soul that can only be complemented by demonstrating your abilities or intellect to underline your value – to show that what you have always believed or the path you’ve walked was right.
For those blessed with world-class talent-ore mcilroys, Scottie schefflers and nelly Cordas-Nevoja to try anything for anyone, to save themselves, scattered long ago. Their illustrative resumptions stand as evidence – they have not destroyed their gifts.
So when Korda, world no. 1, sat for its pre-Turneut press conference at AIG Women Open at Royal PortCawl On Tuesday and asked if it was “important to be a golf player” at the end of her career (ie, someone who wins everywhere), her answer was discovering.
“I feel like I have nothing more to try people ever,” Korda said. “For me, it’s right, I’m passionate about play. I love the game. I want to play in these kinds of conditions, try my game and play against the best players in the world. Having something to prove myself, I don’t think I really have to do it. For me, it’s just enjoying it and being in the battle heat.
“I Feel Like, Yeah, of Course i want to acccompish more. There are those goals that of have, goals that set for myself. To make myself that about winning in every Play in, that definitely not my goal is to prepare. Enjoy MySelf and Hopphully Be in Contention.
Nelly Cord impressed by the sub-randar part of Lottie Woad victory
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On the surface, of course, the cord is right. She has nothing left to try. She is the best golf of her generation. It is two -thirds of the way to the Hall of Fame. She has won two degrees and a golden Olympic medal. This is all signed, sealed and delivered.
But it should be noted that it was not the question. The question asked was simply for a personal desire to win around the world. Much in the way that Mcilroy has spoken about The importance of acquiring certain tournaments in specific locations. But it’s right to ask ourselves if Corda, the straw that evokes the women’s golf drink, someone with talent to be an excellent time, wants the same. Should we not love it for it? Trying to do it at greater heights? To ask more of her, Like we did from mcilroy During his great 10-year-old drought or Scheffler before winning a major Augusta National?
A year ago, Corda went to a historic heater she saw that she would win six times in seven starts, including a big championship. From January to mid -May, a total of six players ended better than Korda in any case she played. She was coming going to the summer, with a chance to join a legendary season. But then came “10” in her third Open Women’s Women’s Hole, which led to a lost cut. Next, she fired a second round 81 in the KPMG women’s PGA Championship to lose the cut there. She seemed to have opened women in St. Andrews in its sense before a double duplicate baggage allowed Lydia KO to claim the title.
Cord has not won this year. It still wakes up with its power and irritates with an unstable coercion. It is the first in strokes obtained: outside of tee, first in the percentage of birds and the third in the strokes obtained: total. it Completed the racing at Open Womens of SH.BA But otherwise it has not been a real weekend factor in diplomas this year. Her golf has been good, but a note below her high standards. And she knows it. Cord is very aware that this week at Royal PartthCawl in Wales is its last chance to make this season worthy of memory – to keep it not to be Yearly in the main department.
As she said – Cord has nothing else to try, and yet this week is a perfect opportunity to make it just. Not to prove something, but to cement it. As Mcilroy recently noted as he climbed from his master’s illness, certain places and tournaments call the big ones. Cord feels destined to become an open champion for women in the US. She would have been a well -deserved champion last year in St. Andrews. These wounds would make a win in more and more meaningful Wales. It would be an appropriate title for her stay in the game. A victory that would give a message about what the picture would be when all it can do is look back.
With a discovery response on Tuesday, Korda told us something. What happens next means even more.
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Golfit.com editor
Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for Golf.com. Before entering Golf, Josh was the interior of Chicago Bears for the NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and Uo alum, seduces and spends his free time walking with his wife and dog, thinking about how the ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become half a professor into pieces. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break 90 and will never lose the confidence that Rory Mcilroy’s main drought will end (updated: he did it). Josh Schrock can be reached in Josho.schrock@golf.com.

