NEW ZEALANDER IS NOT A LONG HITTER
FIRST-CLASS FOOTWORK HELPS LYDIA
BECOME LPGA'S RICHEST 17-year-old
FROM GOLF DIGESTBy Matthew Rudy
The LPGA's youngest multi-millionaire doesn't win by overpowering a golf course with raw speed.
Instead
of a sledgehammer, Lydia Ko uses a scalpel. At the season-ending CME
Group Tour Championship, the 17-year-old from New Zealand wore out the
field with her relentless fairways-and-greens approach, winning a
three-way, four-hole playoff to collect both the $500,000 first prize
and $1 million bonus for taking the season-long points race.
It
was the largest single-day payday in LPGA history, and the soft-spoken
teenager did it averaging about 250 yards off the tee - 30 yards behind
the longest hitters in the field. She hit all 14 fairways on Sunday and
missed only one green, shooting 68 to get into a play-off with Carlota
Ciganda and Julieta Granada. Appropriately enough, Ko made all pars in
the extra holes until Ciganda finally fell away the fourth time they
played the 18th.
"The thing that jumps out at
people is her great tempo, but I know plenty of people who have great
tempo who hit it crooked," says Las Vegas-based instructor Joseph Mayo,
better known by his nickname and Twitter handle--Trackman Maestro.
"Lydia's footwork is just beautiful. When you watch her hit short irons,
her feet are so quiet. When she comes through impact, her right foot
stays down. Even up into the finish, her right foot stays at a 45 degree
angle, not spun up onto the toe."
Average
players do too much thrusting and lunging on short irons, says Mayo,
which produces a too-steep angle of attack and shaky control over
distance and direction.
"That right knee heads toward the ball and the
hips spin out" says Mayo, who holds court at both TPC Summerlin in
Vegas, where he's the director of instruction, and for his 10,000
followers on Twitter.
"You want to copy what Ko's doing, especially on
less-than full shots. Feel like your right foot is flat on the ground
through impact, and feel it gently roll over as you go to the finish."
Labels: Pro Ladies
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