On paper, Nelly Korda’s 2026 season almost doesn’t seem real.
In her first six starts, Korda has three wins and three runner-up finishes. Because two of the second-place results came in Hyo Joo Kim victories, Korda has more wins in 2026 than there are players who have finished ahead of her (Solheim Cup teammate Lauren Coughlin, in Las Vegas, is the other).
Korda’s sprint back to the top of the Rolex World Rankings has her rubbing shoulders with legends. She is one of just two players since 1980 to start an LPGA season with six consecutive top-2 finishes, joining Annika Sorenstam (2001). Sorenstam won eight times that season.
Per the Elias Sports Bureau, Korda is the first player since Lorena Ochoa in 2008 to win an LPGA tournament by four strokes or more in back-to-back weeks. Her victory in Mexico was the 18th of her LPGA career, making her the youngest American player to reach that benchmark since Nancy Lopez in 1980.
The rare air Korda now breathes is reserved for all-timers. So, what is separating her from her peers? Where does she gain her greatest advantages on the field?
Let’s break down what has made Nelly Korda so hard to beat.
Approach play (especially from the rough)
Korda’s angle of attack with her irons is vital to her success, especially this season. When missing the fairway off the tee on par-4s and 5s this year, Korda has gone on to hit the green in regulation at a rate of 68.0%. Not only is that the highest rate on Tour among qualified players, the gap between her and her peers is enormous. Every player not named Nelly Korda is hitting the green in that situation just 51.8% of the time.
That aspect of Korda’s iron play has led to the most impressive strokes gained approach numbers of her career. From 2022 through the 2025 season, Nelly averaged 0.35 strokes gained approach per round. She gained strokes with her approach play in 62.8% of her overall rounds and gained at least a full stroke in 32.7% of them. This season, Korda is on another planet when it comes to this metric. She leads the LPGA in strokes gained approach, gaining a whopping 1.97 per round. She’s gained strokes with her approach play in all but one round — and gained a stroke or more 83.3% of the time.
Over the previous three seasons, players on the LPGA Tour gained three or more strokes with their approach play in about 4% of overall rounds played. In 2025, Nelly is doing that at a staggering 22% clip.
Short-game prowess
On the relatively rare occasion that Korda has missed the green in regulation this season, her short game has been brilliant. She is getting up-and-down at a 75.0% clip so far in 2026, the best rate of any player on the LPGA. What was once a bit of a weakness in her statistical profile has now joined her array of elite skills: As recently as 2022, Korda ranked outside the top-100 in scrambling percentage. Last season, she ranked 55th (57.7%).
Korda’s bunker play has been a big reason in the improvement. From 2022 through 2025, she ranked anywhere from 72nd to 138th on the LPGA in sand save percentage. Through her win in Mexico, she’s 11-for-16 saving par from greenside bunkers, good for the third-best rate on Tour.
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All of this has helped forge one of her most impressive statistical feats in 2026: a bogey or worse percentage of 7.97%. Not only is that the lowest rate on the LPGA, it’s also more than 4 full percentage points better than anyone else. Haeran Ryu and Miyu Yamashita are tied for second lowest, at 12.26%. Korda made just seven bogeys combined in her back-to-back wins in Houston and Mexico.
Korda already has six bogey-free rounds this season, tied with Chizzy Iwai for most on the LPGA Tour. She had just four all of last season and didn’t record her second of the season until October.
Par-5 dominance
Korda’s length off the tee has always provided her a greater ability to take advantage of scoring opportunities on par-5s. In her 18 LPGA wins, she is a combined 160 under par on par-5s. In each of the previous five seasons, she’s ranked either first or second on the Tour that season in par-5 performance.
Yet somehow, in 2026, Korda has found a way to be even more dominant on par 5s. She has ranked in the top-5 in the field in par-5 scoring in all six of her starts. She did that in just four tournaments all of last season — when she tied for the best par-5 scoring average on the LPGA Tour! Korda currently averages a preposterous 4.34 strokes per par-5 played, a full tenth of a stroke better than anyone else and nearly three-tenths of a stroke better than the LPGA average.
Korda was double-digits under par on par-5s in just two tournaments all last season. This year she already has done that four times in six starts.
Korda will enter this week’s event, the Kroger Queen City Championship, with a season scoring average of 68.04. Per Elias, that’s the second-best scoring average for any player through the first 23 rounds of a specific season going back to 1980. Only Ochoa in 2008 (67.87) has had a better scoring start to a year.
What we are witnessing this season from Nelly Korda is a brilliant athlete at the peak of her craft.
Soak it up.
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: golf.com








