The world No 1, Nelly Korda, announces a neck injury has forced her to pull out of LPGA Tour events in South Korea and Malaysia; Watch start of LPGA Tour's BMW Ladies Championship from South Korea on Sky Sports Golf from 6am on Thursday
Tuesday 15 October 2024 07:56, UK
World No 1 Nelly Korda has withdrawn from the next two tournaments on the LPGA Tour's Asian swing after hurting her neck during practice, she has announced.
The tour is in South Korea this week for the BMW Ladies Championship beginning on Thursday, live on Sky Sports Golf, while players will head to the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur for the Maybank Championship the following week, also live on Sky Sports Golf.
Fans in those countries will miss the chance to see the USA's Korda, the No 1-ranked player in the world and a six-time winner this season.
"Unfortunately, I've had to withdraw from the LPGA events in Korea and Malaysia due to a minor neck injury I sustained while practising," Korda posted on social media.
"I'm disappointed to miss these events and am especially sorry to my fans who were looking forward to seeing me play.
"I'm currently resting and working with my team to get better. Thank you for all your support - it truly means the world to me!"
Korda, 26, did not say when she plans to return to competition. The Asian swing concludes with the TOTO Japan Classic on October 31-November 3. The season ends three weeks later at the CME Group Tour Championship in her home state of Florida.
All six of Korda's victories this year came before June. She won five consecutive starts, culminating at the Chevron Championship, her second career major title.
Korda currently holds a roughly 1,235-point lead over New Zealand's Lydia Ko in the season-long Race to the CME Globe standings. Korda has yet to win the season-long championship.
Watch the start of the LPGA Tour's BMW Ladies Championship from South Korea on Sky Sports Golf at 6am on Thursday October 17.
Watch the latest action from the LPGA Tour, PGA Tour and DP World Tour live on Sky Sports Golf, which once again will be the home of the Ryder Cup in 2025. Stream Sky Sports Golf instantly on NOW - no contract, cancel any time.