Golf

World No. 1 Female Golfer Nelly Korda’s Career, Net worth and Endorsements

There aren’t many names in women’s professional golf who can match the explosive run that Nelly Korda has seen in recent times. Ranked No 1 on the Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings, Korda plays at a level that challenges the best, and the proof is in her mind-boggling run of six wins in seven starts between January-May 2024 on the LPGA Tour. We delve into the illustrious career, endorsements and net worth of top golfer Nelly Korda, who’ll be competing at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Her journey has been shaped by skill and perseverance, and the recent stretch helped Korda take her tally to 14 wins on the LPGA. As a two-time Major winner and gold medallist at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, Korda will next play at the 2024 Paris Olympics women’s golf event from August 7 to 10. The tournament is held at Le Golf National and will see her competing alongside fellow Team USA golfers Lilia Vu and Rose Zhang.

Well on her way to being counted among the greatest in women’s golf, we chart the American athlete’s career, and her earnings and net worth, which have kept pace with her meteoric rise.

Get to know Nelly Korda: Net worth, career and endorsements

Exceptional sporting genes

Korda comes from a family of famous athletes. Her father, Petr Korda, was a well-known Czech tennis professional who finished second at the 1992 French Open and won the 1998 Australian Open in 1998. Her mother, Regina Rajchrtova, was also a former professional tennis player who represented Czechoslovakia at the Seoul 1988 Summer Olympics. Younger brother Sebastian is an American tennis pro with one ATP singles and one doubles championship.

Her elder sister Jessica plays on the LPGA Tour and has won six times till date. Like her sister, Korda chose golf over tennis and made rapid progress. Hailing from such a background, it’s no wonder that Korda has reached such heights at only 25.

Solid amateur grounding

Korda’s career began early, largely inspired by her family’s sporting interests. She took to golf at six and had made an impression even before turning professional by demonstrating her competence in top junior and amateur competitions.

Korda was a member of the winning 2015 Junior Solheim Cup squad, and also won the 2015 Harder Hall Invitational, 2015 PING Invitational, and 2015 AJGA Rolex Junior All-American title. She qualified for the Women’s US Open in 2013, made cut and finished tied T64.

Turning professional

Korda turned professional in 2016, and her swift transition was testament to the robust foundation she built in her amateur days. She earned her LPGA card by finishing top-10 at the LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament, which set the stage for her rookie season in 2017.

The breakthrough moment on Tour came in 2018, when she won her first tour event at the Swinging Skirts LPGA Taiwan Championship. The win was not just a personal triumph but a landmark for the family, as it aligned her success with that of sister Jessica, and established them as a powerhouse sibling duo in women’s pro golf. The week also marked Korda crossing the USD 1 million mark in career earnings.

Fostering the winning habit

In February 2019, Korda won the ISPS Handa Women’s Australian Open, and with it broke into the top-10 in the Women’s World Golf Rankings for the first time. In September, she won the Open de France Dames at Golf du Medoc Resort in France by eight shots.

Two months down, she defended her title at the Taiwan Swinging Skirts LPGA by prevailing in a playoff. It was an unprecedented season in which Korda had 12 top-10 finishes, and earned USD 1,665,546 in prize money. Another landmark week was the CME Group Tour Championship where Korda’s T3 finish helped her breach the USD 3 million mark in career earnings.

The 2020 ANA Inspiration stands out for Korda as she had a career-best result in a Major (T2) at that point, and earned an impressive USD 245,480. With three more top-10s, her season earnings stood at USD 575,894.

Major breakthroughs

Compared to 2020, Korda had a breakout year on the LPGA in 2021. In 17 starts, she missed cut just once and her 10 top-10s included wins at the Gainbridge LPGA, Meijer LPGA Classic, her maiden Major title at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship and Pelican Women’s Championship, which were instrumental in the season earnings of USD 2,382,198.

Other than the cheque of USD 675,000, the PGA Championship highlighted Korda’s ability to win under tremendous pressure that characterise Major championships. The victory signalled her ascent atop the Women’s World Golf Rankings.

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