Navigation for News Categories
Sport
29 Aug 2024
12:11 pm on 29 August 2024
Lydia Ko says she wants to retire while she is still playing well and loving the game. Photo: AFP/EMMANUEL DUNAND
Golfer Lydia Ko says her plan remains to retire within three years, before hitting 30, despite recent wins.
Lydia Ko on her British Open win, full set of Olympic medalsduration 10′ :02″
from First Up
Add to playlistPlaylist
Lydia Ko on her British Open win, full set of Olympic medals
Fresh off an Olympic gold medal in Paris, Ko became the British Golf Open champion earlier this week.
Her Olympic win was enough to win her a spot in the LPGA Hall of Fame, and the combined wins have seen her jump to number three in the latest world golf rankings.
Ko, 27, told RNZ's First Up programme the past few weeks were like a dream but haven't changed her thoughts on retirement.
"I know for a fact I'm probably never playing past 30. And you know what has happened in the last few weeks doesn't change the my I think timeline of things."
The exact timing was an ongoing discussion with her family, she said.
"I still need to keep thinking more about (it) because it is a big one... I want to leave the game while I'm still playing well.
"I want to leave it still feeling like maybe I could have done more and still with the love of the game."
Lydia Ko poses with the trophy after winning the 2024 Women's British Open Golf Championship. Photo: AFP
It was eight years since Ko last won a major. She said her life had changed a lot in that time.
"I got married to an amazing person that, you know, now that I can call my husband. And and I'm a dog mum. Just so you know, so many crazy things on and off the golf course."
Ko said 2023 was her worst ever golf season and it was hard to come back from that low.
"I'm definitely the type where I kind of sit on my feelings and all that and not always super vocal about, I guess about, you know what I'm going through, but my family has always been there for me, and especially my sister."
Gold medallist Lydia Ko celebrates on the podium after the women's golf event at the Paris Olympics. Photo: AFP/PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU
And meeting her husband had helped to realise golf was only a part of her, she said.
"To know that golf doesn't complete me golf, it's just part of me, but that's not like me as a whole."
But for now, there's still several months of golf left to see out this season.
Then "hopefully" she'll get to make a trip home to New Zealand for a visit.
Related Stories
- Lydia Ko rockets up world rankings
Lydia Ko rockets up world rankings
27 Aug 2024
New British Open champion Lydia Ko has jumped nine places in the latest world golf rankings.
- Lydia Ko wins women's British Open at St Andrews
$2m payday as Lydia Ko wins women's British Open
26 Aug 2024
The Olympic champion has clinched her third major title after going into the final round three shots off the leaders. Audio
- Olympics 2024: Lydia Ko takes gold in Paris, qualifies for LPGA Hall of Fame
Lydia Ko takes Olympic gold, qualifies for LPGA Hall of Fame
11 Aug 2024
A double bogey on the 13th hole was the only major upset for the now-triple medallist as she hunted down the win.
Sport
- NRL: Shaun Johnson's genius sinks Sharks in Warriors legend's swansong
- NRL recap: Warriors claim victory over Sharks in Shaun Johnson's final game
- Defending champion Djokovic knocked out of US Open third round
Top News stories
- Why are more adults living with their parents?
- Weather: Storms, lightning and heavy rain dampen weekend
- NRL: Shaun Johnson's genius sinks Sharks in Warriors legend's swansong
- Outcry after hospital denies new mums toast and tea after labour
- Is New Zealand pulling its weight on climate change in the Pacific?
Live sport
We have regular online commentary of local and international sport.