Korda's Bogey-Free Masterclass Delivers Mexico Domination

Back-to-Back Brilliance from the World's Best
If you thought Nelly Korda's five-shot demolition at the Chevron Championship last week was impressive, she just followed it up with another statement performance that had the rest of the LPGA Tour shaking their heads in disbelief.
The world number one cruised to a four-shot victory at the Riviera Maya Open at Mayakoba, Mexico, and here's the stat that'll make your jaw drop: she went 69 consecutive holes without making a bogey. That's not a typo. Sixty-nine holes of clean, precise, utterly dominant golf.
"I'm just enjoying myself and I love the competition. I love travelling to places like Mexico, all over the world. I'm just having fun," Korda said after posting a closing round of 69 to finish at 17-under par.
Fun? For her, maybe. For everyone else trying to catch her? Anything but.
A Wire-to-Wire Clinic
Korda's bogey-free streak began after she dropped a shot on the second hole of round one. From that point forward, she was absolutely immaculate, building a commanding lead that swelled to seven shots early in the final round.
Tournament organizers pushed up Sunday's start time to dodge incoming thunderstorms, but nothing could rain on Korda's parade. She controlled her ball, managed the El Camaleon Golf Course with surgical precision, and never gave her pursuers a sniff of hope.
Thailand's Arpichaya Yubol celebrated her 24th birthday with a final-round 70 to finish alone in second place at 13-under. Yu Liu of China carded a 69 to claim third at 12-under, while American Brigette Do rounded out the top four at 10-under.
The Streak Ends in Style
The only blemish came on the 72nd hole, when Korda's run finally ended with a bogey after finding the bushes and then a bunker. It prevented her from matching her largest LPGA Tour margin of victory, but honestly, who's complaining?
"Golf humbled me on the last hole and I made my first bogey on the weekend," Korda admitted with what I imagine was a slight grin. "Overall I'm so happy. I played some really good golf. You put in the work. Everyone out here puts in the work. Sometimes it works out."
Sometimes it works out? Nelly, you just won back-to-back events by a combined nine shots. I'd say it's working out just fine.
The International Chase
While Korda was busy rewriting record books, the international contingent showed strong form throughout the week:
- Maria Jose Marín of Colombia, playing as an amateur, finished at 8-under to tie for fifth
- Carlota Ciganda of Spain and England's Jodi Ewart Shadoff both finished at 7-under
- Sweden's Linn Grant came in at 4-under
- Local favorite Gaby Lopez of Mexico finished at 3-under to the delight of the home crowd
What's Driving This Run?
At 27 years old with three major championships, an Olympic gold medal from Tokyo, and now consecutive dominant victories, Korda is playing the best golf of her career at exactly the right time. Her ball-striking has been nothing short of elite, and her mental game appears unshakeable.
When you can go nearly four full rounds without a single blemish on your card, you're operating on a different level than the competition. The rest of the tour isn't playing poorly—Korda is simply playing that well.
The Takeaway
Nelly Korda is on an absolute tear, and there's no indication she's slowing down. Back-to-back victories following her Chevron Championship triumph have put the golfing world on notice: the world number one ranking isn't just a title, it's a statement of intent. When she's locked in like this, 69 bogey-free holes isn't a fluke—it's a warning shot. The only question now is how long this incredible run continues and who, if anyone, can step up to challenge her.

About the Author
Jack HartmanA keen golfer and huge fan of the game, Jack has been covering golf for the last five years. Bringing you all the latest coverage and news from the PGA, LIV, LPGA and DP World Tours, never before has golf been so popular and Jack can't wait to bring all the excitement to his readers.
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