Dame Lydia Ko says another Olympics is not on her radar
Photo:
CARMEN MANDATO / AFP
Dame Lydia Ko has again hinted that retirement may not to be too far away with the 2028 LA Olympics not on her radar.
Ko lines up in this week's PGA Championship in Texas hoping to fulfil one of her dreams, completing a career Grand Slam.
She won the British Open two week's after her Olympic success last year to add her third major title.
Victory at either the PGA Championship or the US Open would give her that honour.
The 28-year-old said after her golden run in 2024 that
her plan remains to retire within three years.
Following the recent success of Ryan Fox on the PGA Tour, Ko was this week asked if she would like to team up with him in the new mixed-team competition at the Los Angeles Olympics.
"In Paris we were both like this is probably our last Olympics," Ko said.
"I think it's a really fun format to have, but I think it's very unlikely that I will be competing in that one."
Ko, who completed her Olympic set of medals with gold in Paris last year, thinks that golf has been on the Olympic programme long enough now for it to be changed up.
"I think it's a great way to integrate the sport.
"I'm excited to see it (mixed teams), whether I play in it or not is not really the big thing."
The big thing now for Ko though is another major title.
She feels that she has a PGA Championship victory in her.
"The PGA Championship is the one that I could-should win, like the type of golf courses we play."
Seven women have completed career grand slam, the last was Inbee Park in 2015.
New Zealand golfer Dame Lydia Ko.
Photo:
Ken Murray/Icon Sportswire/Photosport
Ko admitted she probably shouldn't have won the British Open last year, so to do that means anything is possible.
"That is where I had not the best record going into St Andrews last year and especially coming off the Olympics, so if I made the impossible possible.
"I feel like if I'm playing good golf and I'm smart and committed then hopefully I can give myself opportunities.
"I'm enjoying playing a lot more these days and that just puts me in a better mindset."
Ko became the youngest player to win on the LPGA Tour claiming the Canadian Open as a 15-year-old amateur in 2012.
She turned pro in 2014 and has now won 23 times on the LPGA Tour and 15 times in other parts of the world.
Her major victories were the 2015 Evian Championship, the 2016 Chevron Championship and the 2024 British Open.
She finished second at the 2016 PGA Championships and tied for third at the 2016 US Open.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Black Caps crush Zimbabwe by nine wickets in first test
New Zealand's Matt Henry celebrates a wicket, Basin Reserve, 2024. Photo: PHOTOSPORT New Zealand won the first test against Zimbabwe inside three days, securing victory at the Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo by nine wickets after skittling out the hosts a second time. Stand-in skipper Mitchell Santner took four wickets as Zimbabwe were dismissed for 165 runs in their second innings after being 31-2 overnight, leaving New Zealand needing only eight runs in their second innings to win the test. They achieved the target in 14 balls but not before opener Devon Conway was bowled in the first over by Newman Nyamburi for four. Henry Nicholls hit the winning run in the third over after tea on the third day to see the tourists go 1-0 up in the two-test series. Zimbabwe started the day with hopes of wiping out a 158-run first innings deficit and setting a tough target for New Zealand to chase but they were always up against it, even if the tourists were two bowlers short. All-rounder Nathan Smith suffered an abdominal strain on the second day and then Will O'Rourke did not bowl after lunch on Friday because of stiffness in his back. Zimbabwe added only three runs to their overnight score before Nick Welch was caught behind off O'Rourke and by lunch Zimbabwe were tottering on 114-6, still 44 runs adrift. They had by then lost leading scorer Sean Williams, who tickled the ball down leg to be caught behind for 49, and captain Craig Ervine, who got a feint edge to Matt Henry and was out for 22. Henry, who took 6-39 in the first innings, persisted as the lone pace man after lunch and dismissed Zimbabwe's last recognised batsman Sikandar Raza cheaply to ensure a nine-wicket match haul. Photo: PHOTOSPORT Santner, captaining the Kiwis for the first time in the absence of the injured Tom Latham, mopped up the tail as he took the last three wickets for figures of 4-27 off 17.1 overs. Henry took 3-51 in the second innings and O'Rourke 3-28 off 10 overs before his injury. Zimbabwe won the toss on the first day on Wednesday and, after electing to bat, scored 149 with New Zealand getting 307-9 in reply in their first innings. The second test will also be played in Bulawayo, starting next Thursday. - Reuters

RNZ News
3 hours ago
- RNZ News
The battle to get netball on TV: How did it come to this?
The Tactix celebrate winning the 2025 ANZ Premiership. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ Analysis - How has New Zealand's top netball competition gone from attracting millions in broadcast rights, to having to fork out some of its own money to get it on TV? Just six years ago the Silver Ferns were on top of the world after beating Australia in the final to win the 2019 Netball World Cup. Fast-forward, and the national body finally secured a broadcast deal this week for next year's ANZ Premiership, following months of drawn-out negotiations. Sky Sport had been the major broadcast partner since 2008, but the national body is going back to TVNZ - marking the return of the sport on free-to-air television. RNZ understands that Sky TVs offer was so much lower than any of its previous deals, that Netball New Zealand didn't actually have too much to lose in rolling the dice. The new broadcast deal does not include rights for Silver Ferns matches - Netball New Zealand is still looking for a home for Test netball from 2026. How much TVNZ are actually paying for the rights, if any, won't be disclosed but it seems inevitable that players will face pay cuts. Netball NZ is taking a calculated risk that a bigger TV audience will draw more commercial revenue to make up for a massive shortfall in broadcast revenue. The one-year agreement also buys Netball New Zealand some time if it wants to explore joining the Australian league from 2027 in some capacity. It feels like netball is back where it was in 2007 before the dawn of the semi-professional trans-Tasman competition, which promised so much. But at least then the country's best players were still playing in New Zealand. Next year, nearly half the Silver Ferns could be playing in Australia. Netball World Cup 2019 winners. Photo: © (t/a Photography Hub Ltd) Netball New Zealand's stocks were high following the Silver Ferns' victory at the 2019 World Cup. When Spark emerged as a player in the sports broadcast market in 2019, Sky quickly locked down the netball rights until the end of 2024, despite having two years to run on the existing deal. In 2023 Spark Sport came to an end and Sky has had no real competition since. Tougher economic times means a lot of sports are now looking over their shoulder. Talks over a new broadcast deal between New Zealand Rugby and Sky have dragged on for months. Sky Television's profits have taken a hit , and they are tightening their belts. Sky Sport's 2025 ANZ Premiership broadcast looked a little different to previous years. The weekly Netball Zone programme was dropped, one on-site host fronted regular season games instead of two, and remote commentary was used for four of the matches. White Fern Amelia Kerr is now one of the most recognised sports personalities in NZ. Photo: Photosport Recent years have seen a surge in the popularity of women's sport globally and it's not really netball's fault that this has happened - it was always going to. As traditionally male dominated sports have invested more in their women's programmes, it's helped increase the profile of codes like of women's cricket and rugby. Netball used to be essential in Sky Sports' line-up because it was the only female sport it would broadcast on a regular basis. Women's rugby gets far more coverage on Sky than it used to, including Super Rugby Aupiki, the Farah Palmer Cup, the Black Ferns, and sevens. The same goes for women's cricket and next year will see the return to Sky of the White Ferns playing domestically. Sky also broadcasts the New Zealand women's basketball league, rugby league's NRLW, and football's A-League women's competition. And if Sky want the rights to All Blacks and Black Caps matches, New Zealand Rugby and New Zealand Cricket can leverage that to get better coverage for their women. Sky TV's Anna Stanley and Anna Harrison. Photo: PHOTOSPORT When Australian Diamonds sides used to tour New Zealand, they would be jealous of the level of media coverage the Silver Ferns got. But former Diamonds coach Lisa Alexander told RNZ earlier this year that she had noticed a shift. "There was so much more coverage in New Zealand [back then] and I think you've taken it for granted to be quite honest because it's really hard to get it back," Alexander said. "In Australia we are fighting very very hard to have our slice of the media pie and it's still very tough …but I'm now a columnist, I write about netball - I wouldn't have dreamed of that 10 years ago." It probably took Netball NZ too long to recognise that with more female sports vying for eyeballs, it had to actively generate more intrigue in its showpiece competition. A concerted effort to attract top-tier quality import players to the ANZ Premiership from the start would have helped it compete with the Australian league. But a one import player per team limit and a lack of ambition in targeting a pool of top talent, meant that ship sailed a long time ago. NZ Prime Minister Helen Clark and players at the launch of the ground-breaking ANZ Championship, March 2008. Photo: James Ensing-Trussell Oh how the tables have turned. Between 2008 and 2016, revenue generated from New Zealand propped up the former trans-Tasman ANZ Championship. Broadcast revenue from Sky was divvied up equally among the franchises on both sides of the Tasman to cover the salary cap. But after banking more than $10 million from Sky for eight years, eventually Australia didn't need New Zealand anymore. Netball Australia finally started carrying some clout with their broadcasters and secured a paid broadcast deal for the first time. Australia's Suncorp Super Netball (SSN) competition struggles to break even, but crowds and viewership have been growing and the SSN pays the highest salaries of any league. England Netball launched a new-look Netball Super League (NSL) this year, marking a significant step towards professionalism. For the first time all games were available to watch, and the average salary increased by at least 60 percent. New Zealand was a couple of decades ahead of the curve when TVNZ started broadcasting netball regularly from the 1980's. It's only been in the last few years that other countries finally figured out that broadcasting women's sport is actually pretty cool. Any novelty factor has long gone in New Zealand, but England Netball and Netball Australia are riding that wave of momentum - and they operate in bigger economies. Kelly Jackson Photo: PHOTOSPORT It would be easy to conclude that the quality of the ANZ Premiership must be declining, that less people are playing netball, and viewership is dwindling - but that's not the case. Netball NZ said this year's domestic competition saw record-breaking crowds. Its 2024 annual report described last year's ANZ Premiership as the most popular season yet and that viewership was up over 1.7 million viewers - "another large increase year-on-year for the competition." It reported a 50 percent increase in ANZ Premiership viewership and over 35 percent increase in Constellation Cup audience in New Zealand. Silver Fern defender Kelly Jackson said the country's top netballers were still among the best in the world. "I think the hardest part of all to accept in these troubling times is that the product we are putting out on court is still to a really high standard and that's not being reflected in what's going on," Jackson said. The Silver Ferns beat Australia 3-1 in the Constellation Cup last year, suggesting the ANZ Premiership can't be too bad. Players' Association boss Steph Bond said participation rates were still miles ahead of other female sports. "The community game is still growing … there is definitely the fans and the people that are supporting the game just at this point in time we don't seem to be able to be getting that turned into dollars and making that a difference at that level," Bond said. The National Bank Cup final in Invercargill, 2005. The Southern Sting had a huge fanbase. Photo: Richard Jones Netball New Zealand's move to free-to-air might see some short-term pain for long-term gain. No longer will people miss out on watching the domestic competition because they can't afford a Sky subscription. In the 1980s, 90s, and 2000s most budding young netballers would have been able to name every member of the Silver Ferns and that helped netball hold its own against male codes. In 2024, Netball NZ trialled free-to-air coverage of the ANZ Premiership, and this year Saturday games were screened exclusively on TVNZ. If fans are the bedrock of professional sport then opening up the sport to more of them could ultimately pay off for Netball New Zealand. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


Otago Daily Times
3 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
Deans finishes with personal best
Caitlin Deans (right), alongside Australian Moesha Johnson, looks at the board after the 800m freestyle at the world championships in Singapore yesterday. PHOTO: SUPPLIED Saving the best for last. Dunedin swimmer Caitlin Deans wrapped up an admirable world championships in Singapore with a top 10 finish and a personal best in the women's 800m freestyle yesterday. The Neptune swimmer touched the wall in 8min28.72sec in a big personal best, lowering the time of 8min29.3sec she set at the national championships earlier this year. Deans finished 10th overall in the 800m discipline after being drawn in a stacked heat against United States great Katie Ledecky, Australian Lani Pallister and German Isabel Gose, who are in the top four seeds for the final. Former Dunedin swimmer Erika Fairweather, also in the same heat as Deans, qualified sixth for tonight's final in 8min22.22sec. Earlier in the week, Deans, who represented New Zealand at the Paris Olympics, finished 13th in the women's 1500m freestyle in 16min13.16sec. Kiwis Zoe Pedersen and Laura Quilter, returning internationally for the first time since 2014, finished 24th and 29th respectively in the women's 50m butterfly. Lewis Clareburt. PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Olympian Lewis Clareburt set a New Zealand record on his way to finishing fifth in the men's 200m IM on Thursday. Clareburt collected his second personal best of the championships when he touched the wall in 1min57.06sec, lowering the previous record of 1min57.27sec from the Tokyo Olympics. French swimmer Leon Marchand, who set a world record in the distance during the semifinals, won gold in 1min53.68sec. Shaine Casas, of the United States, was second and Hungary's Hubert Cos won bronze. Quilter is back in the pool in the women's 50m freestyle heats and Andrew Jeffcoat and Finn Harland are in the men's 50m backstroke heats today. Fairweather will race in her final tonight and Clareburt will be out to defend his title in the men's 400m IM tomorrow.