Why Nelly Korda’s ‘unbelievable miss’ opinion is valuable | Weekend 9Nick Piastowski

Welcome! Where are you, you ask. I’m calling this the Weekend 9. Think of it as a spot to warm up for Friday, Saturday and Sunday. We’ll have thoughts. We’ll have tips. We’ll have tweets. But just nine in all, though sometimes maybe more and sometimes maybe less. As for who I am? The paragraphs below tell some of the story. I can be reached at nick.piastowski@golf.com.

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Nelly Korda spoke up.

And I can’t help but think that’ll be one of the LPGA’s moments of the year.

Korda’s thought had come in a story this week from meticulous Golfweek writer Beth Ann Nichols, and you can read the entire story here. Earlier this month, a women’s indoor simulator league was announced – the WTGL, which will be played much like TGL, the men’s simulator league that kicked off a year ago. And folks were excited. There’d be golf. There’d be exposure. All good things.

But Korda, in talking with Nichols this week, was upset.

The women, she said, should be playing with the men.

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“I have mixed feelings on it, if I’m being very honest,” Korda said, “and I’m surprised no other girls have, or no one’s really spoken out about it.

“I think it’s a huge and unbelievable miss that we’re not playing alongside the men. There’s no greater way to grow the game, and it would have been revolutionary. It would have been the first time, I think, that men and women are on the same playing field, playing for the same exact amount of money.

“But I also think it’s great that we are getting this opportunity, so that’s my mixed feelings.”

For what it’s worth, I agree, and I’ve previously thought that there should be a mixed Ryder Cup-style event. But for now, let’s put aside our opinions on her opinion.

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Because it’s the thought that counts.

A sincere thought. And expressing it.

That’s not from me, though. That’s from LPGA commish Craig Kessler. It was just a couple of months ago, at the LPGA’s season-ending event, where, amidst a series of questions about the LPGA’s growth, star building and attention creation, he said this:

“We compete in the attention economy. It’s not just against other sports. It’s: Should I put on Netflix, should I go out to dinner, should I hang out with friends, should I play in the backyard, should I go play a round of golf?

“Anything that has the potential to capture a fan’s attention, we are competing against that, so it’s our job to be differentiated, to be interesting, and capture fans’ minds in every way we possibly can.”

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Now, should Korda and other pros go all Talking Head or have their own Friday opinion piece on a golf website? No, of course not (though I’d happily take a week off). And there’s also the chance that Kessler and his team will meet every need of every LPGA pro. But probably not.

Think of the pros who have let you into their thinking the way Korda did. You notice. You saw the headline on Nichols’ story and you clicked. (A friendly reminder to do so, if you haven’t.) And you look for more. Maybe you stick around. Maybe while you’re there, you find something else that’s interesting.

And, all of a sudden, folks are talking about the LPGA like they do, say, the WNBA.

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Xander Schauffele of the United States plays his shot from the fifth tee during the pro-am prior to the Farmers Insurance Open 2026 at Torrey Pines South Course on January 28, 2026 in La Jolla, California.

Xander Schauffele of the United States plays his shot from the fifth tee during the pro-am prior to the Farmers Insurance Open 2026 at Torrey Pines South Course on January 28, 2026 in La Jolla, California.

None of this is all that painful, either.

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The truth doesn’t hurt, right?

“Again, no silver bullets to creating stars, and this is where it takes an ecosystem,” Kessler said last November. “Yesterday we had our partner meeting, and at the end they graciously asked, what can we do to help. We said two things: Raise your hand if you have ideas or a megaphone that you’re willing to share; and, two, make introductions to those who can also lean in and help.

“There are so many examples we can point to, whether it’s what Nelly did by going to the Met Gala or with Sports Illustrated or Charley [Hull] going to a state banquet in the UK or some of the recent things she’s done on social. I could take you through a variety of players and things that they have done to show up in culture, not just inside the ropes. Those things make a difference.

“We have done a massive piece of work on our fans. What do fans love and what do fans want to see more of. And one of the pieces of feedback we’re getting is that they want to see our LPGA athletes and stars show up outside the ropes.”

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Let’s see if we can find eight more items for the Weekend 9.

2. The video below was good, too.

Read the full article here

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