It’s an early wedding gift as she now prepares to marry her fiancé in Korea during the off-season.
“I couldn’t have drawn it up any better. There’s been so many exciting things going on in my life. It will my last win as a single lady,” she joked.
“This has been of the most consistent and solid years I’ve had. I’m excited my photo of winning here in 2014 with the glasses can get updated this year with the blue jacket,” Ko added referring to the new blue jacket which follows the tradition of the Masters men’s tournament where the winner gets the green jacket.
The US$2 million prize took her season earnings to just over US$4.3 million ($NZ6.99m), leaving her US$591 short of the Lorena Ochoa’s record for single-season earnings set in 2007. Ko clinched the points-based award for LPGA player of the year for the second time, and she won the Vare Trophy for the second straight year for having the lowest scoring average.
Player of the year and the Vare Trophy are each worth one point, along with the victory, giving her 25 points toward the 27 points needed for the LPGA Hall of Fame.
The 25-year-old Kiwi, tied with Maguire at the start of the final round, took her first lead with a birdie on the par-3 eighth hole. Ko still led by one shot when she hit her tee shot just short of the flag on the par-3 16th and made the 7-foot birdie putt.
Ko two-putted from 25 feet for birdie on the par-5 17th to keep her lead at two shots going to the final hole, and she played it safe from there.
Ko finished at 17-under 271 and won the LPGA Tour finale for the second time. Her first title in the CME Group Tour Championship was in 2014 when she was 17 and already becoming a dominant figure in women’s golf.
Ko is on the verge of the LPGA Hall of Fame at age 25, a testament to how good she has been for so long.
“I’m glad the photo I won in 2014 with my glasses can be updated,” Ko said.
She ends the year with three victories — her first multiple-win season since 2016 — and had nine other finishes in the top five.
Maguire’s hopes began to fade when she hit a fairway metal so thin on the par-5 14th that it didn’t cross the hazard. She took a penalty drop, still couldn’t get to the green into the strong wind and had to get up-and-down with a wedge to salvage bogey.
Ko, however, hit her second shot off the side of a hill and into the hazard, and she also made bogey to keep the lead at one shot.
Maguire shot 72 to finish second. That was worth US$550,000 from the US$7 million purse. Anna Nordqvist had a 67 to finish third.
Ko now has 19 career victories — the first one was 10 years ago in Canada when she was a 15-year-old amateur, making her the youngest to win an LPGA Tour event.
“I felt more calmer than I thought I would be which was more worrying,” Ko said after her victory.
“There was a lot of things on the line today. I wanted to play the best golf I could today and there was so many big names chasing Leona and I. I knew it would be a tough battle, especially with the conditions as well.”
Ko previously won the season-ending event in 2014 and her last player of the year award came a year later. It caps off an impressive comeback to the top after struggling with form and going without a win for almost three years before claiming the Lotte Championship last April.