Ko, a former world number-one, won three times in 2022 but was winless last year. In 20 starts, she had only two top-10 finishes, and she didn’t even qualify to defend her Tour Championship title.
Success, and winning, seemed a distant memory that was fading quickly.
“It’s crazy, because when you’re not performing well, you wonder if you’re ever going to perform well,” Ko said. “It’s not just one round, but they keep adding up. As much as you sometimes try to brush it off and say it’s only golf ... like, I dream about golf. I dream about missing my tee time. That’s how much golf is — knock on wood that never happens — but that’s how much it means to me.”
On Saturday, Ko — who lives at Lake Nona — took advantage with birdies on two early par-fives and on the short par-four 14th, where she got up and down from a greenside bunker.
Pano recorded her first bogey-free round on the LPGA Tour. She was between clubs on several approach shots and wasn’t coming up with the right solutions. Fortunately, her short game saved her.
Pano won for the first time in 2023, capturing the ISPS Handa World Invitational in Ireland in a playoff on her 19th birthday. Already, there is a big difference between this season and last for the teenager from Massachusetts.
As a rookie, Pano wasn’t in the biggest events. As an LPGA winner, she gets to play this week and in all the majors this year. And she found a way to post an impressive score Saturday without her best ball-striking.
“I did work very hard this off-season, and I think it’s just showing up this week,” Pano said. “It’s a course that I’m a little bit familiar with as well. The energy just feels good this week.”
Defending champion Brooke Henderson (71) was tied for seventh, six shots behind.
In the 48-player celebrity division, former NHL standout Jeremy Roenick took a two-point lead in the modified Stableford format. Competing alongside Ko and Furue in the final group, Roenick caught LPGA great Annika Sorenstam on the back nine to take the lead.
“Everything is about staying composed, and when I played hockey, I wasn’t so composed,” Roenick said. “It’s kind of a new thing for me, but we’re good. I’m happy with where I am. I battled really hard. I think I did some pretty good things today that I had never done on the golf course, which I think is really going to help me tomorrow.”
Sorenstam and former major league pitcher Derek Lowe are tied for second among the celebrities. Lowe defeated Sorenstam in a playoff two years ago.