
HOUSTON — Nelly Korda has been free and easy all week. With all facets of her game firing, the World No. 2 ripped apart Memorial Park en route to a six-shot lead at the 36-hole mark of the year’s first major.
Korda’s lead grew to eight early on Saturday, and it looked like a lengthy coronation was in store at the Chevron Championship. But as often happens at major championships, the heat rises — literally in Texas — and the pressure mounts as the gravity of the moment comes into focus. Korda made a sloppy bogey at the par-5 eighth and then missed short putts on 13 and 14 — one for birdie and one for par — that left her stewing as she marched to the 15th tee.
The World No. 2 striped her tee shot right over the flag and flashed a smile, but her longtime caddie, Jason McDede, was already giving Korda an earful as they walked to the green.
“He was just telling me to stay in it,” Korda said after her round. “Got a lot more golf left to play.”
Korda changed her mentality after a winless 2025. Her focus has been on staying positive and believing that no matter what spot she finds herself in, her game will win the day. That’s much easier to do early in the week when your lead is growing, and your game feels unstoppable. But when the major championship pressure truly arrives on the weekend, your lead is shrinking and your putter failing you, that requires mental strength. Korda said she felt her focus wavering as she mis-hit key putts on the back nine, and she needed to recalibrate so it didn’t bleed into other parts of her game. Her lead had shrunk from eight to six to five, and the putts that had been ticketed for the center of the cup all week were diving left and right as they approached the cup.
“I’m learning so much about myself,” Korda said, noting that she just wanted to keep giving herself birdies looks even if they didn’t fall. “I was still trying my best, and at the end of the day, that’s all I can control. I want to try my best and execute to the best of my ability. I can’t be frustrated with anything but that.”
Nelly Korda understands what Sunday means. For all of her world-beating talent, Korda has just two major titles to her name. It’s a stunning number for someone who has been far and away the best player in women’s golf for the last few years. Korda won the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship in 2021 and added the Chevron in 2024. But her last few major memories, when she has truly been in contention, have left her only with scars. She stumbled in the final round of the 2024 AIG Women’s Open and lost to Lydia Ko, and was unable to run down Maja Stark at last year’s U.S. Women’s Open.
She’s still waiting on No. 3.
“This is why we do it, right, to be in contention on major championship Sunday?” Korda said on Saturday after shooting a third-round 2-under 70.
The gravity of Sunday is clear for Nelly Korda. She spent 41 holes tearing this course apart while building a massive lead. That leaves her with only two potential outcomes.
Door No. 1 sees Nelly Korda put the pedal down and run through the finish line, announcing that, after a frustrating season, she’s back as the major killer and unquestioned best player in the world. That would launch her back to No. 1 in the world and set off a hype train leading toward the U.S. Women’s Open at Riviera, the one major that Korda holds above all else. Door No. 2 has Nelly Korda stumble on Sunday, watching a massive lead evaporate in what would be a crushing collapse.
“I’m just going to focus on myself, kind of work on my process, really dial into that, make sure that I have tunnel vision, and not really focus on the exterior noise,” Korda said of how she’ll approach a massive Sunday.
The correlations between Korda’s Chevron week and Rory McIlroy’s Masters week have been notable. Both fan favorites and tour megastars built tournament record six-shot leads over 36 holes. McIlroy watched his disappear by the 13th hole on that Saturday at Augusta National. Afterward, he went to the range and beat balls, trying to fix what ailed his swing. Korda said she didn’t watch any of McIlroy’s Masters, and how he let everyone else back into it before triumphing on Sunday. While her lead didn’t dissolve on Saturday as McIlroy’s did, Korda kept her media session short Saturday and went to do the same as the two-time Masters champion. She immediately entered the practice putting green and dropped three balls with McDede watching every stroke. She moved around the cup, alternating from five feet to eight feet to 10 and longer. Each time she hit a putt, she’d look back at McDede, who was crouched watching her stroke and the contact, for feedback. A brief discussion about her motion ensued after a few long-range putts came up short. Then, Korda rolled a few more in the center and called it a day.
“At the end of the day, it’s a clean slate,” Korda said of Sunday. “I’m starting the day at zero.”
But on major championship Sundays, zero is miles away from the goal — from elation or heartbreak.
Nelly Korda has dominated this week in Houston. On Sunday, she’ll either become a three-time major champion or leave with major championship trauma that won’t be easy to flush.
Everything or devastation.






