Golf

Lydia Ko surges to 4-shot lead in bid to end winning drought

With two late birdies, Lydia Ko had a 3-under 68 and doubled her lead in the Marathon Classic, four shots ahead as the former No. 1 player goes for her first LPGA victory in two years.

Ko has gone 44 tournaments since her last win

Lydia Ko of New Zealand hits a shot on the second hole during the third round of the Marathon LPGA Classic at Highland Meadows Golf Club on Saturday. (Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

With two late birdies, Lydia Ko had a 3-under 68 and doubled her lead in the Marathon Classic, four shots ahead as the former No. 1 player goes for her first LPGA victory in two years.

Ko has gone 44 tournaments worldwide since her last victory.

Danielle Kang, who won last week at nearby Inverness Club, had a 70 and was four shots behind. Kang got within two shots of the lead with a birdie on the par-3 14th, but she bogeyed the next and picked up one birdie on the final two holes, both of them par 5s.

Ko, meanwhile, birdied the 16th and 17th and finished four ahead. Ko was at 16-under 197.

She had a one-shot lead going into the third round at Highland Meadows and seized control early, stretching her lead to three shots at the turn. Unlike the opening two rounds, when birdies were required to keep pace, this round was all about pars. Ko ran off nine straight pars until her big finish.

It was shaping up as a two-player race.

WATCH | Ko nearly gets an ace:

Lydia Ko maintains lead, nearly aces 2nd hole at the Marathon Classic

4 years ago
Duration 0:21
Lydia Ko almost aces the 2nd hole at the Marathon Classic while maintaining the lead by four strokes through three rounds.

Minjee Lee of Australia had a 68, while Jodi Ewart Shadoff, who started the round one shot behind, struggled to a 73. They were at 10-under 203, six shots behind.

Lexi Thompson also lost ground with a 73 and fell 12 shots back of Ko.

Alena Sharp of Hamilton, the lone Canadian to survive the cut, shot a 71 and sits at 3-under.

Ko was heralded as the future of the LPGA Tour when she won the Canadian Women's Open as a 15-year-old amateur. She was 17 when she first rose to No. 1 in the world, and she compiled 14 wins and two majors before turning 20.

But she has only one victory the past four years.

Ko is a two-time winner of the Marathon Classic. A third win could be just what she needs to get back on track.

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