
Beware the injured golfer? Well, not quite. In Charley Hullâs case, that old adage needs to be changed to the sick golfer.
Ahead of this weekâs ISPS Handa Womenâs Scottish Open at Dundonald Links, Hull went into so much detail about her recent virus, the golf writers couldâve scribbled an authoritative essay on the subject for a medical journal.
It was no laughing matter, of course. The effects of her ailment caused her to collapse during the opening round of the Amundi Evian Championship earlier this month and led to her withdrawal from the womenâs major.
Cold sweats, aching joints, dizziness, a temperature that was through the roof, low blood pressure? You name it, Hull had it.
âI was on my 12th hole and in the bunker and I had to sit down for a minute because my eyesight went and my hearing went,â explained the 29-year-old.
âI got up, hit my bunker shot, finished the hole then walked to the next tee. I called the medics and before I hit my tee shot, my knees gave way and I collapsed.
âI got back up, hit my shot then walked off the tee and I donât really remember anything after that. My caddie said my eyes rolled to the back of my head and I was out for over a minute.
âEvery time I stood up, I fainted. It was scary. A security guard and the medic caught me just before I was about to hit my head on a concrete slab. Thatâs why I had to get stretchered out.â
Hull finished first day under par
Hull looked in reasonable fettle as she blethered away to the media at Dundonald although the Solheim Cup mainstay reckons sheâs still only â80 percentâ fit. She was good enough to post a 1-under 71 in the opening round of play.
âIâll take my time out there this week,â added Hull, who finished fifth at Dundonald 12 months ago. âYou probably won’t see me strolling 30 yards ahead of everyone like I usually do. Iâll probably be 30 yards behind everyone, but I’ll get it done.
âItâs been a bit frustrating. I was practising last week, and it felt like all the feelings had gone out of my swing.
“The best way to describe it would be like when you have a hangover and the next day your hand-eye coordination is out.â
Being devout disciples of the temperance movement, the golf scribes wouldnât know anything about that, Charley.
Anyway, Hull is here and ready for an assault in a domestic showpiece that has attracted another terrific field.
Nelly Korda is two off the lead after Day 1
The lineup is headlined by the world No 1, Nelly Korda, who is competing in the Womenâs Scottish Open for the first time.
A warm welcome? âIâm cold,â shivered the Florida resident with a wry smile. Or was it a grimace?
After a barnstorming 2024 campaign, which saw her win seven times during a glory-laden campaign, Korda is still seeking a breakthrough this season.
âObviously, I wouldâve loved to have lifted a couple of trophies by now,â said Korda, who has two seconds in 2025 including a joint runner-up finish at the U.S. Womenâs Open.
âBut it’s golf. You never know what’s going to happen.â
Korda is only 26 but has been out on the tour for almost a decade. Sheâs not quite ready for the senior circuit, but the years do hurtle by. Korda posted a 4-under 68 in the opening round, and she’s right in the thick of things, two strokes behind leader Charlotte Laffar.
âI definitely feel like a bit of a veteran out here,â added the two-time major champion. âI see some girls who are born in 2004, 2003 and I’m like, âoh, my goshâ.
âBut I’m still enjoying it as much as I was in my rookie year.â
#LPGAs #Charley #Hull #Evian #illness