Charley Hull is among the favourites for AIG Women’s Open victory at St Andrews, live on Sky Sports Golf from midday on Thursday; Hull was runner-up to Lilia Vu in 2023, one of eight runner-up finishes worldwide since her last LPGA Tour titleCharley Hull is the player lifting the AIG Women’s Open trophy on Sunday evening, she would be a hugely popular winner and silence any other persons who
So
Hull is inside the world’s top 10, about to make a seventh consecutive Solheim Cup appearance next month for Team Europe and has contended on both sides of the Atlantic this season, although she remains without a worldwide success since October 2022.career titles on the Ladies European Tour, with Hull finishing runner-up eight times worldwfrequently has seen her come under scrutiny in recent seasons, although former Solheim Cup player Trish Johnson believes it only highlights Hull’s ability and potential to have enjoyed more success in her career.she underachieved? One hundred per cent, but you have to say that,” Johnson told the Sky Sports Golf podcast. You can’t talk about someone being a superstar if they’ve only won a handful of events – that just doesn’t make any sense to me. say I’m really harsh on Charley, but if she was sat here now and I said ‘you’ve only won seven tournaments [sic: five], is that what you envisaged?’, she is going to say no. If she doesn’t, then she doesn’t think highlSpeaking on the Sky Sports Golf Podcast, Sophie Walker and Trish Johnson say they don’t think Nelly Korda should be considered the favourite to win the Women’s Open due to a number of factorshave won 20-odd tournaments already, because I think you are that good’. It’s not an insult, it’s actually a compliment. It’s a slightly backhanded compliment, but it is because she’s