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4 Essential Golf Tips From Jeeno Thitikul, Nelly Korda, Brooke Henderson & Minjee Lee

By Brendon Elliott, PGA
Published on

The leaderboard at the CME Group Tour Championship tells a story that goes beyond scores and prize money.
After two rounds in Naples, Florida, we're watching four of the world's finest players demonstrate what separates good golf from great golf. And here's the thing: the lessons they're teaching us aren't reserved for tour professionals.
Let's break down what Jeeno Thitikul, Nelly Korda, Brooke Henderson, and Minjee Lee are showing us this week, and more importantly, how you can apply their strengths to your own game.
Jeeno Thitikul: The Power of Precision Over Distance
Leading at 14-under par, Jeeno is putting on a ball-striking clinic. But here's what caught my eye: she's hitting 93% of her fairways (26 of 28) while averaging 275 yards off the tee. That's not the longest distance out there, yet she's three shots clear of the field.
The Tip: Master Your Personal Power Zone
Jeeno isn't trying to be the longest hitter. She's found her optimal swing speed where she maintains complete control while still generating plenty of distance. This is what I call your "personal power zone," and it's one of the most underutilized concepts in amateur golf.
What It Helps: Finding your power zone improves accuracy and consistency, and, ironically, often increases your effective distance because you're hitting more fairways and better lies.
Why It Works: When you swing at 85-90% of your maximum effort instead of 100%, you maintain better balance, tempo, and face control. Your body can repeat the motion more reliably, and your mind stays calmer throughout the swing.
How to Start: On the range, hit a dozen drives at what feels like 75% effort. Note your carry distance. Then hit a dozen at 90% effort. Compare not just distance, but dispersion pattern. Most players find their sweet spot around 85-87% effort, where they lose only 5-10 yards but gain 50% more fairways. That's your power zone. Practice living there.
Nelly Korda: The Fairway Finder's Advantage
Nelly matched Jeeno's fairway accuracy in round two, going 14 for 14, and she's done it while averaging 283 yards. At nine-under and tied for fifth, she's proving that when you eliminate one side of the golf course, scoring becomes significantly easier.
The Tip: Commit to Your Stock Shot Shape
Nelly knows her ball flight and trusts it completely. She's not trying to hit different shapes on every hole. She's playing her reliable pattern and aiming accordingly.
What It Helps: This approach reduces decision-making stress, simplifies course management, and builds the kind of confidence that shows up under pressure.
Why It Works: Your brain and body can groove one swing pattern far more effectively than trying to hit multiple shapes. When you know your ball is going to move a certain way, you can aim with conviction and swing without doubt.
How to Start: Spend three range sessions hitting only your natural shot shape. If you fade it, fade every shot. Don't fight your pattern. Learn exactly how much it curves with each club. Then on the course, aim for that shape and trust it. Give yourself a month of this commitment, and watch your fairways hit percentage climb.
Brooke Henderson: The Short Game Separator
Brooke's sitting at nine-under, and while her driving distance average of 267 yards is the shortest among these four players, she's making up for it where it counts. She went 14 for 14 in fairways in round two and has hit 96% of her fairways overall (27 of 28). She’s also hit 30/36 greens in regulation. Here's the kicker: she's converted on all but one of her 6 up and down opportunities, that's an 83% scrambling clip. Pretty solid.
The Tip: Practice Scrambling Like Your Round Depends On It
Brooke understands that perfect ball-striking is a myth. What matters is recovering brilliantly when things go sideways.
What It Helps: A strong short game transforms bogey holes into par saves and par holes into birdie opportunities. It's the fastest way to lower your scores without changing your swing.
Why It Works: While the long game accounts for the majority of scoring differences between golfers, a strong short game acts as a crucial safety net that prevents round-killing double and triple bogeys. Even great players miss 5-7 greens per round, and your ability to scramble in those moments keeps big numbers off your scorecard and maintains momentum when your ball-striking isn't sharp.
How to Start: Create a "scrambling circuit" at your practice facility. Drop three balls in different challenging spots around one green: thick rough, a bunker, and a tight lie. You must get up and down with at least two of the three balls before moving to the next green. Do this for 30 minutes twice a week. Your confidence around the greens will skyrocket.
Minjee Lee: The Green (and Pin) Reading Genius
Minjee is also nine-under and has been absolutely surgical with her iron play, hitting 89% of greens in regulation (32 of 36). When you're giving yourself that many birdie looks, you're going to score.
The Tip: Prioritize Green Center Over Pin Hunting
Minjee's GIR percentage tells us she's not always firing at flags. She's playing to the fat part of greens and trusting her putting.
What It Helps: This strategy reduces three-putts, eliminates short-sided disasters, and actually creates more birdie opportunities because you're putting from the green instead of chipping from the rough.
Why It Works: The difference between a 25-foot putt from the center of the green and a 15-foot putt from a tucked pin location is minimal in terms of birdie percentage for most golfers. But the difference between being on the green versus short-sided in rough is massive.
How to Start: For the next five rounds, ignore every pin position. Aim for the center of every green. Track your GIR percentage and your average putts per GIR. Compare it to your previous five rounds. I'm willing to bet you'll see improvement in both categories, and your scores will drop.
The Common Thread
What ties these four players together isn't just talent. It's intelligent, strategic golf. They've each identified their strengths and built their games around maximizing those advantages while minimizing weaknesses.
You can do the same thing. Pick one of these four tips and commit to it for the next month. Don't try to overhaul everything at once. Just choose the area that resonates most with your game and get to work.
That's how champions are built, one smart decision at a time.

PGA of America Golf Professional Brendon Elliott is an award-winning coach and golf writer. Read his recent “Playing Through” on R.org and his stories on Athlon Sports. To stay updated on his latest work, sign up for his newsletter and visit OneMoreRollGolf.com