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Asian Tour
SportGolf

Asian Tour: Hong Kong golfer Taichi Kho’s journey continues, next stop the PIF Saudi International

  • Kho will compete alongside the likes of Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau and Sergio Garcia
  • The Hongkonger, who is in his last year of college at Notre Dame, is looking to learn everything he can from week ahead

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Hong Kong’s Thaichi Kho will be up against some of the best in the world at the PIF Saudi International. Photo: Instagram/@tk_1_
Josh Ball

Taichi Kho returns to the Arabian Peninsular this week for the next stop on his golfing journey at the star-studded PIF Saudi International, believing he can compete against the best in the world.

Kho, who is in his final year of college at Notre Dame, will be in a field alongside the likes of Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Sergio Garcia and Lee Westwood in the Asian Tour’s first event of the 2022 season.

And the world’s best, drawn by the promise of a US$5 million prize fund, will present a far stiffer challenge than on Kho’s previous visit to the region in November, when he was second at the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship in Dubai.

Taichi Kho takes a selfie with winner Keita Nakajima after the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship. Photo: AAC
Taichi Kho takes a selfie with winner Keita Nakajima after the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship. Photo: AAC

Still, the Hongkonger remains undaunted by the week ahead and is looking to just enjoy the experience at the Royal Greens Golf & Country Club in King Abdullah Economic City.

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“I’m going against some of the best professionals in the world and I’m not ignoring who’s playing,” Kho said. “I saw the field list, I saw the invites, and they’re all obviously very good players. But at the end of the day I’m still going through my own journey and I want to experience it myself and go through the journey by myself, and just kind of learn from every week.

“So, I might have a great week, I might not, but either way, I know, I’m going to come out of Saudi a better player and that’s the main goal. I think in terms of the confidence and belief for me to compete against those guys, I definitely have it.”

That confidence in his game has grown through his time as a member of The Fighting Irish, and was further boosted by his showing three months ago when he took Japan’s Keita Nakajima, the world’s top amateur, to a playoff at Dubai Creek Golf and Yacht Club.

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