LPGA Stars Join 3M Greats of Golf with Nicklaus, Player, and Irwin

After competing in the Greats of Golf scramble at the Insperity Invitational with a team that included Tony Jacklin, Tom Weiskopf, and David Graham, LPGA great Pat Bradley talked about the thrill it is for her to play with former PGA stars she rarely crossed paths with when she was winning on the LPGA Tour. She appreciates the game, the fans, volunteers, the fellow competitors, and what the sport has given her. #rolemodel

On the 18th hole on Saturday, she rolled in a birdie for the team that would give them one-stroke margin bragging rights over Team Nicklaus/Sorenstam. Sorenstam, Nancy Lopez, and Juli Inkster were the other LPGA players in the event.

Imagine that a small number of members at CCR didn’t want these classy players back in Rochester competing in the 2020 U.S. Senior Women’s Open. (I had suggested early in 2015 that CCR would be a great venue for the inaugural U.S. Senior Women’s Open event in 2018 due to the local golf history and the popularity of the LPGA here. However, the USGA staged it at Chicago Golf Club.) CCR last hosted the women at the 1973 U.S. Women’s Open, an event that seemed to propel the creation of the yearly LPGA stop at Locust Hill in 1977. A minority of CCR members voting against the 2020 Senior Open was truly a lose-lose-lose for the Rochester community, golf, and CCR. Snatching defeat from the jaws of victory…

Inaugural 2018 U.S. Women’s Senior Open: Flashback to One Year in the Struggle for Recognition

With the long-awaited inaugural U.S. Senior Women’s Open approaching in July, I thought I would dig up the column I wrote back in 2010 following that year’s Legends Tour Handa Cup in New Hampshire. The column, through my editor, developed into a call for the U.S. Senior Women’s Open to be inaugurated in golf fan-friendly Rochester. While the 2018 Open won’t be in Rochester, the Chicago Golf Club is a historic, fitting, and worthy venue. (The longtime Rochester LPGA event had just become a major in 2010, hosting the LPGA Championship amidst a year of economic turbulence for the LPGA. It would end in 2014 with the new 2015 Women’s PGA Championship traveling to a different venue each year and Wegmans dropping its sponsorship of the local, well-attended LPGA tournament after the event’s 38th year.)

 

 

Daily Record (Rochester, NY) (Dolan Media)
September 14, 2010
Commentary: Senior Women Deserve USGA Event … in Rochester
Michael Giuliano
In the world of professional golf, there is a very clear divide between the male players – who often look forward to turning 50 years old so as to qualify to play on the “Champions Tour,” i.e. the Senior PGA Tour, as it was known in less marketing-driven times – and the female LPGA players, who still largely wander in the wilderness once they reach that “certain age.”
Of course, it could be said that the division is more oddly jagged than that. In fact, the U.S. Golf Association holds U.S. Open Championships for male and female professionals (and qualifying amateurs) and U.S. Amateur Championships for men, womensenior men and senior women, among others. It also holds a U.S. Senior Open to cater to PGA professionals over 50 to determine the “national champion” of the birthyear-challenged crowd. There is no comparable event for senior professional women. They are left out in the cold.
Twenty-seven-time LPGA winner Jane Blalock – who won in Rochester in 1979 – founded the Legends Tour several years ago to give the female set its own professional events to play.
Over this past Labor Day weekend, Sept. 4-5, the Legends held the Handa Cup competition between U.S. and International professional senior women golfers in Portsmouth, N.H at Wentworth By The Sea Golf Club, a Donald Ross course situated on the coastline, its only relief from the elements being nearby New Castle Island. Portsmouth also happens to be Blalock’s hometown.
The U.S. team won the event 27-21, the closest result since it began in 2006 at The World Golf Village in St. Augustine, Fla. It was a fan-friendly competition; the players seemed to go out of their way to make it so.
With the winds whipping off the coast Saturday morning, the feeling on the first tee was as much reunion and clambake as sober competition, which it also was as demonstrated by U.S. team captain Kathy Whitworth’s scrambling up and down the first hole to lend encouragement to all of her players at the start of their round.
The enthusiastic greetings, stories and laughs flowed freely until the first shots were hit in Saturday’s two-player team competitions. The forced carry over water to a shallow, bunkered and slippery green at the championship’s first hole – a 376-yard par 4 that played directly into a stiff, gusting wind each day of the event – ensured the players got down to business with dispatch.
Of course, the serious demeanor lasted only as long as the golf. After she and Sherri Turner won their match Saturday morning against Sally Little and Anne Marie Palli and began walking to the back of the green to head to the clubhouse, Hall of Famer Pat Bradley, 59, a winner at the LPGA event at Locust Hill Country Club in 1977 and 1985, noticed an embarrassing oversight: Bradley’s mother, Kathleen, of Westford, Mass., was in the bleachers next to the green to greet her daughter following play, only to have been overlooked.
Those sitting near the Bradley family matriarch noticed Mom’s disbelief and made the appropriate noise of a somewhat entertained consternation. Dutifully, Bradley jogged back across the green to hug her mother. She also greeted nearly everyone else seated there in the process.
Bradley’s brother, serving as her caddie last week, would make his way back to the stands just moments later to join in the family reunion. The smiles and guffaws were an indication of a short break before the afternoon matches began. In Bradley’s case in particular, her trademark methodical, grinding style of play would continue.
Bradley grew up playing at Nashua (N.H.) Country Club against much-older members in the 1960s. As related by Sandy Keenan in “Sports Illustrated,” Bradley “learned to compete under pressure by playing pickup golf at Nashua for $10 a round. The guys called the afternoon stakes match the Hatreds because the games could get pretty hateful,” she told the magazine. “There was a lot of swearing and what we call ‘color’ out there.” The men were pressured by Nashua’s PGA club pro into letting Bradley play in their Hatreds matches.
“John Wirbal made us do it,” explained Nashua Country Club alum Mike Lupica.
Today, Bradley, along with fellow greats Jan Stephenson and Jane Blalock, has been lobbying the USGA, which has a de facto monopoly over American golf’s purported “national championships,” and likely legal rights to any event billing itself as a “United States Open,” to create a Senior Women’s Open.
Blalock told me on Sept. 3 that it has been difficult even to get a hearing. She noted the USGA’s rather odd explanation that it is concerned over the profitability of such an event. The USGA made a $7.8 million profit in 2009, by the way. “The last time I looked, the USGA was a non-profit,” Blalock said.
The long-festering frustration on the part of these snubbed women seemed to come to a head this past summer. Former LPGA player Martha Nause, much to the approval of her peers, decided to make a statement and enter local qualifiers for the Men’s Senior Open held at Sahalee Country Club in Washington earlier this year. She didn’t qualify, but her attempt made an impact.
The July 10 edition of The New York Times, appearing during the U.S. Women’s Open in Oakmont, Pa., noted the lack of a comparable senior women’s event. USGA Executive Director David Fay, explaining the lack of a national championship for senior women players, drew a distinction between the creation of the Men’s Senior Open, first held in 1980, and a possible women’s version.
“The PGA Tour was fully supportive of this (the U.S. Senior Open) because that was in the genesis of creating what’s now known as the Champions Tour,” Fay said. “Right now, the environment for women’s professional golf at the older level, it’s not truly a tour.” Considering the fact that the USGA is a non-profit that asserts it exists for the “good of the game,” Fay’s statement no doubt rubbed the over-45 Legends Tour players the wrong way.
But you wouldn’t guess that from the positive attitudes seen Labor Day weekend in New Hampshire, at what probably was the biggest professional golf event ever held in that state. Bradley applauded the gallery after finishing play on Sunday. She had just lost her singles match against Canadian Gail Graham in sudden-death.
Nor would you know it by watching JoAnne Carner, 71 – affectionately known as “Big Mama” to galleries throughout much of her career – banter with the gallery during the course of the event. Carner’s golf swing appears blissfully unaware of her age as she slams her drives further than players a quarter-century younger. The gallery was impressed when Carner cut the corner on the par 5 eighth hole, carrying her drive over the beach and rocky shoreline to reach the lush fairway beyond. For the sake of variety of personality, and making a strike against political correctness, Carner even is known to light up a cigarette or two during her warm-up on the practice range and during play.
Blalock, now CEO of the Legends Tour and owner of a sports management company that runs golf clinics for women – targeted specifically at women in the corporate world – said she expects the number of senior women’s events will increase to nine in 2011. She said she hopes to attain a dozen Legends Tour events by 2012. Although the present economic circumstances make corporate sponsorships difficult to attract and keep, Blalock noted that, from a potential sponsor’s perspective, “optimism is not a bad thing.”
The charitable endeavors involved with such events combined with the competitive golf make them well worth it, she said. “It’s wonderful for the spirit of a community,” she said.
Blalock recalled the former champions event held by the Wegmans LPGA at Locust Hill in 2006 for former Rochester winners, most of whom were Legends Tour players. “We drew 26,000 (spectators] on a Tuesday afternoon. You saw incredible energy,” she said.
Many of those players – Bradley, Lopez, Sheehan – have played and won at Locust Hill over the past 34 years and gained large followings among fans in the process. A handful competed in the 1973 U.S. Women’s Open held at Country Club of Rochester.
Blalock said she knew from the support at the 2006 Rochester champions tournament – won by Bradley – there would be a market for the Legends Tour and, hopefully, a USGA event for these women.
Blalock also couldn’t help but wonder: “Wouldn’t Rochester be the perfect place for it?”
Michael Giuliano is a Rochester-based freelance writer and an attorney editor at Thomson Reuters.

First Senior Women’s Major to be Televised in 2017

Read the story here. It was a great Legends Tour event in 2016 when I attended. It was the only Legends Tour “major” then and now it will also be officially coordinated by the LPGA. It should grow mightily with new support from both the LPGA’s corporate involvement and the Golf Channel’s television coverage.

Trish Johnson’s Sudden Death Victory over Solheim Foe Inkster at French Lick

It was a great week in French Lick in all respects including the excruciating (for the players, not I who instead sipped a cold one alongside 18 near a similarly imbibing Laura Davies and Sandra Palmer) six-hole playoff in which Trish Johnson defeated defending champion Juli Inkster. Having a chance to play the Donald Ross course at French Lick on Friday, I appreciated come Saturday just how difficult the Pete Dye course is as the site of this championship. The Ross is challenging enough and boasts a similar links-style, but the Dye course forces a player to drive the ball down chutes the width of Hollywood-style red carpets and then approach greens, purposely misshapen by Dye, that really resent the idea of golf balls remaining atop them.

An epic finish, a terrific, classy group of women, and Ross’ and Dye’s masterworks, all combined to make this a week to remember.

 

 

 

 

 

2018, 2019 U.S. Senior Women’s Open Sites Announced by USGA

We finally know where the inaugural Senior Women’s Open (conducted by the USGA) will be staged in 2018. The 2019 site has also been selected.

Chicago Golf Club, which hosted its first two USGA championships in 1897, has been selected as the 2018 site and Pine Needles in North Carolina, a Donald Ross creation which has hosted several U.S. Women’s Opens, will be the 2019 venue.

2018 Senior Women’s Open Site Remains Unannounced

As of December 31, the USGA has announced the location of the 2020 Amateur Four-Ball (the Philadelphia Cricket Club) but not yet the inaugural U.S. Senior Women’s Open scheduled to debut in 2018. Really, USGA? In previous posts, I lobbied the USGA to select one of the great golf venues in Rochester, N.Y.

We do, of course, also wait with bated breath to learn of the site of the 2021 Four-Ball.

Inkster Licks Field at LPGA Legends Championship; Several Notables Absent

Juli Inkster’s 68 stole the show at the French Lick Resort’s Pete Dye course today in a closely contested final round that had Inkster, Laura Davies, Trish Johnson, Lorie Kane, Rosie Jones, and Pat Hurst in a close race to the finish in this biggest event in senior women’s golf in the United States.

Jan Stephenson won the “super legends” division carding a 1-under par 71 on Sunday on a French Lick course that played consistent with the expectations of a Pete Dye-designed golf course. Stephenson and JoAnne Carner were inducted into the Legends Tour Hall of Fame earlier in the week at the West Baden Springs Hotel. Legends Tour trailblazer Jane Blalock shot 77-77.

Noteworthy were the absences this week: Lopez, Sheehan, Steinhauer (whose 63 at last year’s event set the Legends Tour record low), Alcott, Daniel, and King were all absent. King has only competed sporadically on the senior circuit but the absence of these other greats at the premier tournament on the Legends schedule must have raised some eyebrows.

With 2015 Opens in the Books, LPGA Legends Await Word on 2018 Open Venue

The decision to stage a new U.S. Senior Women’s Open was announced in February. This summer’s Opens have been played and one would think that a decision on any remaining unannounced 2018 USGA Championship sites will be made soon. A good argument can be made for holding it here to get these gals back in town.

USGA Selects 2018 U.S. Women’s Amateur Site: Senior Women’s Open Next?

The USGA announced the site of the 2018 Women’s Amateur last week, The Golf Club of Tennessee. The site of that year’s U.S. Women’s Open, Shoal Creek, had already been announced as had the location of the 2018 U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur, Orchid Island Golf & Beach Club in Vero Beach, Florida.

I previously wrote an open letter to the USGA promoting Rochester, N.Y. as the site of the new U.S. Senior Women’s Open. One possibility is that the USGA will play it the week following the U.S. Women’s Open, à la the 2014 U.S. Open and U.S. Women’s Open doubleheader at Pinehurst No. 2, thus easing the championship into the calendar for its inaugural edition.

The USGA has been generally announcing Open sites at least three years ahead (usually longer than that). We should know the USGA’s selection relatively soon.