‘I don’t think that that’s a lot to ask for’: Bronte Law unhappy how she learned Georgia Hall and Charley Hull will skip International Crown

Radio silence didn’t make for happy remaining teammates on English team after two players withdraw.

For the first time since 2018, the Hanwha Lifeplus International Crown is back on the LPGA schedule.

One of the unique events on the golf calendar, the event pits the top eight countries (based on the Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings) against one another in match play May 4-7. This week’s tournament will be at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco. It’s the fourth installment of the event.

The United States and Korea have dominated the event, but other countries are doing their best to try to take down those two, including Team England.

However, England will attempt to do so without two of its top players, Georgia Hall and Charley Hull. The duo withdrew Saturday, leaving officials scrambling to replace them. Hall told Golfweek she has struggled with her left foot for several weeks. Hull said she hasn’t felt well recently and planned to go home to see a doctor.

However, their Team England teammates don’t sound too happy with their decision. Bronte Law and Jodi Ewart Shadoff said they didn’t find out about Hall and Hull’s decision until Sunday, Law joking she found out through “Chinese whispers,” which is a game in the United Kingdom similar to the American game of telephone in which information is repeated.

“I think anyone with some level of decency would send their teammates a message that they weren’t coming, not find out from other players on tour who have heard things from them saying things at the tournament last week,” Law said during a pre-tournament press conference at TPC Harding Park. “I don’t think that that’s a lot to ask for.”

Ladies European Tour players Alice Hewson and Liz Young flew in Sunday from England to round out the four-player English squad.

“Very happy to have both Alice and Liz are here,” Law said. “They’re both very patriotic, very team-oriented, and I think that that’s a testament to kind of what this tournament is about and is more important than the individuals in the team.

“I know that they’ll fight with everything that they’ve got.”

Law said she didn’t get any messages from Hall or Hull until Tuesday, when Hull reached out to apologize for not being able to play.

“But it’s besides the point now,” she said. “We’re here, and this is our team This is Team England.”

The competition gets underway Thursday. There are eight teams in this year’s Crown: U.S., South Korea, Japan, Sweden, England, Thailand, Australia and China.

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Team England takes massive hit after last-minute withdrawals from Georgia Hall, Charley Hull for International Crown

Team England officials have been left scrambling.

LOS ANGELES – Team England suffered a devastating loss at the Hanwha Lifeplus International Crown before a shot was struck.

Both Georgia Hall and Charley Hull withdrew Saturday, leaving officials scrambling to replace them. Ladies European Tour players Alice Hewson and Liz Young were en route from England on Sunday to round out the four-player squad.

Hall, ranked No. 10 in the world, is currently one of the hottest players on the LPGA and Hull, ranked 17th, isn’t far behind. Both players competed in this week’s JM Eagle LA Championship, with Hull taking a share of T-17 and Hall finishing T-44.

Former Solheim Cup players Jodi Ewart Shadoff, No. 45, and Bronte Law, 103, make up the rest of the team.

Eight countries have qualified for the event, which will be staged May 4-7 at San Francisco’s TPC Harding Park. This marks the first staging of the Crown since South Korea won on home soil in 2018.

Hall told Golfweek that she’s been struggling with her left foot the past several weeks, an injury she sustained from running too much on concrete without warming up properly.

“I have a private physio I see every day,” said Hall. “I’ve been getting treatment on it every day, and he advised I need to rest it before it gets any worse.”

Hall said she plans to compete in the Cognizant Founders Cup in New Jersey the week after the Crown.

Georgia Hall and Charley Hull at the 2018 UL International Crown in Incheon, South Korea. (Photo: Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)

Hull, who was in a hurry to catch a flight after her round, said she hasn’t been feeling well for several weeks and planned to go home to see a doctor. She plans to return to the tour in three to four weeks.

“I wish the others good luck, and sorry I couldn’t be there,” said Hull, who has twice represented England at the Crown. In 2016, Mel Reid famously played one round solo after Hull pulled out sick.

Substitutes Hewson and Young rank 172nd and 216th, respectively. Hewson has five top-20 finishes this season on the LET, including a share of second at the Magical Kenya Ladies Open. Last year, Young won her first LET title in her 14th season on the tour, one month before her 40th birthday.

There are eight teams in this year’s Crown: U.S., South Korea, Japan, Sweden, England, Thailand, Australia and China.

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2023 JM Eagle LA Championship prize money payouts for each LPGA player

Check out the prize money payouts at the 2023 JM Eagle LA Championship.

The purse at the LPGA stop at Wilshire Country Club doubled in 2023 to $3 million thanks to new title sponsor JM Eagle and presenting sponsors. The renamed JM Eagle LA Championship now boasts one of the biggest purses on the LPGA schedule.

As a result, Australia’s Hannah Green took home $450,000 after clinching her third career title in a two-hole playoff. Green has now collected $3,983,874 in career earnings.

The major champ has an interesting financial trend when it comes to winning on tour:

“I had actually missed the cut last week at Chevron, and my other two wins that I had on Tour, I missed the weekend the week prior. Not that I want to miss cuts, but it has been some sort of a recipe to a win.”

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Check out the prize money payouts at the 2023 JM Eagle LA Championship.

Pos Player Score Winnings
T1 Hannah Green -9* $450,000
T1 Xiyu Lin -9 $242,747
T1 Aditi Ashok -9 $242,747
T4 Ayaka Furue -8 $142,497
T4 Ruoning Yin -8 $142,497
T6 Nelly Korda -7 $89,094
T6 Cheyenne Knight -7 $89,094
T6 Hae Ran Ryu -7 $89,094
T9 Alison Lee -6 $65,472
T9 Jaravee Boonchant -6 $65,472
T11 Nasa Hataoka -5 $55,842
T11 Chella Choi -5 $55,842
T13 Gemma Dryburgh -4 $46,215
T13 Na Rin An -4 $46,215
T13 Stacy Lewis -4 $46,215
T13 Sarah Kemp -4 $46,215
T17 Hye Jin Choi -3 $35,608
T17 Hyo Joo Kim -3 $35,608
T17 Charley Hull -3 $35,608
T17 Madelene Sagstrom -3 $35,608
T17 Perrine Delacour -3 $35,608
T17 Gina Kim -3 $35,608
T17 Yuna Nishimura -3 $35,608
T24 Natthakritta Vongtaveelap -2 $29,424
T24 Ally Ewing -2 $29,424
T24 Lindsey Weaver-Wright -2 $29,424
T27 Ryann O’Toole -1 $24,725
T27 Lauren Coughlin -1 $24,725
T27 Emma Talley -1 $24,725
T27 Caroline Inglis -1 $24,725
T27 Yu-Sang Hou -1 $24,725
T27 Pavarisa Yoktuan -1 $24,725
T33 Atthaya Thitikul E $17,562
T33 Ashleigh Buhai E $17,562
T33 Hinako Shibuno E $17,562
T33 Amy Yang E $17,562
T33 Wichanee Meechai E $17,562
T33 In-Kyung Kim E $17,562
T33 Lucy Li E $17,562
T33 Jennifer Chang E $17,562
T33 Yu Liu E $17,562
T33 Ines Laklalech E $17,562
T33 Min Lee E $17,562
T44 Minjee Lee 1 $11,759
T44 Jin Young Ko 1 $11,759
T44 Georgia Hall 1 $11,759
T44 Lizette Salas 1 $11,759
T44 Eun-Hee Ji 1 $11,759
T44 Brittany Lincicome 1 $11,759
T44 Angel Yin 1 $11,759
T44 Linnea Strom 1 $11,759
T44 Azahara Munoz 1 $11,759
T53 Maja Stark 2 $9,397
T53 Stephanie Kyriacou 2 $9,397
T53 Pernilla Lindberg 2 $9,397
T53 Minami Katsu 2 $9,397
T57 Danielle Kang 3 $8,165
T57 Marina Alex 3 $8,165
T57 Pornanong Phatlum 3 $8,165
T57 Lauren Hartlage 3 $8,165
T61 Daniela Darquea 4 $7,395
T61 Hyo Joon Jang 4 $7,395
T61 Linnea Johansson 4 $7,395
64 Patty Tavatanakit 5 $7,087
65 Maude-Aimee Leblanc 7 $6,931
T66 Allison Emrey 9 $6,702
T66 Celine Borge 9 $6,702

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‘It’s been a long few years’: Australia’s Hannah Green survives three-way playoff to win third LPGA title at JM Eagle LA Championship

Hannah Green couldn’t hold back the emotion after clinching her first LPGA title in nearly four years.

LOS ANGELES – Hannah Green couldn’t hold back the emotion after clinching her first LPGA title in nearly four years. After finishing inside the top three the past two years at Wilshire Country Club, the steady and oft-stoic Aussie won a three-way playoff at the JM Eagle LA Championship.

“It’s been a long few years,” said Green, who parred the first 14 holes on Sunday but birdied the closing par-3 18th to finish at 9-under 275 alongside Aditi Ashok and Xiyu “Janet” Lin.

At one point late in the day, the crowded LA Championship leaderboard featured five players tied at 8 under.

American Cheyenne Knight looked primed to make a run for her second LPGA title until her second shot into the par-5 15th sailed out of bounds, resulting in a double-bogey seven. China’s Ruoning Lin held the outright lead until bogeys on the 17th and 18th derailed her bid.

The three players who found their way into the playoff did so with gutsy birdies on the closing par-3 18th. Lin actually birdied the last two in regulation.

In overtime, India’s Ashok suffered a hard lip-out from 15 feet on the 156-yard 18th, the first playoff hole. Lin then drained a 12-footer for birdie to put the pressure on Green, who hit an 8-iron to 4 feet and then converted to push it to a second hole.

After Lin found the bunker on her tee shot, Green needed only to two-putt from 25 feet to become the seventh Australian in LPGA history to earn at least three titles, joining Katherine Kirk (3), Wendy Doolan (3), Minjee Lee (8), Rachel Hetherington (8), Jan Stephenson (16) and Karrie Webb (41).

Now in her sixth season on the LPGA, Green broke through in 2019 at the KPMG Women’s PGA at Hazeltine and followed it with a second title that year at the Portland Classic. She’s a former Karrie Webb Scholarship winner, like fellow major champion Minjee Lee and recent LPGA winner Grace Kim.

Green earned $450,000 at Wilshire, bringing her career earnings total to $3,983,874.

“I said to my team and my caddie, I feel like once I get over the hurdle of having my third win that that will just open doors because I was really nervous today,” said Green.

“I hadn’t been in that position for quite some time to be especially in a playoff to win a tournament. So when I holed that 4-footer, I felt like I was literally shaking like crazy and you could see it visually. But I don’t really know. Maybe I’ll have a look at the footage.”

After missing the cut last week at the Chevron – Green missed the cut before all three of her victories – she spoke with LPGA sports psychologist Julie Aamto to get a fresh perspective and they talked about her post-shot routine.

Green had come to realize she when she hits a bad shot, she often holds onto that club until she gets to the ball. When she hits a good shot, Green typically gives her caddie the club back right away.

“Golf can be really frustrating,” said Green, “and sometimes showing emotion is a good thing, but just making sure that it doesn’t get too deep and affect your next shot.”

Ashok worked on building swing speed in the offseason and said the added distance helped her reach more par 5s in two this week. A four-time winner on the Ladies European Tour, Ashok began 2023 finishing 1-3-2 in her first three starts on the LET.

“I’ve never played in this position on the LPGA,” said Ashok, “so to be near the lead on the first day, kind of stay there the whole tournament. The competition is just so deep out here. Ten people have a good tournament but only one can win. I’m happy with the way I played.”

World No. 1 Nelly Korda played the weekend with sister Jessica’s caddie after her regular looper, Jason McDede, rushed home to Florida Saturday morning after wife Caroline Masson gave birth to their first child, a son.

“It was very unexpected,” said Nelly, “but they’re both doing really well, both healthy, and Jason is back home with the baby. Yeah, I can’t wait to meet him. Auntie Nelly.”

Masson, 33, has competed on the LPGA the past 10 years, winning the 2016 Manulife LPGA Classic. She has represented Europe in the Solheim Cup on four different occasions.

Jessica’s regular caddie, Kyle Morrison, will be on the bag for Nelly at next week’s International Crown team event at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco. Nelly took a share of sixth at Wilshire.

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Watch: Aditi Ashok jars it from the fairway for eagle at LPGA’s JM Eagle LA Championship

Ashok said on Thursday that she’s been working with a new putter in her bag this week. But who needs to putt when you can do this?

There’s making an eagle. There’s holing out for an eagle. And then there’s what Aditi Ashok did Friday in Los Angeles.

Playing the back nine first during her second round of the 2023 JM Eagle LA Championship, Ashok faced a third shot on the par-5 15th hole at Wilshire Country Club.

Aiming for a front pin, she had to carry a stream that fronts the green but dialed in the distance perfectly as the ball flew into the cup on the fly.

And let’s give Golf Channel some credit for the camera angle, too. This is fun to watch from the overhead view.

Ashok said on Thursday that she’s been working with a new putter in her bag this week, trying to overcome some recent issues.

“I think the last three weeks, I couldn’t lean on my putting as much,” she said. “It’s a similar blade. It’s just much lighter. It was too heavy for me, and I ended up leaving a bunch of them short. I have a lighter one at home, but it’s in India, so I had to go to Callaway and they made me the same Odyssey putter that I had, just lighter, so that’s the only difference.”

But knocking it right in the hole takes any putting issues off the table.

Ashok’s eagle came on the heels of back-to-back birdies. That’s right, she went 4 under over three holes to get to 9 under and grabbed the solo lead by three shots. The 25-year-old is seeking her first LPGA title.

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LPGA: Linnea Johansson, No. 358 in the world, leads after 64 at Wilshire Country Club

After several seasons on the Epson Tour, Johansson earned her LPGA card in 2020.

Linnea Johansson ranks 358th in the world, but the Swede’s opening 7-under 64 puts her atop the leaderboard early at the JM Eagle LA Championship. Johansson hit all 14 fairways, 15 greens and took 26 putts in her fifth round on tour this season. It marks the first time she’s broken par.

“I’ve been working a lot on my swing and trying to get a little bit more consistent ball flight, and I think that was very helpful today because I was able to attack a little bit more of the pins out there and give myself chances,” said Johansson of her bogey-free day. “The greens can be tricky, a lot going on, but I managed to read them and match the speed today, and they dropped for me.”

Johansson, 29, began her career at Nova Southeastern before transferring to Oklahoma State. After several seasons on the Epson Tour, she earned her LPGA card in 2020 and is still looking for her first career top-10 finish. Eight of the top-10 players in the world at in the field in Los Angeles.

“Obviously it’s been a little ride for me the past couple of years, struggling a little bit out here,” said Johansson. “The girls are good. It’s the best players in the world, so it should be tough, and so it is. It’s tough for everybody.

“But days when it clicks and when you really hit the shots that you want and manage to roll putts in, that’s the days you really enjoy it a little bit more, and it’s competitive out here, but starting off the tournament here like this, it’s great.”

Minjee Lee, a former champ at Wilshire Country Club, holds a share of second with Gemma Dryburgh.

Cristie Kerr opened with a 67. The 45-year-old is making her fourth start to the season this week, with her best finish, a 73rd, coming at the Lotte Championship.

Lilia Vu, last week’s winner at the Chevron Championship, shot 69.

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Lilia Vu thought she’d see Taylor Swift after missing her flight on Sunday but instead won a major. She’s back at Wilshire, where she played at UCLA

As a student-athlete at UCLA, Vu played Wilshire Country Club every Wednesday morning with her team.

After weather pushed back tee times for the final round of the Chevron Championship, Lilia Vu thought she might as well go to the Taylor Swift concert in Houston that night after missing her 8 p.m. flight.

But then she became the first player to win an LPGA major championship coming from outside the top 10 since Sherri Turner won the LPGA Championship in 1988. Swift would have to wait.

After landing in Los Angeles at 3 p.m. Monday, Vu and her parents went straight to their favorite restaurant – Thanh My in Westminster – and then packed for another three-week stretch.

Vu opened the JM Eagle LA Championship with 2-under 69 in her first round as a major champion. As a student-athlete at UCLA, Vu played Wilshire Country Club every Wednesday morning with her team.

“It’s nostalgia,” said Vu of coming back to the LA club, “and there’s really no golf course quite like Wilshire. I don’t think you can really compare it to anything in my opinion because they’re just so different from the typical surrounding LA courses around here. It’s not easy. Putting is going to be difficult. I think it’s going to be difficult for everybody”

Vu, the winningest player in UCLA history with eight titles, is one of six Bruins in the field this week.

Longtime UCLA coach Carrie Forsyth announced her retirement from coaching on Monday.

In 24 years as head coach at UCLA, Forsyth led the Bruins to two NCAA titles, nine NCAA Regional Championships and 74 tournament victories.

After the NCAA postseason, Forsyth will take on a newly-created role as a special assistant to The Alice and Nahum Lainer Family Director of Athletics Martin Jarmond.

Here’s a closer look at the six UCLA players in this week’s field:

Photos: Patty Tavatanakit through the years

View photos of major champion Patty Tavatanakit throughout her young career.

At just 23 years of age, is it too early to say that Patty Tavatanakit is having a career resurgence?

As one of the most highly touted juniors in recent memory, Tavatanakit got out to a scorching hot start to her professional career in 2019. Winning three times in just eight starts on the now-Epson Tour, Tavatanakit ran away with Rookie of the Year honors and jumped up to the LPGA in 2020.

After a COVID-19-hindered rookie season, the Thai broke through for her first LPGA win in 2021.

Tavatanakit joined a shortlist of golfers whose first win on tour was a major championship, winning the ANA Inspiration by five strokes over Lydia Ko.

In her eight major starts since that win, Tavatanakit locked down three top-10 finishes but rode a cold streak of four straight missed cuts heading into the 2023 major season.

After briefly being in contention at the Chevron, it will be interesting to see how Tavatanakit continues her search for her second major title.

Chevron Championship was NBC’s most watched sports program of the week

Things really heated up when Lilia Vu and Angel Yin went to a playoff, with an impressive number of peak viewers.

The Chevron Championship’s move from California to Texas might not have been popular with LPGA players, but the tour’s first major of the year was a bona fide success in terms of its television audience, according to numbers that were unveiled early this week.

The final round of coverage from The Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands averaged 941,000 viewers across all platforms, including NBC Sports, the NBC Sports app and Peacock, which is up considerably from the 349,000 average viewers when the event was on Golf Channel last year.

But things really heated up when champ Lilia Vu and Angel Yin went to a playoff, with a peak of 1.54 million viewers or a 1.0 rating between 7:15 and 7:30 p.m. ET. Yin went in the water as the two played 18 again in the playoff, and Vu dropped a birdie putt to capture her first major title.

The tournament’s numbers were clearly aided by a schedule move away from the Augusta National Women’s Amateur and into a better timeslot against the PGA Tour’s Zurich Classic.

Other important stats:

  • This year’s event was the most-watched since 2010 and was the best for NBC Sports
  • The Chevron was the top-rated sports program on NBC for the week
  • It was also in the top 20 sports programs for the week across all broadcast networks
  • Even though it falls in the heart of a busy week that included NBA and NHL playoffs, Major League Baseball games and the PGA Tour’s Zurich, Sunday’s broadcast of the Chevron was among the top 10 sports broadcasts for the day

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Premium practice balls, ball tracking technology, VR, Rolls-Royces and more: How Carlton Woods wowed LPGA players at the Chevron Championship

“We’ve already got plans to make this so much bigger and better.”

THE WOODLANDS, Texas — As the sun magnificently lit up The Club at Carlton Woods for Saturday’s third round of the LPGA’s Chevron Championship, adding a hue of green that previously hadn’t been seen by TV audiences, the biggest concern tournament organizers faced was an overload of patrons waiting for the shuttle bus at a nearby park-and-ride.

Too many fans. That was the biggest takeaway after the first few rounds of play after the event moved from sacred ground in California to its new Texas home.

Steve Salzman, the general manager and chief operating officer of the club, knew many were sensitive and sentimental about the move away from Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage after 51 years. So he knew to give players a reason to keep circling the date, tournament organizers would need to dig deep into a bag of Texas hospitality.

The reaction was overwhelmingly positive. Stipends of $5,000 were added for players who missed the cut, marking the first time in the tournament’s history that was offered. Players received courtesy cars for the week, with returning champs rolling around town in Bentleys and Rolls-Royces.

2023 Chevron Championship
Patty Tavatanakit picks up her ball after finishing the 18th hole during the second round of the 2023 Chevron Championship. (Photo: Thomas Shea-USA TODAY Sports)

And those are just some of the perks the new partnership between Carlton Woods and Chevron has cooked up. LPGA players often aren’t given an option when it comes to practice balls, meaning they often have a different feel on the range. Salzman and his staff reached out to ball manufacturers and while some did provide extra balls for the range, a few did not.

“That didn’t sit really well with us,” he said. “So we contacted all the ball manufacturers to get balls. Most of the big ones came through, but there were a few that didn’t, so we dug into our own stock and made sure that was the case, so that they can practice with the balls that they play with. And I think that’s the first time that’s ever been done. The gals are walking up there and seeing their balls in boxes and they’re really happy.”

Players noticed

Many said the LPGA pros were excited about the new roots the event put down, even though it was painful to move away from the Coachella Valley. Brittany Lincicome, for example, was impressed with the treatment the players received.

“It’s been spectacular. From when we got here, picked up at the airport on Sunday, the Past Champions Dinner on Monday was spectacular, getting my Bentley on Tuesday, just the golf course even, too,” said Lincicome, who won the event twice, in 2009 and again in 2015. “You walk up to the range where the practice facility I’d probably practice more if I had that practice facility. I’m so jealous.

“But the golf course is perfect. It’s so beautiful. … it’s a long-hitter’s course. It’s narrow. There’s a lot of water and trouble. You really kind of have to work your way around the course, don’t short-side yourself. That’s where you’re going to be in big trouble.”

In terms of the practice range, Salzman said the organizers of the Chevron wanted to borrow ideas from perhaps the world’s most well-respected tournament, the Masters, even using the same technology on the range as those seen at Augusta National.

“This is the first time Toptracer Range has ever been at an LPGA event,” Salzman explained. “That package here was at the Masters and as soon as the Masters was done, we got it on a semi and they brought it here to set it up. First time in the history of the LPGA that arranged product has been available.”

Korda: ‘Crowds were amazing’

So most everything went well during the initial move, aside from some lengthy lines at the shuttle bus stop. Even the historic jump into the lake off 18 for winner Lilia Vu went off without a hitch. Fans were treated to a captivating playoff as Vu edged Angel Yin on the first hole. Nelly Korda was third after she buried a long eagle putt on the 18th hole to get within a shot of the playoff.

“The crowds were amazing. The crowds that we have gotten and followed my group were really great. They’re treating us really well. I like the golf course, too,” Korda said. “It’s challenging. I think the difference between Palm Springs that we played for so long and this golf course is that there’s just more water. It’s a little bit more wide open, let’s say, off the tee, but there are a lot of trees, so you kind of have to play within. The greens are pretty tough, as well. I would say Palm Springs is a little tighter off the tee, but they’re both really great golf courses, and I’ve heard, I’m not sure if this is true, that they’re going to be redoing the greens for next year, so we’ll see.”

“Chevron put together a player advisory group, just they wanted to know what was important to us to make the championship special,” said Stacy Lewis, who is a product of The Woodlands. “There’s obviously a lot of traditions with this event, and what was the traditions that were most important to us. They asked current players, they asked retired players, they asked everybody.

2023 Chevron Championship
Lilia Vu holds the trophy after winning the 2023 Chevron Championship at The Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands, Texas. (Photo: Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

“Chevron crushed it. You see it with the trophy. Dinah’s Place on 18. Everything was about Dinah this week, and that’s what we tried to tell them over and over again is what was important.”

Fans also got an enhanced experience as just behind the ninth green sat an impressive structure named the Inspiration Dome, half of which housed a virtual reality experience sponsored by Accenture tapping into the life of an LPGA pro.

Among those who took part in the exhibit was LPGA Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan.

LPGA Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan engages herself in the Putt Like A Lady virtual reality experience during the final round of The Chevron Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Thomas Shea-USA TODAY Sports

It was all part of a plan to make a splash in the first year of the event. Salzman understood the tradition the tournament built and wanted to stay true to the roots, but he said organizers were also shooting to make this an even larger spectacle, and insisted the plans for the future are to go even bigger.

“If the players need something, they get it. If they want it, they get it,” he said. “There are so many things about an event like this that I’ve heard, ‘Well, they don’t expect this or they typically don’t get that.’ But I ask, but they’d like it, right? Then let’s get it. I’ve already heard this is incomparable to anything they’ve experienced and I’m thinking, ‘Oh boy, then I’m really going to blow them away next year.’

“We’ve already got plans to make this so much bigger and better.”

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