This woman creates thousands of flower ribbons and has passed them out at the Dinah Shore for 23 years

In the course of the four days here, she will give 1,000 of the flower ribbons away.

There are several styles of smiles.

The full grin of the Cheshire Cat, the muted purse of the Mona Lisa, or the missing-toothed version favored by toddlers.

For the last 23 years at the desert’s LPGA event the Chevron Championship, Judi Callaway has seen them all.

Callaway, an 80-year-old from San Diego, has been a mainstay in her lawn chair in the shade of a giant eucalyptus tree in front of the 18th green at Mission Hills Country Club. As players and spectators walk by, she offers them a flower made out of ribbon that she made by hand.

“People always try to give me a donation, but I’m not doing it for money, I’m doing it for smiles,” she said Thursday, the first day of the tournament in Rancho Mirage. “That’s why I call them smile flowers.”

And the flowers work. Sit with Judi for any length of time and you’ll see her hand out her corsage-like, colorful handiwork, and the recipient always walks away with a grin.

Callaway said she starts making the smile flowers in February each year, and it takes her three-and-a half hours to make a box of 25 ribbon blossoms. By the time the tournament starts a month later, she has made 1,000. And in the course of the four days here, she will give them all away.

More: ‘Treating us like we were somebody’: Money, television and Dinah Shore helped jumpstart the LPGA

“It’s just ribbon, wire and flower tape, and then I include a pin, of course, so they can attach it to their hat or their shirt or whatever,” Callaway said. “At this point, a lot of the players know me and when they see me they come over and they know what they’re getting.”

She’s not wrong. She’s outfitted some of the biggest names in LPGA circles from Hall of Famers to current stars. She said Juli Inkster and Christina Kim have been some of her favorites over the years.

For Kim, the feeling is mutual.

“It’s just part of coming here for me. It’s just one of the annual traditions I have. I see Judi, I give her a hug and see how she’s doing and how her husband is doing,” Kim said after her round Friday. “Catching up is our annual tradition, which is a very sad thing to be ending.”

Kim said, for the record, that she has at least a dozen flower ribbons at home and about 10 of another of Judi’s creations, wine-bottle aprons. Those are little aprons that fit your wine bottle that Judi created and worked on during the pandemic.

Lexi Thompson, the 2014 champion here, said Judi is as much a fabric of this tournament to her as the San Jacinto Mountains and the Dinah Shore statue.

“Ever since I was here when I was 14, I remember her being here,” the 27-year-old Thompson said Thursday. “She’s an amazing lady, and I think all of us look forward to seeing her coming up to the 18th green.”

Judi Callaway poses for a photo with her flowers made of ribbon from alongside the 18th green at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, Calif., Thursday, March 31, 2022.

Origin story

Judi’s neighbor in the 1970s as well as Tony Orlando and Dawn are all partly responsible for the boxes of ribbon flowers that Judi carts out to the 18th hole every year.

“Over 40 years ago, I had a very sweet neighbor that took the time and taught me how to make them,” Judi said. “Since then, I’ve made them for weddings, birthdays, you name it, but when I got real serious about making them had to do with the military service.”

Both of Callaway’s sons were in the Army and when the song by Orlando and Dawn “Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree” became a hit, Judi got a bright idea.

Callaway started making red, white and blue ones with a yellow ribbon flower in the middle. She said those were quite popular with her family and friends, and she’s been making them ever since. She shares them with people at work, people in her neighborhood and then when she and Don began volunteering at the golf tournament in the desert in 1998, she decided to bring some.

Callaway has always been handy with her hands. She’s had many jobs throughout her career. She was a janitor, she cut keys and made trophies and she’s proud to say she was one of the first volunteer firewomen in North Carolina.

“My husband was in the military and four of them were volunteers and when they went off to war that left the station empty, so the four of us women stepped in,” she said. “We had boots, coats, helmets everything. We had to battle some fires, too.”

Flower forms made of ribbon are seen made by Judi Callaway to give out to players and spectators at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, Calif., Thursday, March 31, 2022.

Happy couple

Judi is accompanied every year by her husband Don. The 85-year-old former military man also volunteers at the tournament, and he works behind the green on the 18th hole.

“He always likes to keep an eye on me,” she said with a laugh.

The couple make a week of it and stay at a favorite small motel of theirs that she said is on the Cathedral City/Palm Springs border.

Unfortunately for people like Judi and Don and other volunteers who consider working at the desert’s LPGA tournament a cherished part of their year, this will be the final installment. The tournament is moving to Houston next year.

“I’m very sad about it. We love it out here. It’s beautiful out here, and that’s not to say it isn’t beautiful where we live, too, but this is special. It’s a special getaway for us,” she said.

Judi said that’s not going to stop her, though. She plans to give out her smile flowers at an LPGA tournament in Carlsbad instead.

“Especially after these last couple years, I think people need fun things like this,” she said. “I know they aren’t a necessity, but to make people smile, to me, that is a necessity.”

Shad Powers is a columnist for The Desert Sun. Reach him at shad.powers@desertsun.com.

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Former Augusta National Women’s Amateur champion Jennifer Kupcho trails by one at Chevron

Kupcho is still searching for her first win on the LPGA.

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. – Jennifer Kupcho broke out the gum to try and stay calm after 15 consecutive pars. She struggled to get enough pace on her putts on Friday afternoon. Eventually, on two of her last three holes, she poured in a couple of birdie putts to get within one stroke of leader Hinako Shibuno at the Chevron Championship.

“I wouldn’t say I stayed very patient,” said Kupcho. “I definitely got a little angry.”

On the eve of the final round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, the inaugural champion finds herself in the mix for another piece of history: to become the last major champion at Mission Hills Country Club.

“It’s just exciting to be here,” said Kupcho, who still awaits her first victory on the LPGA.

Kupcho sits tied at 8 under with last year’s champion Patty Tavantanakit and Annie Park, who played solo in the first two rounds. South Korean major winners Sei Young Kim and Hyo Joo Kim trail by two in a share of fifth.

While Park enjoyed being on her own, Kupcho had fun playing alongside Lizette Salas, who became a close friend after last year’s Solheim Cup.

“I definitely talk a lot more,” said Kupcho. “I’m sure the fans out here saw that I am definitely a different person when I’m playing with a really good friend.”

Fans certainly saw plenty of that in Augusta when she competed alongside good friend Maria Fassi in the final round.

Jennifer Kupcho of the United States and Maria Fassi of Mexico fist bump on the No. 12 hole during the final round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, Saturday, April 6, 2019. (Augusta National/The Masters)

When asked what she does to manage emotions when things get tough, Kupcho said she has to have a quick release.

“Honestly, I think, as everybody knows, I wear my heart on my sleeve,” she said. “I kind of just get angry and slam a club or hit my leg or bag. It’s just that quick thing that I think is kind of – just like let’s it all out.

“That’s kind of what I have to do. I can’t really do it any other way.”

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Chevron Championship: Jin Young Ko fights her way back into contention with second-round 68

Jin Young Ko is the No.1 player in the Rolex rankings and the winner of six of her last 11 starts on the LPGA.

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. — Jin Young Ko, the No.1 player in the Rolex rankings and winner of six of her last 11 starts on the LPGA, found herself outside of the cut line at the start of the second round of the Chevron Championship. She shot a 74 on Thursday that snapped her consecutive rounds under-par streak at 34. Ko responded like a top player.

Playing with Lexi Thompson, Ko rallied with a 4-under 68 in the second round Friday. That pushed her to 2-under par for the tournament, well inside the cut line that came at 1-over 145. That’s still seven shots behind 36-hole leader Hinako Shibuno.

Several big names who struggled Thursday played their way back into the cut with solid rounds Friday, including past Chevron winners Inbee Park (69 in the second round) and Seon Yo Ryu (68), both at even par for the first two days.

Perhaps the biggest name to miss the cut is Yuka Saso, the reigning U.S. Women’s Open champion, who finished two rounds at 2-over par.

Jin Young Ko of South Korea walks down from the second tee box during round two of the Chevron Championship at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, Friday, April 1, 2022.

Home cooking

Last week Gabriela Ruffels was in the field of the developmental Epson Tour event in Beaumont. That’s where Ruffels, whose home course is Toscana Country Club in Indian Wells, will play most of her golf this year since she does not have status on the LPGA after failing to maintain her LPGA playing privileges through qualifying school.

This week, Ruffels is playing for a major championship on the LPGA Tour at the Chevron Championship. While she is not exempt for the regular tour, she made the field of the Chevron by finishing in the top 20 of the Mission Hills event in 2021. A final-hole birdie allowed her to finish 19th.

Ruffels, the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, is obviously pleased to be back at Mission Hills this year even as she’s planning a year on the Epson Tour.

“I can’t really control that. Yeah, I don’t have any status, but I just feel like I’m so grateful to be out here,” Ruffels said. “When I do get a start, I’m just so grateful to be here.”

Ruffels has played in the tournament twice, finishing 15th in 2020 and then 19th last year.

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“It’s really cool to be out here again. I had exemptions last year on the LPGA Tour but couldn’t quite get status through Q-School,” she said. “I just think it’s just being grateful to be out here and just having a lot of fun playing against the best in the world.”

Through 36 holes, Ruffels is 5-under 139, including a 71 Friday.

Red-hot player

There is lots of talk about how well Jin Young Ko has played in the last few months on the LPGA, but it is Nanna Koerstz Madsen who might actually be the hottest player on the tour. In her last two starts, she has a win at the Honda LPGA Thailand and a playoff loss at the JTBC Classic in Carlsbad last week.

That has Koerstz Madsen in second place in the Race to the CME Globe points behind Danielle Kang. Koerstz Madsen said her solid play is just a matter of taking her time.

“I’m just staying patient and trusting my game. I was very frustrated after my round yesterday,” Koerstz Madsen said about her opening 71. “I didn’t hit the ball good at all yesterday. I really fought around. Only hit eight greens yesterday.”

She rebounded with a 5-under 67 on Friday to get back in the hunt.

Nanna Koerstz Madsen hits her second shot on the 9th hole during the second round of the Chevron Championship at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, April 1, 2022.

“So just really that I grinded it out yesterday and ended up getting it to minus-1, and then I had some time on the range,” she said. “As long as I think I can play good, then I believe it.”

Give us the cheers

Georgia Hall played in the Chevron Championship when there were no fans on the course because of COVID-19, and she knows she didn’t like it.

“Yeah, I mean, it’s a big difference having fans,” Hall said Friday after shooting a 1-under 71 to get to 5-under for the tournament. “It was really quiet the first time we came out and there was no one here. It didn’t feel like a major.”

Things have changed and for the better with fans back on the course this week, and Hall notices that the crowds seem to be a bit bigger than three years ago.

“Now everyone is back out and kind of back to normal,” she said. “It’s really nice. Always nice to get some support even though I’m out of the U.K.”

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Can two players from a Mississippi town of 3,500 win on the PGA Tour and LPGA in back-to-back weeks? Ally Ewing charging at Chevron

Ewing has two top-10 finishes in four starts at this event, finishing tied for seventh last year.

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. — If the LPGA and PGA Tour ever resurrect a team event, watch out for the pair from Fulton, Mississippi. As of last week, the town of 3,500 has produced both PGA Tour and LPGA champions in Chad Ramey and Ally Ewing. The two friends grew up together at Fulton Country Club, a hilly nine-hole course that tips at 5,700 yards for two loops.

Ramey, a rookie on the PGA Tour, won last week’s Corales Puntacana Championship in his 16th career start. Ewing is a two-time winner on the LPGA and is currently tied for fifth at the LPGA’s first major of the year, the Chevron Championship. She’s three strokes back of leader Hinako Shibuno after a 4-under 68.

Ewing was on the range warming up for a practice round at Mission Hills Country Club on Sunday when she saw that Ramey was in the hunt after four consecutive birdies on Nos. 13-16. By the time she got to the fairway on the second hole, he’d won.

“I sent him a text immediately,” said a proud Ewing, “which I’m sure he got a billion.”

There’s no driving range at Fulton Country Club. The longest putt on the putting green might be about 45 feet. Ramey was the only kid at the course close to Ewing’s age and his dad happened to run the place. He was longer and stronger and had a better short game, and Ewing soaked up every chance she could to practice alongside him.

The 29-year-old Mississippi State grads pushed each other, and the members never complained when their cross-country golf occasionally got in the way.

“They saw what we were going to be capable of,” said Ewing.

2022 Corales Puntacana Championship
Chad Ramey celebrates with the trophy after winning during the final round of the 2022 Corales Puntacana Championship at the Corales Golf Course in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic. (Photo: Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Ramey once shot 27 on the par-35 course with an ace on the last hole. His father would often throw down four balls inside 100 yards and challenge them to get two of the four up-and-down.

Many people joined Fulton for the good-sized pool. But there was Ewing, winning the club championship while in grade school.

“I remember a guy came up to me and said, ‘I put money on you in the calcutta,’” said Ewing. “I went back to my parents and said ‘What’s a calcutta?’ ”

She chipped in on the last to take the title.

A group of members went out to Pebble Beach earlier this year to watch Ramey compete in the AT&T, and they’ve come out to the LPGA to watch Ewing, too. The two-time Solheim Cup player is currently ranked No. 25 in the world.

Ramey and Ewing both work with the same instructor, V.J. Trolio at Old Waverly Golf Club, and if they have a lesson the same day they’ll go out and play nine holes.

“We knew it was only time,” said Ewing of Ramey getting his first PGA Tour victory.

No doubt Ramey will be checking scores at the Chevron this weekend as his childhood friend seeks to win her first major. Ewing has two top-10 finishes in four starts at this event, finishing tied for seventh last year.

“I feel like the more disciplined I am around this golf course,” said Ewing, “obviously it takes shots, I have to execute, I have to roll putts in, but I’m really disciplined out there, looking away from holes that just kind of say, Hey, hit it at me.

“But I don’t do that. I try to stay really disciplined. My caddie and I just really stick to targets, and it certainly helps to roll in putts.”

To that end, she recently started working with Vision 54’s Pia Nilsson and Lynn Marriott on putting, shortening her routing and trying to think less and react more like an athlete. Naturally an analytical person, the less she can free up her body on the greens the better.

Channel those two kids from Fulton Country Club who grew up to take on the world.

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Annie Park, who ‘considered stepping away’ from golf, finds her smile again in Chevron Championship

“I just overall started having fun on the golf course again last week, and been enjoying it this week as well.”

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. — In the world where golf and karma intersect, it made sense that Annie Park had a positive experience at the Chevron Championship on Friday morning.

Playing by herself and the first one out on the course, Park breezed around the Dinah Shore Tournament Course for a 5-under 67 to move to 8 under for the tournament and up among the leaders.

A smile beamed as she addressed the media after the round, part of her best 36-hole effort ever at a major.

“Just having fun out there. I think that’s kind of the biggest key, and it’s been a while that I’ve had a great time on the golf course,” she said.

Flashback to 2019 and Park wasn’t smiling. On Wednesday night before the tournament then known as the ANA Inspiration started that year, Park’s car was broken into in the parking lot of her Palm Desert hotel. She learned her golf clubs were stolen when she woke up Thursday morning about two and a half hours before she was scheduled to tee off.

She cobbled together a set of clubs using the only long putter they had in the clubhouse, her caddie’s irons and some hastily put together woods and was able to play. She didn’t play poorly considering the circumstances, but she did miss the cut.

Annie Park lines up her tee shot on the 9th hole during the second round of the Chevron Championship at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, March 30, 2022.

“No one ever found my clubs,” she said Friday, as the police report she had to file back then didn’t lead to anything. “Yeah, that was stressful, but it was a lesson learned. And I’ve got a great set now, so everything’s good.”

That’s an understatement. Park used those clubs to string together six birdies and one bogey on Friday, including a three-birdie stretch on holes 18, one, and two. To be in contention at a major is a big step for Park. This is her 23rd major tournament, and she’s never finished inside the top 15.

She admitted that she considered calling it a career or at least taking a break from golf as her performance was lagging and the toll of playing pro golf during the pandemic sapped some of the enjoyment out of the game.

“Yeah, it feels good to be back (in contention),” she said. “You know, I think for a while I thought about stepping away from the game. I mean, COVID really was long. Last year I took the two-month break just needing some time to myself. Yeah, I think last week was the first time I started to enjoy it again. Just not with golf, but just in general, like being able to see the spectators again and just having this newfound passion for golf.”

On Thursday and Friday, Park was in the unusual situation of playing by herself. The tournament plays in twosomes and there were 115 golfers in the field, so that meant someone has to play by themselves and Park was the last player to make the field.

But is playing as a single an advantage or a disadvantage? Even after playing two great rounds, she wasn’t 100 percent sure if being by herself helped her.

“Yesterday, I was just chilling, taking my time. Then I realized the group behind me started to catch up, and I’m like, I’m going to get a warning at this rate by myself,” she said. “Playing by myself was kind of weird yesterday, but today I kind of got used to it.

Annie Park lines up a putt on the 8th hole during the second round of the Chevron Championship at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, March 30, 2022.

“When I made the turn and started waiting on players in the group in front of me, kind of just starts to feel like a normal golf all over again,” she said. “It could be an advantage that you do have a little bit more time to yourself, but also overthinking is not always great.”

The one clear disadvantage? Without a playing partner, she had to rely heavily on her caddie Scott Leonard’s sense of humor.

“I mean, I am by myself out there, so there is a lot of talking to myself and I’ve been stuck with my caddie’s dad jokes,” she said with a laugh.

Park went to USC, but is a New Yorker through and through as evidenced by the white Yankees cap she wore during her round Friday. Even giving her a mulligan for the 2019 tournament, she has not had much success on the Dinah Shore Tournament Course.

She’s played here four other times, missing the cut twice along with finishes of 56th and 57th.

She’s been tinkering successfully with the entire package that is her golf game in recent weeks and it’s paying off. She’s worked on the mental aspect, her swing, and even her equipment, adding a Scotty Cameron putter and a TSi3 driver to her bag.

“I’ve been studying my own swing, and it’s been kind of helping me guide my DNA and base foundation out there,” she said. “I actually changed to a new putter and it’s been helping out a lot. I’ve added new iron shafts, new driver. But, yeah, I just overall started having fun on the golf course again last week, and been enjoying it this week as well.”

Shad Powers is a columnist for The Desert Sun. Reach him at shad.powers@desertsun.com.

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Chevron Championship: Patty Tavatanakit continues quest for consecutive wins and date with history

Only two players have won the Chevron title in consecutive years.

Anyone who watched Patty Tavatanakit dominate the field at the Chevron Championship in winning the 2021 major championship can’t be surprised that Tavatanakit is looking for back-to-back wins in the event this year.

A pair of late birdies Friday pushed Tavatanakit to 8-under 136 after 36 holes on the Dinah Shore Course at Mission Hills Country Club. That puts Tavatanakit, the reigning LPGA rookie of the year, just one shot behind leader Hinako Shibuno after the morning wave of players in the second round.

Only two players, Sandra Post in 1978-79 and Annika Sorenstam in 2001-02, have won the Chevron title in consecutive years.

Shibuno, the 2019 AIG Women’s Open winner, shot one of the best rounds of the morning, a 6-under 66 that included seven birdies. Shibuno is at 9 under, and like Tavatanakit, she is seeking her second major title.

Tavatanakit is tied at 8 under with Annie Park, who for the second day in a row played without a partner. Park shot a 67 on Friday.

A group of players is tied at 6 under for the tournament, including overnight leaders Minjee Lee and Jennifer Kupcho, who have afternoon tee times.

Patty Tavatanakit of Thailand reacts after a birdie on the 17th hole during the second round of The Chevron Championship at The Westin Mission Hills Golf Resort & Spa on April 01, 2022, in Rancho Mirage, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Tavantanakit said she left too many shots on the course Friday, but was happy with the two closing birdies

“I think 17 was definitely a bonus,” Tavatanakit said of the 20-foot birdie putt on the par-3. “That pin position (tight to the left side of the green) was just taking it one shot at a time, and it ended up being a great shot.”

Knowing the tee is up on the 485-yard par-5 18th hole, Tavatanakit was again able to reach the island green in two shots but missed the putting surface to the left. She hit a delicate chip shot to within three feet and made the birdie putt in front of applauding fans who were not at the tournament last year because of COVID-19 restrictions.

“I remember being here as an amateur and making birdie on that hole (the 18th) is always a cheery feeling,” Tavatanakit said.

Park playing well

Annie Park, the 26-year old from New York who attended USC, was the first player out on the course Friday, and she played by herself as the odd woman out in the 115-player field. She took advantage of the solitude by firing a 5-under 67 to move her to 8 under for the tournament.

Annie Park tees off on the 9th hole during the second round of the Chevron Championship at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, on April 1, 2022.

Park being in contention could be considered a bit of a surprise. This is Park’s 23rd major championship, and she’s never finished inside the top 15. Her best finish in this event is a tie for 56th.

“Just overall it was a great day and I feel pretty — a lot better about my long game. Been putting a lot better. Made some really good putts out there. Did leave some out there, but overall I’m stroking it pretty solid,” said Park, who’s just plain having fun on the course this week. “Yeah, it’s nice. I think the fans are very supportive. So nice to see just fans out there again, always supporting, Hey, go Annie, fight on.”

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Angela Stanford’s last trip to the Dinah carries great emotion, three weeks after her mom’s death

“I want to be the best of who she was … I don’t know if I can do that.”

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. – No matter where Angela Stanford traveled around the world, she always sent her mom a text on the plane. The first trip without her was rough. At the Palm Springs airport baggage claim, Stanford fought the urge to run back to Texas.

Golf had always been a tool – to go to college, to escape, to help others, to bring joy to her mom as she bravely battled cancer.

“It’s never felt like I played golf for me,” she said.

Now what?

When Stanford, 44, turned into Mission Hills Country Club for the first time this week, she noticed that the flower beds were covered in luscious pink and purple petunias, the same colors that Nan wanted on her casket.

She lost it.

When the desert sky spit rain during that first practice round at the Chevron Championship, Stanford thought it might have been the first sprinkling she’d ever felt in 20 years of coming here. Then she saw a rainbow, arched in the sky like a bridge to heaven. A reminder of God’s promises.

Hi mom.

The night before the first round, Stanford went to the Sunglass Hut to find something that would hide her tears. On the first tee Thursday, she sobbed as she prepared her yardage book and pin sheet in the shade of the grandstand.

She thought she’d cried it out by the time Jenny Shin hit. But when the first tee announcer said, “from Saginaw, Texas,” Stanford’s head tilted back in a shock of pain.

“She basically built that city,” said Stanford.

Angela Stanford celebrates her 40th birthday with her mom in Las Vegas. (Courtesy photo)

Laura Nan met the love of her life, Steve, in the fifth grade in Saginaw, a suburb of Fort Worth, and the two married in 1974 shortly after high school graduation. Nan’s mind for numbers had her overseeing the city finances for decades, without a college degree. She somehow managed to build a police station, rec center, and city hall without raising taxes. She was city manager for 17 years.

When Nan was approached by a councilman about naming rights one day, she thought they were going to put Angela’s name on the water tower. Instead, it’s Nan’s name that’s on city hall.

Nan Stanford died on March 9 at home in Saginaw at age 66. She’d battled cancer – first in the breast and then in her bones and liver – for more than a decade. During the funeral procession out to Aurora, the police officer stopped in front of city hall for 15 seconds to honor her life’s work.

“There aren’t many buildings named after women,” said Stanford.

Looking back, Stanford said she should’ve backed off of that first tee shot at Mission Hills until she was ready to hit. Instead, she hurried through and pulled it left out of bounds. The opening triple-bogey proved difficult to recover from in a first-round 77.

But there were shots, like the 48-foot birdie putt she drained on the third hole and the tiny window she laced it through in the trees on No. 11, that she credits mom for the assist.

She plans to play in Hawaii next because mom loved it there. Nan even touched base with her sister about an upcoming trip mere days before she died.

Stanford, a seven-time winner on the LPGA, gets her strength from Nan, that stick-to-itiveness that saw her win her first major at age 40. She started a foundation that awards college scholarships to those whose lives have been impacted by cancer because she knows that if Nan’s cancer had come when Angela was in high school, there’s no way she would’ve gone to college. And Angela was the first from her family to go to college.

It’s the reason she wears blue on Sundays – ­in honor of her blue-collar roots.

“We’ll give scholarships until we run out of money,” she said.

A hug from mom at the 2015 Solheim Cup, where Stanford defeated Suzann Pettersen in singles play. (courtesy photo)

Nan loved people. In Rancho Mirage, she’d get out to the first, ninth, 10th, and 18th to watch golf but would otherwise stay in the clubhouse and talk to those she knew on tour about their families.

“That’s the thing I’m having the hardest part with,” said Stanford. “I want to be the best of who she was … I don’t know if I can do that.”

It’s difficult to say what comes next for Stanford, beyond this week and Hawaii, because she’s still battling an emptiness inside.

The good news is that there will never be another first round without mom.

And there will be more rainbows.

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The Dinah deserves an epic finish. Is there a more popular choice than Lexi Thompson to deliver it?

“I’m enjoying every last step I have at Mission Hills.”

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. – Lexi Thompson was a combined 43 under at the Chevron Championship the past five years heading into this week. Lydia Ko stood closest to her in that stretch at 37 under.

Mission Hills is Thompson’s favorite stop on tour. The 27-year-old won here in 2014 and then put herself in the conversation at the season’s first major nearly every year after that. Of course, what happened in 2017 on the back nine of the Dinah Shore Tournament Course became a legendary nightmare: a four-stroke penalty that rocked the golf world and a comeback that sent chills down the spines of all who gathered around Poppie’s Pond to watch the finish.

But, of course, Thompson came up short to So Yeon Ryu that week. The rules of golf have since changed and many feel Thompson is owed one here. Had she won that week, what kind of trajectory would that momentum have taken her?

We’ll never know, but a Thompson victory on the last lap around Dinah’s Place would be the popular choice of many if such a thing could be scripted.

Lexi Thompson cries in a towel as she walks to the 18th green after her second shot during the final round of the ANA Inspiration on the Dinah Shore Tournament Course at Mission Hills Country Club on April 2, 2017, in Rancho Mirage, California. (Photo by Robert Laberge/Getty Images)

Thompson opened with a 3-under 69 on a day of tremendous ball-striking and seemed relaxed after what could’ve been a silly low round. When asked if she felt like there might be some kind of destiny in the cards for her this week, she shrugged it off.

“Destiny, I don’t know,” said Thompson. “I’m enjoying every last step I have at Mission Hills because it’s one of my favorite venues.”

Jennifer Kuphcho and Minjee Lee hold the early lead at 6 under. Thompson played alongside World No. 1 Jin Young Ko in the morning’s marquee pairing. Ko, who boldly said her best golf would have her winning by five this week, broke a streak of 34 consecutive rounds under par on Thursday after she struggled to a 74.

“I was hitting lots of great shots, said Ko, “but my putting wasn’t good on the green. I couldn’t see the break as much or speed, everything was wrong.

“I don’t know what happened.”

Jin Young Ko watches her tee shot off the first tee at the Dinah Shore Tournament Course during round one at the Chevron Championship at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, on Thursday, March 31, 2022.

Coming into this week, Ko was a combined 50 under par in the major championships since 2019, the best of any player in that span. She amassed eight top-20 finishes in 10 starts in the majors during that stretch.

How shocking is Ko’s 74? Her scoring average over the past 11 events is 67.54.

Expectations are enormously high for a reason.

Thompson’s love affair with Mission Hills can be seen in her performance numbers. Since winning here in 2014, she leads the tour at the Chevron in scoring average (69.75), rounds in the 60s (14), top-5 finishes (5), top-10 finishes (6), and cumulative score in relation to par (72 under). She also leads in proximity to the hole from 100-125 yards at 22 feet, 11 inches.

Thompson, who works with instructor Martin Hall, said she’s grinding harder than ever on her game, particularly putting.

“I don’t know how my back is still intact with how many putts I hit every day,” she said, “the hours that I’ve put in, but that’s what it takes.”

Thompson and her family rent a house every year in Rancho Mirage and she enjoys mom’s cooking each night. It’s been five years since that shocking Sunday in the desert knocked the wind out of her chest.

Despite it all, she can’t get enough of the place.

“There’s nothing like this event,” said Thompson.

Which is why the old Dinah deserves an epic conclusion, exactly the kind a people’s champion like Thompson could deliver.

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Chevron Championship: Jennifer Kupcho is feeling comfortable on the golf course, fires opening round 66

Kupcho kept repeating the same word about her round Thursday, “comfortable.”

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. — Jennifer Kupcho is having a great 2022, and her opening round of 6-under 66 at the Chevron Championship on Thursday isn’t the reason.

Kupcho got married on February 19 in Arizona, and the sampling of wedding day photos she posted on Instagram includes a picturesque sunset shot of her taking a swing at a driving range with her wedding dress on.

She opted for the more traditional golf attire of green shorts and a black shirt on Thursday as she tore through the Dinah Shore Tournament Course. After four straight birdies on the back nine, she reached 8 under through 14 holes, which put her in striking distance of the record round of 10 under (shared by Lorena Ochoa and Lydia Ko). But back-to-back bogeys on 15 and 16 had her settling for a fine round of 66.

Kupcho singled out one club, the biggest one in her bag, for the reason she started so fast.

“I haven’t been hitting my driver particularly well recently, and that’s usually my strongest suit, so to come out and you really need to hit fairways on a major golf course and that was my big thing today,” the 24-year-old from Colorado said. “I hit a bunch of fairways, and that really set me up for my birdies.”

Kupcho said she grinded on the driving range Wednesday night with her driver after hitting it all over the place during Wednesday’s pro-am. That extra work paid off. She hit 11 of 14 fairways with an average drive of 271 yards. That helps you get nine birdies in 18 holes.

Jennifer Kupcho of the United States reacts to a missed putt on the seventh hole during the first round of The Chevron Championship at The Westin Mission Hills Golf Resort & Spa on March 31, 2022, in Rancho Mirage, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Kupcho may not be a household name yet, but she’s getting close. She was a top amateur player out of Wake Forest, and famously won the inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur in 2019. She turned pro and finished tied for second in a major event later that year at the Evian Championship. Since then, she has risen high enough in the world of American LPGA players that she was on the 2021 Solheim Cup team.

She acquitted herself well at the Solheim Cup, teaming with Lizette Salas to pick up two wins and a halve in the 15-13 American loss.

Speaking of Salas, Kupcho was partnered with Salas on Thursday and will be again Friday. The two developed such a bond at the Solheim Cup that Salas attended Kupcho’s wedding.

Kupcho kept repeating the same word about her round Thursday, “comfortable.”

“Honestly, it’s just being comfortable on this golf course. I get here and I feel comfortable and I love this place and then getting to play with Lizette who is my good friend. It was just all comfortable and really fun,” she said. “This is similar to Colorado golf, so similar to Arizona golf, which is where I live now. The same type of grass. I felt good out there.”

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While the driver is traditionally her strong suit, her putter has been considered a weakness, and that was the club she focused on during the offseason.

And her putting coach during that time was none other than her now-husband Jay Monahan (that’s Jay Monahan the LPGA caddie, not Jay Monahan the commissioner of the PGA Tour). Her husband, in fact, is caddying this week for another player in the field, American Sarah Schmelzel.

Kupcho was on fire with the short blade on Thursday, needing just 24 putts to get around the course. She made a 25-footer for birdie on 14, which elicited a fist-pump.

“I’ve been working on my putting a lot.  I really just worked with actually my husband who is a great putter, and he really knows my game well so I worked on it a lot with him over the offseason and worked on my stroke and my stroke has been really good recently,” she said.

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She’s had success at a major before, been on the Solheim Cup, won at the amateur level, so is she at the point now where she feels comfortable at an event like the Chevron Championship, or are there still nerves?

“Everyone gets nervous, but I think it’s more of just getting used to the nerves and figuring out how to deal with it and learning different tactics, and that’s what I’ve definitely tried to do in the big events that I’ve played in,” she said.

Shad Powers is a columnist for The Desert Sun. Reach him at shad.powers@desertsun.com.

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Minjee Lee co-leads at Chevron, plans to caddie for brother Min Woo Lee at Masters Par 3 Contest

This will be Minjee’s first trip to Augusta National.

RANCHO MIRAGE, Cali. – It’s a special fortnight for Australian siblings Minjee Lee and Min Woo Lee. Minjee Lee, last year’s Amundi Evian champion, holds a share of the early lead with Jennifer Kupcho at the Chevron Championship, where the women are taking their final major championship laps around the Dinah Shore Tournament Course. Minjee, 25, opened with a 6-under 66 on a picture-perfect day in the desert.

Next week, Min Woo, 23, will make his debut in the Masters. On Wednesday, Minjee plans to caddie for her younger brother in the Par 3 Contest.

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Min Woo Lee of Australia celebrates with the trophy after winning the abrdn Scottish Open at The Renaissance Club on July 11, 2021 in North Berwick, Scotland. (Photo by Mark Runnacles/Getty Images)

Minjee won’t be the first major champion to caddie in the Masters Par 3. In 2018, former No. 1 Ariya Jutanguarn looped for good friend Kiradech Aphibarnrat. In 2016, Lydia Ko caddied for Kevin Na and even hit a tee shot.

“He kind of asked me very casually,” said Minjee, who will also make her first trip to Augusta.

AUGUSTA, GEORGIA – APRIL 06: Lydia Ko, signs an autograph as Kevin Na of the United States looks on during the Par 3 Contest prior to the start of the 2016 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 6, 2016 in Augusta, Georgia. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Min Woo qualified for the Masters by finishing in the top 50 of the Official World Golf Ranking at year’s end (49th). He has twice won on the DP World Tour, most recently last summer at the Scottish Open.

The Lees became the first siblings to win USGA titles. Minjee won the 2012 U.S. Girls’ Junior while Min Woo won the 2016 U.S. Junior.

Minjee, currently ranked No. 4 in the world, has won six times on the LPGA, including last year’s Evian in a playoff. Her previous best finish at the ANA is a share of third in 2017.

“I know I have one under my belt,” said Minjee of winning majors, “but I do want a little bit more.”

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