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In this clip from the Forward Press podcast, Golfweek’s David Dusek & Beth Ann Nichols discuss how players can qualify for the 2021 Solheim Cup.

In this clip from the Forward Press podcast, Golfweek’s David Dusek & Beth Ann Nichols discuss how players can qualify for the 2021 Solheim Cup.

Angela Stanford doesn’t mind being a late bloomer. She’s still unrelenting in her quest to get better.

Angela Stanford is still learning how to deal with moments high on emotion. She’s fine with having questions about her game still unanswered

Angela Stanford stayed with her family across the street from Champions Golf Club during the 75th U.S. Women’s Open. When she walked in the door after a gut-wrenching opening round of 80, her parents were sitting on the couch and her dad, Steve, had already opened up a Coors Original.

“You want one of these?” he asked, offering up a beer.

“Yeah,” Stanford replied.

Such a fickle game. Four days prior, the trio had been on top of the proverbial mountain in suburban Dallas, with Angela winning on the LPGA for the first time in front of her parents at the Volunteers of America Classic. Now, with expectations and emotions running as high as the clouds, Stanford hit the opening tee shot in her home state of Texas – “God’s country,” as she calls it – and proceeded to play the first four holes in six over par.

Double, bogey, bogey, double.

The heart that once swelled so big it could bust was ripped out in about an hour.

“Standing over a par putt on the fifth hole, I’m just praying and begging for this 3-footer to go in,” said Stanford. “I’m like, I’ve got to make a par.”

2020 U.S. Women's Open
Angela Stanford watches her tee shot on the first hole during the first round at the 2020 U.S. Women’s Open at Champions Golf Club (Cypress Creek Course) in Houston, Texas on Thursday, Dec. 10, 2020. (Jeff Haynes/USGA)

In a way, the fact that it was so bad almost made it easier to get over. A missed put on Friday to miss the weekend by one might have stung even harder.

Still, learning how to deal with moments that run high on emotion remains something of an enigma to Stanford. And at 43, she’s perfectly fine with having questions about her game that remained unanswered. The fact that there’s still so much left to unlock is what drives her to want more after two decades on tour.

“I love that I’ve been a late bloomer,” she said. “I love that it takes me a little bit longer than most. I tell people I’m slow at everything, except when I get behind the wheel.”

After the 2020 season came to an end – she’s still vexed that she hasn’t figured out how to play Tiburon Golf Club, site of the CME Group Tour Championship – Stanford put her clubs away and headed north to Pagosa Springs, Colorado, where she has a little place and likes to ski at Wolf Creek. She also spent time on the slopes with friends in Vail and then flew to Montana to ski some more.

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Stanford has skied for a long as she can remember, taking road trips with her family to Red River, New Mexico. Skiing, she said, is the only thing she can do that truly gets her away from golf.

“There’s something about being on a ski lift, the quiet and the peace,” she said. “For me it’s a spiritual thing.”

Friends gave her a hard time for having the shortest skis. She might be the best skier in the group, but the seven-time LPGA winner knows her limitations and she stays within them.

Going into the season-opening Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions, Stanford hit fewer than a dozen balls into a net. She has a putting mat and a weighted club at her home in Colorado, and she poured through statistics, looking for new goals for the 2021 season.

But for the most part, she went into the TOC with zero expectations and finished tied for fifth. The real work on her game gets started in offseason No. 2, as the tour takes a month off before returning to Orlando in late February. (Stanford does have one more ski trip to Park City planned.)

For 2021, Stanford told instructor Todd Kolb that she wanted to go about her goals differently this time around.

“If you look at my history,” she said, “I’ll win and then I’ll play bad … disappear for months. I’ve got to figure out what’s going on there.”

While Stanford has long prided herself on being a consistent player, it frustrates her that she has never come close to winning the Vare Trophy for low scoring average.

“You can be consistently average,” she concluded.

The fact that Stanford isn’t afraid to look in the mirror at this stage in her career and honestly assess what needs to improve makes Kolb’s job that much easier. He’s not one to sugarcoat either.

“Let’s just get after it,” said Kolb, who points to two specific stats that draw a direct line to Stanford’s success.

The first: average length of her first putt after a missed green.

“I always tell people chipping differentiates,” said Kolb.

The second: tracking her conversion rate on birdie putts from 9 to 15 feet.

“That’s the range that great players are hitting it when they’re hitting the ball well,” he said.

Stanford, a Solheim Cup assistant captain who might end up playing, has greatly enjoyed her weekly Zoom chats with fellow assistant Michelle Wie and captain Pat Hurst. She downplays whether or not she’ll be hitting shots in Toledo.

Angela Stanford tees off at the Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions (courtesy Diamond Resorts).

For someone who isn’t really into stats, Stanford has found that being aware of where she stands with certain numbers helps her to maintain focus during rounds. Keeping a running count of total putts and fairways hit at the TOC, for example, kept her in the present with mini-goals.

There is one goal, however, that’s so big that she hasn’t even put it down on paper.

“If you talk to anybody this year and they don’t mention playing the Olympics,” said Stanford, “then they’re lying. So I don’t want to lie to you. Playing in the Olympics is a dream for every athlete … that’s probably the long shot.”

She won he first major at age 40. Why not?

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Veteran U.S. players want more captain’s picks for 2021 Solheim Cup

Earlier this year, U.S. Solheim Cup captain Pat Hurst said she had lobbied to increase the number of picks she receives from two to four.

NAPLES, Fla. – With Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker joining Golf Channel’s broadcast at the CME Group Tour Championship and Solheim Cup captain Pat Hurst zooming around Tiburon Golf Club in a cart, it seemed fitting to start thinking about how next year’s teams might shape up.

The 2021 golf season will be a Cup extravaganza. In the wake of fewer playing opportunities due to the COVID-19 pandemic, every team has made changes to how players qualify – with the exception of the U.S. Solheim Cup team.

Stricker’s picks were raised from four to six for 2021. The same goes for European Solheim Cup captain Catriona Matthew. On Wednesday, the European Ryder Cup team announced changes to its points system to better reward the hottest players leading into Whistling Straits.

Sticker said he wanted the six picks due to the uncertainty of how the pandemic would impact the PGA Tour’s schedule.

“Whistling straits is a big course,” said Stricker. “We want to make sure we’ve got guys on there that are hitting it a long ways and playing well. If that means going outside the top 12, then we’ll probably do it.”

Steve Stricker, Ryder Cup captain
Golf Channel’s Steve Stricker, left, and Jerry Foltz provided live analysis from the field during the third round at the CME Group Tour Championship.

As for the PGA of America’s role in the decision, “If we’re OK with it, they seemed to be OK with it too.”

Earlier this year, Hurst said she had lobbied to increase the number of picks she receives from two to four. The Solheim committee that makes such decisions includes LPGA commissioner Mike Whan, the chair of the board, the player president and the three previous U.S. Solheim Cup captains.

The 2021 Solheim Cup will be contested Sept. 4-6 at the Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio, three weeks ahead of the Ryder Cup and about six hours away from Whistling Straits in Wisconsin.

Currently eight players will qualify off of Solheim Cup points, two will get in off Rolex Rankings and two are captain’s picks.

“We should get at least four,” said Solheim veteran Cristie Kerr. “I would think you would have to. Even if it’s only ever this one time in history.”

Assistant captain Angela Stanford would also like to see Hurst get four picks, noting that while points increase in 2021 (1.5 times more points for regular events and two times more for majors), there are no guarantees how next year might go.

“I feel like you can err on the safe side,” said Stanford, “and give us more picks just in case it doesn’t go as planned.”

Stanford, by the way, won in Dallas earlier this month and currently ranks fifth on the points list.

Stacy Lewis’ main concern is that the Rolex Rankings were altered this year to protect players who chose not to compete. In other words, points and divisors only changed and aged on weeks when an athlete competes. It’s how Jin Young Ko never dropped out of the No. 1 position even though she didn’t compete on tour until November.

“I think you take those two Rolex (spots) and make them picks,” said Lewis. “The rankings aren’t running normally still. To me, that’s the bigger issue.”

It would seem that the committee would need to make a decision before the tour restarts Jan. 21-24 at the Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

The current top 8 on the points list include Danielle Kang, Nelly Korda, Ally Ewing, Brittany Altomare, Angela Stanford, Marina Alex, Austin Ernst and Amy Olson.

The next eight: Jessica Korda, Megan Khang, Stacy Lewis, Jennifer Song, Lexi Thompson, Jennifer Kupcho, Cheyenne Knight and Mina Harigae.

Greg Hardwig of the Naples Daily News contributed to this article.

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Next year’s Solheim Cup buildout will add to the Inverness splendor

This week at the LPGA Drive on Championship, players and television viewers are seeing Inverness in its purest form.

TOLEDO, Ohio – Can you picture it? A massive u-shaped structure that seats 3,000 rowdy Solheim Cup fans situated around one teeing area at Inverness Club, serving both the 1st and 10th holes. Rather than a tunnel, Solheim Cup players will walk across a bridge from the practice putting green, over the road and through the crowd, likely high-fiving their way down the stairs and onto the tee box, music blaring.

In Dennis Baggett’s mind, the crowds at Inverness are going from zero to 150,000 in 13 months’ time.

This week at the LPGA Drive on Championship, players and television viewers are seeing Inverness in its purest form. No fans. No leaderboards. No grandstands. No hospitality suites. Maybe two ropes.

The build-out around the first tee next year will extend into where players are parking their cars this week. The ninth and 18th holes will be switched for Solheim so that players can make the short walk to the 10th tee and back into the rockin’ grandstand. On Sunday, players making the turn in their singles matches will have to wait on players who are just beginning the round. The action there will be nonstop.

Exactly the kind of environment that Danielle Kang thrives in. As a Solheim rookie in Des Moines, Iowa, Kang revved up the gallery on the first tee, encouraging them to scream and shout right through her swing.

Apparently Kang doesn’t mind the quiet either, as she’s tied for the lead here at Inverness with European Solheim Cup players Celine Boutier and Jodi Ewart Shadoff. With so many Asian players opting to skip the two events in Ohio, past and potential Solheim Cuppers are peppering the board.

Mel Reid, a three-time European Solheim Cup player who served as vice captain last year at Gleneages, said Inverness is one of the toughest courses she’s ever played on the LPGA, a fact that she loves.

“Kind of the running joke between players and caddies this week,” said Reid, “is it’s a major for $1 million.”

The LPGA lost one of its five majors to COVID-19 this season when the Evian Championship was canceled. Inverness, a course that has hosted four U.S. Opens and two PGA Championships, has certainly given the women an unexpected treat. It was only seven weeks ago that the LPGA approached Inverness about hosting the last-minute event and five weeks ago that the club agreed.

While the first round played firm and fast, the second offered a completely different challenge as rain ruled the day. There was a 45-minute delay Saturday afternoon for maintenance crews to squeegee water off the greens. Kang marveled at the way Inverness changed like a chameleon.

There likely hasn’t been a more fan-friendly course than this Donald Ross design. Baggett has walked the course this week like he would as a fan, anticipating crowd flow issues and fairway crosswalks.

“I remember standing in the clubhouse one time and I could see 13 flags,” said Baggett.

Fans can purchase upgraded tickets to the Solheim Pavilion, a structure that offers fans views of the greens on Nos. 4, 11 and 14, the 15th tee and the entirety of Nos. 5 and 12.

Community support is terrific, too. Before the pandemic hit, 84 partners signed up for next year. The good news is that not a single one has pulled out. The bad news is that it’s a tough time to add more.

The Toledo market is faithful to the LPGA. Next week the Marathon Classic will be held less than 10 miles away for the 35th time. When Drive On organizers spotted a concerning pothole on Dorr Street earlier this week, right at the entrance of Inverness, a phone call was placed to the mayor and the hole was fixed the next day.

There are 19 of 24 Solheim Cup players from last year in the field this week as well as 2021 assistant captain Angela Stanford. Captains Pat Hurst and Catriona Matthew aren’t here now, but they’ll be on property soon enough.

“Honestly, this is going to be a spectacle,” said Reid.

At last, a course that is as spectacular as the contest itself.

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LPGA restart at Inverness offers a look at Solheim Cup venue, potential team members

Players and television viewers are getting an advance look at the 2021 Solheim track at the LPGA Drive On Championship.

TOLEDO, Ohio – The 8:11 a.m. group of Angela Stanford, Amy Olson and Madelene Sagstrom will be mic’d up on Golf Channel for the first round of the LPGA Drive On Championship at Inverness. Players and television viewers are getting an advance look at the 2021 Solheim track and Stanford, along with Michelle Wie, was recently named an assistant captain under Pat Hurst. Sweden’s Sagstrom won her first LPGA title back in January at the new Gainbridge LPGA at Boca Rio.

This marks the first time an entire group will be mic’d up for television on the LPGA. Coverage for Friday’s first round begins at 9 a.m.

Former Solheim Cuppers Nelly Korda, Lexi Thompson and Carlota Ciganda tee off at 8 a.m.

Thompson warmed up for this week’s restart by competing in two men’s mini tour events. She hit only two drivers off the tee in Thursday’s 18-hole practice round. On both holes, Thompson purposely aimed down the wrong fairway. She’s mostly using a driving iron off the tee, hitting it 210 to 215 before getting another 50 or so yards of roll.

“I would say keeping it straight of the tee is the main focus,” said Thompson, “because distance isn’t really super key out here, because a lot of run-outs are about 270-ish and the ball is rolling a lot. So you don’t have to hit it too far in the air.”

Nelly Korda can’t wait for the chance to let some adrenaline escape her system.

“It’s been just sitting inside me for a couple months,” she said.

The World No. 2 moved out on her own for the first time during the pandemic break, getting an apartment that’s about 20 minutes from her parents’ house.

“I still see them almost every day,” she said. “Hey, what are you guys doing for dinner? Can I come over?”

Korda also switched out most of the clubs in her bag over the break. She had one two-week stretch where she didn’t touch a club.

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As the tour eases back into action and builds its protective bubble, physio trainers aren’t on hand for players these first few weeks. (At the Drive On, only players and caddies and allowed on site – no coaches or trainers or family members.) Nelly said she and big sister Jessica packed an entire suitcase full of “recovery stuff.”

“I’m a little nervous about that,” said Nelly, “how my body is going to hold up, because I’ve always had a physio with me.”

Another interesting group of past and potential Solheim Cuppers goes off at 7:49 a.m.: Danielle Kang, Anna Nordqvist and Jennifer Kupcho.

Kang, a self-described homebody, said the break was good for her mentally. She enjoyed walking to Einstein’s in the mornings with her dog, hiking with boyfriend Maverick McNealy and painting (anything but portraits). She also worked quite a bit on her golf game, taking advantage of being close to instructor Butch Harmon in Nevada.

“It’s been a good off-time, but I’m glad to be back,” said Kang. “Like I said, I love the competition and I can’t wait to play.”

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Michelle Wie West named assistant captain for 2021 Solheim Cup

2021 Solheim Cup captain, Pat Hurst, has selected Michelle Wie West to be an assistant captain for the event. Wie West, 30, recently gave birth to her first child, a daughter named Makenna, and has taken time off from competing on the LPGA Tour. Wie West has not competed in an LPGA event since the 2019 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship, where she missed the cut. Having competed in five previous Solheim Cups, she hopes to help other players feel comfortable in the event. She has helped the U.S. Team win in 2009, 2015, and 2017. Wie West joins Angela Stanford as an assistant captain on Hurst’s squad. The 2021 Solheim Cup will be contested Sept. 4-6 at Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio.

2021 Solheim Cup captain, Pat Hurst, has selected Michelle Wie West to be an assistant captain for the event. Wie West, 30, recently gave birth to her first child, a daughter named Makenna, and has taken time off from competing on the LPGA Tour. Wie West has not competed in an LPGA event since the 2019 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship, where she missed the cut. Having competed in five previous Solheim Cups, she hopes to help other players feel comfortable in the event. She has helped the U.S. Team win in 2009, 2015, and 2017. Wie West joins Angela Stanford as an assistant captain on Hurst’s squad. The 2021 Solheim Cup will be contested Sept. 4-6 at Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio.

Michelle Wie West named assistant captain for 2021 Solheim Cup

New mom Michelle Wie West has been named an assistant captain for the 2021 U.S. Solheim Cup team.

Michelle Wie West didn’t sit around waiting for a call. When she heard that Pat Hurst was going to be the 2021 Solheim Cup captain, Wie West texted her “Pod Mom” saying that she’d love to be an assistant captain.

Hurst didn’t give the nod right away, but Wie West got her wish.

“All the players love her,” said Hurst. “They respect her, and that’s what I need.”

It doesn’t seem all that long ago that Wie West was a mystery to most. When she competed on her first Solheim Cup team in 2009, it marked the first time players got to know the former phenom away from an entourage. They discovered that the “kid” could hang. And her passion shone through in a rousing 3-0-1 Cup debut.

Juli Inkster was so impressed that she predicted a Wie West victory on the LPGA before the year was out. Wie West proved her correct in November at the Lorena Ochoa Invitational.

Morgan Pressel (left) and Michelle Wie share a laugh during a team photo shoot prior to the 2013 Solheim Cup at Colorado Golf Club.

“I won my first LPGA tournament after I played in the Solheim,” said Wie West on a media conference call, “and I don’t know if I hadn’t had that experience if that was going to happen that year.”

Wie West, 30, gave birth to daughter Makenna on June 19 and has posted several pictures with her on the range in recent weeks. The five-time LPGA winner confirmed that she still wants to continue playing on the LPGA, even in 2020 if possible, but her return mostly comes down to safety.

“It just depends really on the state of the world more than the state of my game at this point, unfortunately,” she said.

A silver lining to the pandemic break is that husband Jonnie West, an executive with the Golden State Warriors, will be mostly be her side through the end of the year.

“One positive thing that happened, there was a scenario where if (the Warriors) went to Orlando in the bubble and I was home by myself,” said Wie West, “I was quarantined, my parents couldn’t come, I could have been a single mother for a couple months all by myself, and that was a scary thought.”

Her parents, Bo and B.J., are in town now and Wie West took full advantage, recently playing 18 holes for the first time in a long time.

“I had to pump after nine holes,” she said, laughing.

Practice time on the range looks a bit different too these days. Wie West said she hits two balls and then goes over to check on McKenna before returning to hit two more.

The dream of hoisting hoisting a trophy on the 18th along with Makenna fuels Wie West to keep competing. She wants what Tiger Woods enjoyed at Augusta National last year.

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That being said, she’s now more impressed than ever by what LPGA moms who have come before her have accomplished, notably Suzann Pettersen at last year’s Solheim Cup in Scotland and Catriona Matthew winning the Women’s British Open 11 weeks after giving birth to her second daughter. Wie West marveled at the idea, noting that she’s barely hitting driver 220 yards now.

For two Solheim Cups, Wie West was in Hurst’s player pod and greatly benefited from her nurturing approach. Wie West hopes that she can help other players feel comfortable too, given that she’s likely experienced every emotion there is in her five Solheim Cup appearances.

Wie West joins Angela Stanford as an assistant on Hurst’s squad. The 2021 Solheim Cup will be contested Sept. 4-6 at Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio. Next week the LPGA restarts its season at Inverness at the new Drive On Championship where prominent Americans Nelly Korda, Danielle Kang, Lexi Thompson, Jessica Korda and Stanford are among those in the field. Hurst won’t be onsite for the competition, however, as it’s closed to spectators.

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Angela Stanford named assistant captain for 2021 Solheim Cup

LPGA star Angela Stanford was named assistant captain for the 2021 Solheim Cup by captain Pat Hurst.

Angela Stanford was hitting balls in her new at-home hitting bay when Pat Hurst called on April 21. Stanford went back and looked up the date recently because keeping a secret for that long isn’t easy to do.

At last, she can tell the world that she’ll be by Hurst’s side in the role of assistant captain at next year’s Solheim Cup.

“I told (Hurst) it was kind of between tears and total excitement,” Stanford told a group of reporters, “and it was so hard because when you’re in quarantine, I was bouncing off the walls the rest of the night and there was nobody there to enjoy that with me.”

Assistant captains play a more visible role in the pod system, which three-time captain Juli Inkster put in place for the 2015 campaign and Hurst will continue. Each assistant is assigned a pod of players based on personality, and back then, Stanford was actually in Hurst’s pod. Stanford played a vital role in Team USA’s memorable comeback that year, earning the winning point against Suzann Pettersen in Germany.

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“That morning when I walked out on the putting green,” said Stanford, “I remember looking at my caddie and saying, ‘Hey, this is my turn. This is it. Let’s go.’ It felt so good from start to finish, one of the best rounds I’ve ever played in my life … it’s a memory that’s hard to put into words. I kind of get chills just thinking about it.”

A member of six Solheim Cup teams, the 42-year-old Stanford has six career LPGA victories, including the 2018 Evian Championship. Hurst and Stanford paired together in the 2007 Solheim Cup, defeating Iben Tinning and Bettina Hauert, 4 and 2, in foursomes. Stanford said Hurst took her under her wing early on in her LPGA career.

“Angela and I are pretty similar in a lot of ways,” said Hurst. “We both have a passion for the game. We love the red, white and blue, playing for our country. Angela, even playing for TCU, she’s just the biggest supporter of them, and she’s that way with representing the United States. That’s the way I am and that’s the way she is. … She’s level – she’s determined. I wouldn’t say level-headed; let me rephrase that.

“She wants to win. That’s … I see that in me.”

When asked about being a playing assistant at the Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio, next September, Stanford said she’s at peace with whatever happens.

“I’m still a professional golfer and I’m still going tee it up and try to win golf tournaments,” she said, “and whatever that means in 2021, that’s what that means.”

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