“I knew that once I had kids I wanted to be home,” Olson told Golfweek. “That was a huge desire of my heart.”
Carly Gray Olson just started to crawl last week. Her first teeth came in, too. These are the sweet moments that take most of Amy Olson’s focus these days, which is why the LPGA veteran announced on social media Wednesday that she wouldn’t be coming back from maternity leave.
“I knew that once I had kids I wanted to be home,” Olson told Golfweek. “That was a huge desire of my heart.
“Even when (husband) Grant and I were dating, years ago, we talked about how I wanted to play for 10 years, that was my goal, and then I wanted to shift homeward and focus on family.”
Olson, 31, joined the LPGA in 2014 after winning an NCAA record-tying 20 titles at North Dakota State University, eclipsing the mark of 17 set by Juli Inkster.
Looking back, Olson said winning the 2009 U.S. Girls’ Junior gave her a huge confidence boost as did qualifying for the 2011 U.S. Women’s Open while in college and holding the first-round lead at The Broadmoor. The eventual winner that week, So Yeon Ryu, retired after last week’s Chevron Championship.
(1/4) What. A. Ride. My journey in professional golf is officially ending. Call it quitting, retirement, a VERY extended maternity leave 🤷🏼♀️ …I am turning the page to the next chapter in my life. I couldn’t be more thankful for the places God took me through this game of golf. pic.twitter.com/PQ4MoDu8O9
One of Olson’s favorite memories on the LPGA was clawing back from 6 over through 13 holes at the 2021 Kia Classic to finish tied for second.
Of course, she realizes that others will remember more painful runner-up finishes, like the 2018 Evian Championship, when she made double on the 72nd hole to lose to Angela Stanford.
Or when she was in contention at the 2020 U.S. Women’s Open in Houston and her father-in-law, Lee Olson, died from a heart attack the night before the final round. Olson finished second that year, too.
“Unfortunately, a couple of the pivotal ones of my career were actually really sad moments,” said Olson. “But I think one of the things I’ve always been most proud of is keeping golf in perspective and realizing that life is bigger than golf. In a lot of ways, some of those bigger moments that people remember me for, I was able to live that out in front of them.”
Olson said while there aren’t regrets in terms of what she could’ve done differently, there are dreams that will go unrealized as this chapter of life ends. She never played on a U.S. Solheim Cup team or won an LPGA event.
“I’ve had to come to terms with that,” said Olson, “I’m just realizing OK, that’s not part of my story, and realizing I have different dreams and bigger dreams, rather than clinging to the same ones that motivated me for a number of years.”
The bigger dreams, she said, are ordinary and small. Being a wife and a mom, being present for the milestones, passing on her perspective and deep faith to Carly.
Historic Pebble Beach, host of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open, certainly helped attract eyeballs.
The LPGA is enjoying record television ratings, with July being the most-watched in the tour’s history, according to a report by Sports Business Journal.
The 2023 U.S. Women’s Open, held for the first time at historic Pebble Beach Golf Links, certainly provided golf fans a reason to tune in. And they stuck around. Despite a leaderboard devoid of most of the tour’s big names, the third and final rounds on NBC each surpassed 1 million viewers. Sunday’s action peaked at 1.59 million, the best number of the season. The prime-time NBC window also helped the cause.
The much less heralded Dana Open on CBS also hit 1 million viewers for its final round, giving the tour three such landmark days, according to LPGA data. SBJ reports that in 2014, 2016 and 2022, there were two broadcasts that surpassed the seven-digit mark.
For the month of July 2023 as a whole, viewership averaged 600,000.
This week’s AIG Women’s Open is the fifth and final major of the 2023 campaign. NBC will have the third and final rounds on broadcast TV from noon to 2 p.m. ET.
Venues matter. Look no further than those who tuned into the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach.
NBC Sports announced Tuesday the U.S. Women’s Open was the most-watched edition of the championship since 2014 at Pinehurst No. 2. It averaged 895,000 viewers, up 118 percent from 2022 and up 47 percent from 2021.
The 2014 event averaged 1.03 million viewers on NBC and ESPN2, ranking as the second most-watched U.S. Women’s Open since 2009 and the most-watched West Coast U.S. Women’s Open in 20 years.
Weekend viewership on NBC and Peacock – which included the first East Coast primetime coverage in U.S. Women’s Open history – averaged 1.34 million viewers, up 76 percent in 2022 (765,000 viewers) and 35 percent in 2021 (995,000 viewers).
Sunday’s final round on NBC and Peacock averaged 1.58 million viewers and peaked with more than 2.2 million viewers from 8:15-8:30 p.m. ET, as Allisen Corpuz closed out her first LPGA victory. The final round also ranked as a top-five sports program on Sunday.
Digitally, the U.S. Women’s Open was the most-streamed women’s golf event in NBC Sports history, nearly tripling its consumption from a year ago.
The U.S. Women’s Open purse has doubled over the past two years, rising to $11 million, and is now the biggest purse women’s golf. The winner this week, Allisen Corpuz, received $2 million, which matches the largest winner’s check in the women’s game. Lydia Ko won $2 million at last year’s CME Group Tour Championship.
For perspective, consider that the total purse for next week’s Dana Open is $1,750,000.
How will Corpuz spend that big check?
“I might upgrade quite a few flights, but nothing yet,” she said. “I just bought a car in January, so I think that was my big purchase for the year.”
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The top 20 places on the money list this week earned six-figure checks, season-changing money for many in the field.
Players who missed the cut this week were given $8,000 to cover expenses.
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PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – In the middle of Allisen Corpuz’s winner’s press conference at the 78th U.S. Women’s Open, she learned of a significant congratulatory tweet from a fellow Punahou School grad.
“Congratulations to fellow Hawaiian Allisen Corpuz for winning the U.S. Women’s Open!” tweeted former President Barack Obama. “You make us all proud – and look forward to a round at Kapolei!”
Congratulations to fellow Hawaiian Allisen Corpuz for winning the U.S. Women’s Open! You make us all proud — and look forward to a round at Kapolei! 🤙🏾
The 25-year-old USC grad grew up on the left side of the seventh hole on Kapolei Golf Course on Oahu. Michelle Wie West, another Punahou School graduate and the 2014 U.S. Women’s Open champion, concluded her competitive career earlier this week at Pebble Beach.
“Yeah, Barack and Michelle are the two Punahou alum that I get talked to about the most,” said Corpuz. “I mean, he’s done a lot in his career. Yeah, that’s really special.”
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Standing on the dais next to a trophy so big and shiny it practically overwhelmed her, Allisen Corpuz told assembled scribes that she never really thought she’d get this far.
No one watching, however, would ever guess it. Not given the way Corpuz calmly went about her business on one of the most historic weeks in the game, where the largest paycheck in women’s golf wasn’t even the biggest headline.
This was bigger than money; it was a chance at history. A chance to stand on the shoulders of the giants in the game who came before and claim the honor of being the first woman to win a major championship at Pebble Beach Golf Links, an American treasure that’s breathtaking in its beauty and brawn.
“My coach told me this morning, no one is going to give it to you,” said Corpuz, who calmy went out on a sun-splashed day and took it from a horde of chasers.
Corpuz joins the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Tom Watson as major winners at Pebble Beach. In a week when fellow Punahou School grad Michelle Wie West retired from competitive golf, Corpuz said aloha to the world.
The 25-year-old USC grad now in her second year on tour, came into the week 29th in the world but largely overlooked. She ended the week with a congratulatory tweet from former President Barack Obama, who also requested a tee time.
May Corpuz walked nervously down the famed 18th fairway late Sunday evening, praying as she clutched a water bottle. She sat down inconspicuously below the gallery rope as her youngest child made her way up the fairway with a three-shot lead.
There was no reason to fret. Corpuz smoothly parred the last hole to secure a three-shot victory and a $2 million check. A packed grandstand broke out in chants of “U-S-A! U-S-A!” as Corpuz, a Hawaii native of South Korean and Filipino descent, became the first American to hoist the U.S. Women’s Open trophy since Brittany Lang in 2016.
After getting off to a hot start with two birdies in the first three holes, Corpuz was put on the clock on No. 11. Her caddie, Jay Monahan, candidly noted after the round that the timing was particularly brutal given that he had to go to the bathroom.
On the par-4 13th, Corpuz was between a 5-iron and 6-iron on her approach, and with 5-iron in hand, the wind died down and she backed off. At that point, a rules official approached to say that if she received another bad time, she’d get a one-stroke penalty. Because the LPGA typically hands out fines, Monahan turned around and asked, “We get stroked if we get another one?”
“I think she heard me say that,” said Monahan, who could feel the tension rise.
After his boss two-putted for par, however, Monahan said he was eerily calm the rest of the day.
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“I’ve had a few instances in the past where I kind of let that get to me,” said Corpuz of being put on the clock. “Obviously not happy about it, but just kind of rushed things a little and didn’t hit a good shot. I told myself, that’s just kind of how the course plays sometimes. You have a tough hole, you fall behind. I just told myself that we’d catch up later and just stay calm, just keep doing everything at the same pace.”
All week – really since she joined the LPGA – Corpuz has been telling herself that she belongs here, that she’s good enough to compete. Earlier this year in Singapore, she found herself paired with the top two players in the world – Jin Young Ko and Nelly Korda – in the final round. While she didn’t win the tournament, Corpuz closed with a 69 and for the first time felt really comfortable in that position.
When the stakes rise, Corpuz finds that she often starts to get too quick. Taking time to look at the bigger picture, she said, helps her to keep things slow and steady.
“Every few holes,” said Corpuz, “I just kind of looked out and said, ‘I’m out here at Pebble Beach. There’s not many places that are better than this.’ ”
She closed with a 3-under 69 to beat a hard-charging Charley Hull (66) and former No. 1 Jiyai Shin (68) by three strokes. She was the only player in the field to card four rounds under par, playing Pebble’s demanding final 11-hole stretch in 1 under.
Corpuz grew up on Oahu on the left side of the seventh hole on Kapolei Golf Course and took up the game with her older brother George around age 4 or 5. At age 6, she told her father, Marcos, “If you want me to play golf, don’t scold me.”
Marcos, a dentist, and May were not overbearing parents, but even at such a young age, Corpuz knew that she was intrinsically motivated to get better. No one needed to push her.
Mary Bea Porter-King a former LPGA player who helped found the Hawaii State Golf Association, said Allisen was about 7 years old when she first came to her junior program. She was no-nonsense even then, too.
“She was quietly strong and very gracious, always very gracious,” said Porter-King.
When asked by the media what made her fall in love with the game at young age, Corpuz gave an amusingly honest answer: “Honestly, I sucked. I just wanted to get better. I think that’s just kind of who I am, like as a person. Just if something can be done better, that’s how I want to do it.”
In 2008, Corpuz surpassed Wie West as the youngest to ever qualify for the U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links at 10 years, 3 months and 9 days. Comparisons naturally followed.
“I’ve never really compared myself to her,” said Corpuz. “I’ve always wanted to make my own name. “She’s just served as a really big inspiration.”
Corpuz did follow in her father’s footsteps to USC, where she stayed an extra year to obtain a Master’s degree in Global Supply Chain Management and a graduate certificate in Business Analytics.
There’s no doubt that Corpuz’s strongest asset is her mind.
Now, she can finally let it rest. She’s made history.
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There’s something about aces in majors in 2023 for In Gee Chun.
There’s something about aces in majors in 2023 for In Gee Chun.
During Sunday’s final round at Pebble Beach Golf Links, Chun made a hole-in-one at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open.
She did it at the par-3 5th hole in Pebble Beach, California, the ball bounding for the hole after hitting the green. It then rolled right in the cup for a 1 and Chun then made her way towards the green, high-fiving fans lined up along the hole.
The ace came after she opened with four pars and it vaulted her into the top 10, getting her to even par for the tournament, seven shots off the lead.
It was her second ace in a major in 2023. She also made one in April at the Chevron Championship and that ace also won a million dollars for charity.
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — The toughest day at Pebble Beach Golf Links was also the most spectacular. The winds kicked up, gusting up to 25 mph on Saturday at the U.S. Women’s Open and for the first day this week, the sun broke through.
At day’s end, only six players were under par for the championship, and only one player managed to break 70 on the day. That was Nasa Hataoka, arguably the best player on tour without a major. Hataoka carded a sparkling bogey-free 66 to vault to the top of the board.
South Korea’s Hyo Joo Kim, already a major winner at the 2014 Evian Chamiponship, is the highest-ranked player in contention. Kim, No. 8 in the world, trails by three.
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Aine Donegan’s rip-roaring start along famed Pebble Beach came to a crashing halt after she recorded a nine on the famed par-4 eighth.
The Irish amateur, known for her sunny personality, didn’t let it ruin the day. Her swing coach and caddie, Gary Madden, simply told her to start again heading to the ninth tee on a sun-splashed Saturday at the 78th U.S. Women’s Open.
Donegan rebounded admirably, ending the day in a share of 19th at 4 over after a third-round 75. She currently holds a three-shot lead in the low amateur race with Benedetta Moresco and Monet Chun at 7 over.
After posting birdies on three of the first six holes, Donegan ultimately hit two shots into the hazard on No. 8 en route to a quintuple bogey. Madden reminded her that she was still only 2 over on the day despite the nine, and to pretend she’d simply made two bogeys over the first eight holes.
“I hit a good tee shot and I had about 190 to the flag,” said Donegan of her first approach into the eighth. “The wind was really, really left to right there, and that wind often doesn’t suit a right-handed golfer who plays a draw. Not that it makes a huge difference, or it’s an excuse, but I hit two very bad shots in a row, which obviously concluded in me having a nine on the hole.
“I had to keep moving on.”
Donegan, who transferred to LSU from Indiana last season, capped off the round by sinking a 21-foot putt for par on the 18th. She soaked up the roar of the hearty crowd, which included a number of Irish family and friends.
Madden has worked with Donegan since she was 8 years old and said his sporty pupil played camogie (hurling for women) and Gaelic football before settling on golf.
Sunday at Pebble Beach Golf Links is set to be spectacular, as the final round of the U.S. Women’s Open is upon us. And there are no shortage of storylines.
Nasa Hataoka, off the heels of a stellar 6-under 66 on Saturday, holds the lead at 7 under with 18 holes to play. Allisen Corpuz sits second, one shot behind. Then there’s Hyo Joo Kim and Bailey Tardy, the 36-hole leader, three shots back at 4 under.
Minjee Lee, the 2022 champion, and Rose Zhang, are T-9 and 1 over. They have plenty of grounds to make up, but everyone is chasing Hataoka.
Here are the tee times for the final round of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open on the Monterey Peninsula.
Note: All times listed are ET. Pebble Beach is three hours behind.
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