Nichols: Slow play continues to be a black eye for the LPGA. It’s time to shrink the field at The Annika

Charley Hull has an admittedly ruthless idea to fix slow play on the LPGA.

BELLEAIR, Fla. — Charley Hull has an admittedly ruthless idea to fix slow play on the LPGA. Under Hull’s rules, two-shot penalties shall be given out more frequently and repeat offenders would “lose your tour card instantly.” She knows something so extreme would never happen, but the threat of Q-School would kill slow play for good.

“It’s ridiculous,” said Hull, one of the fastest players in golf, “and I feel sorry for the fans how slow it is out there.”

For the past three years, the check-writers of The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican have asked the LPGA for a smaller field. It’s a matter of math, really. With 120 players in the field this time of year, it’s tough to get everyone around before the sun goes down. Even without weather delays.

And with the tour unable to rein in the issue of slow play, the ideal field for this week might be less than 100 players.

“These players are role models,” said tournament host Annika Sorenstam “You see the young girls out here, they’ve got to show how to play fast if they’re going to grow this game.”

2024 The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican
Nelly Korda of the United States plays her shot from the seventh tee during the final round of The ANNIKA driven by Gainbridge at Pelican 2024 at Pelican Golf Club on November 17, 2024 in Belleair, Florida. (Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

When Kaitlyn Papp Budde came to the demanding 18th on Friday at Pelican Golf Club, the lights from the driving range had been moved over to help light up the green. While that didn’t help her too much in the fairway, she didn’t want to sleep on that second shot over water. She hit her approach, and then woke up early on Saturday to finish up her round along with two others. For the second consecutive day, play spilled over to the next morning despite no interruptions in play.

The ripple effect meant that with tee times pushed back 30 minutes, stars Nelly Korda and Charley Hull came to the 18th on Saturday after the sun came down. Korda called it “poor planning” that they had to finish in the dark. Golf Channel’s TV window was slated to end at 5 p.m. and extended to 5:51 p.m. The final group teed off at 12:13 p.m. on Saturday. That’s a snail’s pace of five hours and 38 minutes.

“I think the pace has gotten slower and slower, even practice rounds,” said Sorenstam. “It’s gotten to the point where a lot of players don’t even want to play 18 and it shouldn’t be that way.

“It’s something the tour needs to address.”

With several players in this week’s field trying to secure their full cards for 2025, cutting down the field would take away an opportunity for those further down the CME points list. But with pace of play a worsening issue, the logistics of The Annika could be made so much smoother with a more limited field.

Justin Sheehan, the director of golf/COO at Pelican Golf Club who first dreamed up the idea of this event, wrote a note to LPGA commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan on Sunday morning, once again laying out the case for a smaller field. They’d love to have Sorenstam hit a ceremonial tee shot on Thursday, example, but there’s simply not enough time.

Two of the most popular players in the game were battling down the stretch on Saturday and all anyone on social media could talk about was the terrible pace of play and darkening skies.

“Common sense tells you if there’s not enough daylight, just don’t have as many players,” said Sheehan. “You don’t need to be a rocket scientist for that.”

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Carlota Ciganda of Spain plays her shot from the fifth tee during the third round of The ANNIKA driven by Gainbridge at Pelican 2024 at Pelican Golf Club on November 16, 2024 in Belleair, Florida. (Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

Spain’s Carlota Ciganda came into the week with a berth into the CME Group Tour Championship on the line. With a $4 million winner’s check up for grabs next week, the $4,000 fine she incurred for slow play might have been worth it as she nabbed the 60th and final spot in the field.

“I know I have to improve, and I’ll try to do that next year,” said Ciganda of her pace of play.

“I don’t think people understand how tough golf can be … mentally it’s a lot tougher than what people think. Golfers just drink some beers and play some golf, and we do this for a living. A lot goes through in your mind.”

Papp Budde, who was also hit with a slow-play fine this week, said she’d like to see the tour add more rules officials to its staff.

“Fines only do so much,” said Lauren Coughlin. “Some players are like, it’s worth it to take the fine. So I think the only real way is to penalize players.”

Missing the television window is always a problem, but even more so when network coverage is involved. Extended coverage typically moves off network to streaming or to cable on CNBC. LPGA sponsors pay low six figures for network coverage, only to have the end of a round or a tournament bumped to another station. That’s risky business.

The LPGA isn’t going to fix the slow-play issue overnight. But it can fix the race against daylight at The Annika in short order by shrinking the field. It’s important to provide opportunities for players, but it’s more important to safeguard the quality of the product.

In five short years, The Annika has quickly become one of the premiere events on the LPGA schedule. The power players involved here – Gainbridge, the Doyle family and Sorenstam – should be granted this request.

It’s for the greater good.

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Check out some photos from The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican on the LPGA

The Annika features some of the LPGA’s biggest names.

The 2024 Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican features some of the LPGA’s biggest names: Nelly Korda, Lydia Ko, Charley Hull, Minjee Lee, Rose Zhang and Lilia Vu. It’s hosted by perhaps the best womens golfer of all time, Annika Sorenstam.

Held at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Florida, it’s the penultimate event on the LPGA’s 2024 schedule.

Check out some photos of the event.

Another Charley Hull, Nelly Korda showdown on tap at The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican

The pair squared off against each other in singles at the Solheim Cup.

BELLEAIRE, Fla. – Charley Hull is a whopping 38 under in her last seven rounds of competitive golf worldwide. The always-entertaining Englishwoman, fresh off a victory on the Ladies European Tour, currently leads The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican by two strokes over World No. 1 Nelly Korda.

The pair, of course, squared off against each other in singles last September at the Solheim Cup, where Hull dusted the American, 6 and 4.

“Yeah, I like playing with Nelly,” said Hull after her round. “She makes loads of birdies, so good fun to watch. Yeah, it’s really cool. I’m going to ask her about her swimsuit thing because she’s looked really nice in it. I think it was pretty cool.”

The “swimsuit thing” is the 2025 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue, which featured Korda for the first time. Korda admitted to being shy at first on the set of the shoot.

“By the end of day, I was having so much fun with them,” she said of the crew.

The 2024 Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican
Nelly Korda looks on during the second round of the 2024 Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican

in Belleair, Florida. (Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

A two-time winner of The Annika, Korda said she may have rushed her rehab a bit after a neck injury to return to Pelican this year. Back-to-back 66s have her at 8 under. She’s quite comfortable playing close to home.

“Even with it being windy, tough conditions,” said Korda, “I just kind of know the holes where you kind of have to be safe and the holes where you can be a little bit more aggressive on.”

Hull made a bet with her boyfriend before the start of Thursday’s round that for every five birdies made they’d stay an extra day on their European vacation. She made seven birdies in the first round and five more on Friday.

“A lot more trickier than yesterday,” said Hull of Friday’s conditions, “so you got to have a good ball-striking day and I’m a good ball-striker, so played more into my hands.”

Alexa Pano chipped it in the water on the 18th to make double but still managed a second-round 64 to hold a share of third with rookie Jin Hee Im, Mi Hyang Lee and Wichanee Meechai at 7 under.

“There is no good miss out there,” said Pano of the closing hole. “Left, long, right, nothing is good. Definitely water is short. That I found out.

“You got to play smart on that hole, and hopefully I’ll figure it out a little bit better over the weekend.”

Brittany Lincicome, who is playing in her final event as a full-time player, made it to the weekend after carding a 69 on Friday to get to 1 under for the tournament.

“I’m super excited, super relieved to get today done,” said Lincicome. “I have not felt that many nerves running through my body. Like my hands were shaking so bad.

“One of the caddies was like, ‘You still got it. You played so great today. Why are you shutting it down?’ I’m like, if you could be in my head and feel what my hands are feeling and how shaky I am on the golf course, you would retire, too.”

Three players did not finish Round 2 due to darkness, which means third-round tee times won’t be released until Saturday morning.

LPGA set to unveil new way for superstar amateurs to bypass Q-School

The LPGA informed players of the changes during The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican.

BELLEAIR, Fla. –  At long last, there will be a way for superstar amateurs to bypass Q-School and go directly to the LPGA. Golf Channel’s Brentley Romine first reported the news, noting that two separate programs will provide paths to both the LPGA and Epson Tour. The LPGA informed players of the changes at a meeting earlier this week during The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican.

The tour has confirmed that more details on the programs will be released next week at the CME Group Tour Championship.

The path that leads directly to the LPGA will be similar to the PGA Tour’s University’s Accelerated program, though the women’s version will be open to all amateurs rather than just college players.

“I love it so much,” Rose Zhang told Golfweek. “The criteria to get into the LPGA is very difficult, but if you have such a stellar career in the amateur league, then why not?”

Zhang, of course, bypassed what’s now known as LPGA Qualifying by winning her first LPGA event as a professional.

“We weren’t sure what the qualifications mean,” said Hannah Green, “and then they showed obviously who would’ve earned spots that are currently members and playing and it was only three people: Lydia (Ko), Rose and Leona (Maguire).”

Such a short list eased their minds that it wouldn’t be a rush of amateurs, Green said.

Most years won’t have anyone meet the threshold, in fact.

Lottie Woad of England and Lydia Ko of New Zealand pose for a photo on Day Four of the AIG Women’s Open at St. Andrews Old Course on August 25, 2024, in St. Andrews, Scotland. (Photo by Luke Walker/Getty Images)

Players were told that Lottie Woad, the 2024 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, would currently have 16 points under the new system.

The second program, Romine noted, will mirror the PGA Tour University rankings for those in their last two years of college.

The top players from those rankings will earn Epson Tour status.

Linn Grant liked the proposal but felt that the 20-point threshold could be dropped some in future years, noting the quality of talent in the amateur game.

“If you play that well during your amateur career, you should definitely have a spot out here,” said Grant. “You shouldn’t have to go to Q-School and all of that. You go to Q-School, you could be sick for a week or just play your worst golf for some reason.”

With LPGA Qualifying falling in November and December, college coaches have dealt with losing star players midseason for more than 15 years. This won’t solve the entire problem, of course, but it will help.

This year five college players advanced to December’s final stage, and they’ll each have to turn professional in order to compete. The deadline to inform the LPGA of their decision is Friday, Nov. 15.

Rose Zhang is using AimPoint for the first time this week at The Annika, where she’s contending

Zhang’s father left the putter she used to dominate amateur golf on a train in London in the summer of 2023.

BELLEAIR, Fla. – Rose Zhang met with AimPoint founder Mark Sweeney early this week at Pelican Golf Club to try something new. The suggestion came from Zhang’s caddie, Olly Brett, who first broached the subject after the BMW Ladies Championship in South Korea.

“We just weren’t holing enough putts inside 15 feet,” said Brett, “and we both felt it was more read than stroke.”

Zhang carded a 2-under 68 in the second round of The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican to get to 5 under for the tournament. Alexa Pano and Jin Hee Im hold the clubhouse lead at 7 under.

Zhang currently ranks 91st on the LPGA in putts per green in regulation. Last year she ranked 10th. It’s also worth noting that Zhang’s father left the putter she used to dominate amateur golf on a train in London in the summer of 2023.

She’s been on a short-game journey ever since.

“It’s something new,” said Zhang. “My putting hasn’t been great statistically so I wanted to have a new sort of mindset when it came to the putting green, and it’s been going well so far.”

Rose Zhang of the United States looks on from the seventh green during the second round of The ANNIKA driven by Gainbridge at Pelican 2024 at Pelican Golf Club on November 15, 2024, in Belleair, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

When Zhang won the Cognizant Founder Cup earlier this year, it’s not surprising that she ranked first that week in both greens in regulation and putts per green in regulation.

If only she could’ve bottled it up.

Brett has been familiar with the AimPoint system for 13 years and said he didn’t want to mention it to Zhang until he’d gathered enough statistical evidence. Zhang was quick to agree.

Nichols: At what feels like a tipping point for the LPGA, a closer look at the rocky tenure of commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan

“I would almost argue in this year was just as much of a rollercoaster as last year for me,” said Zhang, who won her first tournament as a professional on the LPGA after closing the books on a record-breaking year at Stanford.

“There is a lot of new challenges I faced, old recurring things that I’ve been trying to figure out.

“So I think it’s been going good. I feel like I grinded a lot this year. There’s a lot of good showings, and I’m really excited for my potential to get better.”

This LPGA player made her third ace of the season, co-leads at The Annika

Jiwon Jeon got to see it this time.

BELLEAIR, Fla. – Jiwon Jeon got to see it this time. In her first two aces of the season, she wasn’t able to watch the ball go into the hole. But the third time around, she was pretty sure she saw her ball drop from the tee on the par-3 third hole at Pelican Golf Club.

Maybe.

“So I was like, this one today I actually saw it going into the hole, but I wasn’t sure because it was pretty far, like 180 yards off the tee,” she said. “So I see some people raise their hands and I’m like, oh, is it actually going in or not?”

South Korea’s Jeon, 27, gave herself a five out of 10 on the celebration, noting that she did high-five everyone.

The ace helped vault Jeon to a share of first with Charley Hull at the 2024 The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican after a round of 6-under 64.

Jeon used a 5-hybrid for today’s ace at Pelican. Last month, she made an ace at the Buick LPGA Shanghai with a 5-iron. Her first hole-in-one of 2024 came in Portland with a well-struck 8-iron.

She becomes the first player since Danielle Kang in 2014 to make three aces in one season and the fourth overall.

Two years ago, Jeon made her first hole-in-one in a non-competition round.

With Thursday’s ace, CME Group will donate $20,000 to St. Jude Children’s Research. A total of $580,000 has gone to St. Jude this year, with $60,000 of it coming from Jeon’s fine play.

“Obviously I’m just inside top 100 right now, “ said Jeon, who sits 98th on the CME points list, “and then obviously I want to keep my card for next year, but I try not to think about it too much. I literally gave everything for last three days practice. I’m trying to figure out what I have to do out here and then really focus on like each shot.”

The top 100 players on the CME points list keep their cards.