Angela Stanford’s major streak might end at 98 after she failed to qualify for U.S. Women’s Open, USGA denies special exemption

Time is running out.

Angela Stanford’s road to 100 consecutive majors hasn’t yet reached a dead end, but time is running out. On Tuesday, the 46-year-old competed in a U.S. Women’s Open qualifier at Soboba Springs Golf Course in San Jacinto, California, and failed to advance after rounds of 74-74 left her 4 over. Taiwan’s Hsin Yu Lu (4 under) and Mariel Galdiano (2 under) earned spots in the championship, which will be held May 30-June 2 at Lancaster (Pa.) Country Club.

Last week, Stanford competed in her 98th consecutive major at the Chevron Championship, where she played on a sponsor exemption. The 2018 Evian champion needed two more starts to join Jack Nicklaus as the only golfers to reach 100 consecutive majors. Nicklaus owns the record with 146 consecutive major starts (1962 Masters Tournament through 1998 U.S. Open). Adam Scott made his 90th consecutive major start earlier this month at the Masters.

Stanford hoped to receive a special exemption for the U.S. Women’s Open but was informed before the qualifier the USGA had denied her request.

She took to Instagram after the qualifier to express her thanks.

“While a handful of people did not believe the road to 100 was a worthy pursuit, I feel like most did,” Stanford wrote. “Thank you to the LPGA media, golf media, the fans, Chevron, and I believe KPMG and PGA of America would’ve embraced 100.

“As I was standing on my 36th hole today, I was overcome with pride. I haven’t been that proud of myself in a long time. My body held up, thank you Dan. My game held up, thank you Todd. My caddie help up, thank you John.

“Sometimes we don’t get the results we want in this game, but I went after it. I put myself out there and went for a goal that was really hard.”

Volunteers Of America Classic
Angela Stanford poses with the trophy after winning the Volunteers of America Classic at the Old American Golf Club on December 6, 2020 in The Colony, Texas. (Photo: Chuck Burton/Getty Images)

Stanford, who is in the field this week at the JM Eagle LA Championship, has two other ways to gain entry to the Women’s Open: win an LPGA event or climb into the top 75 in the Rolex Rankings before May 27. Stanford, a seven-time winner on tour, currently ranks 398th and joked that at least Nelly Korda, winner of the last four LPGA starts, isn’t in the field this wek at Wilshire Country Club.

The USGA provided the following statement on the decision not to award a special exemption:

Unlike most other events, our field is quite literally, “open.” We allocate roughly 50 percent of our field to open qualifying, which provides an opportunity for any player (not exempt) to earn their way into the championship. We rarely offer special exemptions, as they remove “open” spots from the field, that thousands are competing to earn.

We don’t have “sponsor invites” nor do we think about our exemptions as media stories and/or “local favorites.” Rather, when we do extend a special exemption, we do it purely based on a player’s extraordinary performances over the years, especially in USGA championships, additional major championships, time spent as World No. 1, Tour wins, as well as recent performances/ranking. 

We wish Angela the best of luck over the coming weeks as she tries to earn a place in the field and hope to see her in Lancaster and in USGA championships for many years to come.

Stanford’s streak started at the 2002 McDonald’s LPGA Championship and, given how few players on the LPGA compete past the age of 40, let alone stay healthy enough to sustain such a stretch, many believe another opportunity like this might not come around again in the women’s game.

“A friend of mine send me a text saying my mom would have been proud,” Stanford wrote. “She would have. She taught me to go for the tough things in life. She loved the majors. They have always been the toughest.

“Thank you to my family and friends who have sacrificed so much for me. I’ve been told I should smile more on course. I’m going to try that the rest of the year. Play some of my favorites and call it a career on this tour. #Roadto100 #Exit98.”

Here are seven U.S. players primed to be future Solheim Cup captains

When it comes to future U.S. Solheim Cup captains, Team USA has a deep pool of candidates.

When it comes to future U.S. Solheim Cup captains, Team USA has a deep pool of candidates. So deep, in fact, that it might be some time before we see some big names take the helm.

Stacy Lewis recently named a record four assistant captains for the 2024 Solheim Cup, adding Paula Creamer and Brittany Lincicome into the fold. Morgan Pressel and Angela Stanford return as assistants after working with Lewis last year in Spain.

What does the Solheim Cup committee look for in choosing a captain? Past Solheim Cup experience is a must. While winning a major isn’t a requirement (i.e. Rosie Jones), it’s definitely preferred.

And given how much the Solheim Cup has grown over the years, experience as an assistant captain will surely be seen as a vital component.

The list of players who should be given the honor is so long, in fact, that it’s hard to see how someone like Dottie Pepper gets back into the fold, though it’s certainly possible.

Here’s a list of decorated players who are likely to get the nod in the coming years:

Angela Stanford digs deep in quest to join Jack Nicklaus as the only players to reach 100 consecutive major starts

“I think getting to 100 would matter just as much as winning another major or winning another tournament.”

Angela Stanford spent most of 2023 trying to find answers. As her work with Golf Channel ramped up, the now part-time LPGA player would often find a place to practice after the broadcast. On one such occasion, she was at a golf course in Midland, Michigan, hitting yellow-striped golf balls that were mostly out of dirt, mixed with a few clumps of grass.

It was there that Stanford realized – she wasn’t done.

“I think it just hit me that everything that happened up to that point, I let it shake my confidence,” she said.

And so, Stanford put her TV gig to the side and rededicated herself to a goal she set a few years back to become the first LPGA player to reach 100 consecutive major championship appearances. Stanford, 46, owns the current longest streak at 97. It started at the 2002 McDonald’s LPGA Championship and extends through last year’s AIG Women’s British Open. During that stretch of 97 majors, Stanford made 66 cuts and posted 14 top-10 finishes.

Cristie Kerr’s major streak ended at 92 (with 76 made cuts). The next best in LPGA history is Betsy King with 73 (67 made cuts).

“That’s a lot of perseverance,” said LPGA Hall and World Golf Hall of Famer Judy Rankin, “and a lot of good golf for a very long time.”

Angela Stanford a vice captain of The United States team walks with Rose Zhang during final practice prior to the Solheim Cup at Finca Cortesin Golf Club on September 21, 2023 in Casares, Spain. (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images)

The only male player dating back to 1950 who has played in 100 consecutive majors is Jack Nicklaus, who owns the record for men’s golf with 146 consecutive major starts (1962 Masters Tournament through 1998 U.S. Open). Only 16 players even played in 100-plus majors total in that span.

The longest active majors streak in men’s golf belongs to Adam Scott at 89. The Aussie’s streak began at the 2001 British Open Championship.

The LPGA major schedule has been extremely lean at times, with long stretches in the 60s and 70s with only two majors. In 2013, the LPGA added a fifth major, the Amundi Evian Championship, which Stanford won in 2019 at age 40.

Stanford’s first LPGA title came in 2003 at the ShopRite LPGA Classic, and her most recent came in 2020 at the Volunteers of America Classic, not far from her Texas home.

A seven-time winner on the LPGA, Stanford’s rededicated offseason included two-a-days as much as possible. She loved every minute of the grind. Her quest to reach 100, however, will be a taller order than previous years given that her priority status dipped to No. 95 after she made only nine starts in 2023.

As Stanford’s mother Nan fell increasingly ill with cancer, she found it difficult to focus long enough to practice. Nan died on March 9, 2022, at home in Saginaw at age 66 and, three weeks later, Stanford teed it up at Mission Hills Country Club one last time.

For the better part of two years, Stanford wasn’t herself.

“You’re just in this state of fog,” she said, “where you can’t think, and you can’t focus long enough on anything, and you have no energy to do anything.”

Stanford pulled out of the HSBC Women’s Champions in Singapore, one of her favorite events on tour, in 2022 to be with her mom.

She recently wrote a letter to the event asking for a sponsor exemption because she’d like a chance to say thank you and goodbye to an event she’s loved for a long time. A winner there in 2012, Stanford never dreamed she’d go so far away from home to play a game she loved.

Writing to ask for sponsor exemptions pains Stanford, who never wanted to be given anything.

“Now I’m at a point where I may need some help,” she said, “and it’s a very vulnerable place to be in.”

EVIAN-LES-BAINS, FRANCE - SEPTEMBER 16: Angela Stanford of the United States celebrates winning the Evian Championship with the trophy during Day Four of The Evian Championship 2018 at Evian Resort Golf Club on September 16, 2018 in Evian-les-Bains, France. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)
Angela Stanford of the United States celebrates winning the Evian Championship with the trophy during Day Four of The Evian Championship 2018 at Evian Resort Golf Club on September 16, 2018 in Evian-les-Bains, France. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

The first LPGA major of the season is the Chevron Championship April 18-21 in Stanford’s native Texas. There are a number of ways she can play her way into that field. Winning, of course, takes care of everything.

Currently 450th in the Rolex Rankings, Stanford would need to skyrocket into the top 40 by March 18, which is asking a lot. She could earn a sponsor exemption, and she’s prepared to write that letter. The most likely route is to rank high enough in the 2024 Race to the CME Globe standings following the LPGA Match Play at Shadow Creek to be part of the final field fill.

Should Stanford make it to Chevron, her 99th start would come at the U.S. Women’s Open at Lancaster Country Club. She plans to ask the USGA for a one-time exemption, should she need it. Other ways include the top 75 of the Rolex Rankings, top 10 of the current CME points list or sign up for a qualifier.

The 100th would be at the KPMG Women’s PGA June 20-23 at Sahalee Country Club in Washington.

Angela Stanford of the United States plays her shot from the 11th tee during the second round of The Chevron Championship at The Club at Carlton Woods on April 21, 2023 in The Woodlands, Texas. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Stanford kicks off her Road to 100 at this week’s Drive On Championship in Bradenton, Florida. It’s her 24th season on the LPGA, and she’s the only player in the field of 120 who is over the age of 40.

If Stanford gets to 100, Rankin believes she’ll be the only player to ever do it.

“I think it’s both money,” said Rankin in terms of higher purses, “and it’s also, in part, the difficulty of being that good for that long.”

In college at TCU, Stanford won the team’s most consistent award all four years. That consistency, she believes, is what’s led to her longevity in the game. She’s going to show up each and every day until she can’t.

“Some people call that stubborn,” said Stanford, “I just think that’s who I am. It’s my makeup. I think getting to 100 would matter just as much as winning another major or winning another tournament.”

Stanford recently ran into her old college coach, Angie Ravaioli-Larkin, in the Shady Oaks locker room in Fort Worth. Ravaioli-Larkin asked how it was going. Stanford said that in the middle of a putting drill that day, a thought hit her like a truck: Oh my gosh, what if this doesn’t work?

It won’t be for a lack of effort.

“I think the thing I can be most proud of is that I worked hard at it,” said Stanford. “I have had some of my happiest days the last three weeks of my life.”

Solheim Cup players, captains explain the test provided by the hilly host, Finca Cortesin

A drivable par-4 1st hole sets a unique tone for what fans should expect to see this week in Spain.

CASARES, Spain — When’s the last time you saw a drivable par 4 on the first hole of a golf course?

Fans who tune in to the 2023 Solheim Cup this week at Finca Cortesin on Spain’s southern coast will be treated to the rarity as the opening hole will provide a risk-reward option for players right from the jump.

A lot of the pre-match discussion this week from both players and captains has been about the unique test that this year’s host course will provide. The course at Finca Cortesin offers wide fairways and will bless the good shots and penalize the poor ones. Not only that, the heat and hills will make the 18th matches between the United States and Europe an equal parts physical and mental test for players and their caddies.

Here’s what the stars of the week had to say about this year’s host course as the Solheim Cup is held in Spain for the first time in its nearly two-decade history.

Top spot in world rankings could change hands at Ascendant LPGA benefiting Volunteers of America in Texas

The top-ranked player in the LPGA is not playing this week, leaving the door open for Nelly Korda.

Jin Young Ko will not defend her title at the Ascendant LPGA benefiting Volunteers of America but despite the absence of the world’s top-ranked player, the tournament boasts its strongest field ever in its 10-year history.

Ko, who lives in Frisco, about 20 miles away from Old American Golf Club in The Colony, Texas, has missed the last month due to injury.

That has opened the door for Nelly Korda to return to the top spot world ranking. It was July of 2021 that Korda took over the title of No. 1 after winning the KPMG Women’s PGA. Six days later, Ko won the Volunteers of America tournament and when she won again in October 2021, she returned to the top of the rankings and has held the spot ever since.

That could change once again. Korda, who has six top-10s in 2022 but has yet to find the winner’s circle this season, could reclaim the top spot with a long overdue win this week.

Last week’s tournament winner, Atthaya Thitikul of Thailand, has two wins this season. She’s the first LPGA rookie to do that in five years. Thitikul is third in the Rolex Rankings after leapfrogging Minjee Lee and Lydia Ko, who is playing this field this week. Lee is not.

It’s also a big week for Stacy Lewis and Texas native Angela Stanford. Lewis, the 2023 Solheim Cup captain, named Stanford her third and final assistant captain on Tuesday.

“I love that we get to play here, and so, yeah, I think it’s going to be another great week,” she said at their Tuesday news conference ahead of the Volunteers of America event. “Like Stacy said, this is the most perfect time to be in Texas. I tell people all the time October is it, and we’re sneaking up on October.

“Just a great time to be here. (The Dallas) Cowboys won last night, so everybody is happy right now.”

After this Texas stop, the LPGA will have five events left, with a visit to California before back-to-back trips overseas to Korea and Japan. The season ends with consecutive tournaments in Florida, including the season finale, the CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida.

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Angela Stanford named third assistant captain for the U.S. for 2023 Solheim Cup

Stanford was a six-time player for the U.S. in the Solheim Cup.

Angela Stanford will be an assistant captain for the Americans at the Solheim Cup for a third time in 2023.

Captain Stacy Lewis made the announcement Tuesday, naming Stanford to the third and final assistant slot, joining Morgan Pressel and Natalie Gulbis.

Stanford was a six-time player for the U.S. (2003, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2015) in the event which will be held at Finca Cortesin in Spain, Sept. 22-24, 2023.

“I’ve known Angela for a long time and I’m so happy that she agreed to work with me at the 2023 Solheim Cup,” Lewis said in a statement. “Angela has a great eye for statistics, finding the little details that go into picking the best players and making the right line-up combinations. As we look ahead to our week in Spain, I know that I have three great people – and great friends – who will work with me to bring these players the best experience, on both sides of the ropes.”

Stanford, who joined the LPGA in 2001, has six victories, including a major championship at the 2018 Amundi Evian Championship.

“I am extremely honored and excited to be part of Stacy’s team in 2023. Stacy’s passion for women’s golf and the Solheim Cup is truly awesome. Anyone who knows me knows how much I love the Solheim Cup, and I’m so happy to represent my country again,” Stanford said in a statement.

Lewis and Stanford, U.S. teammates three times (2011, 2013, 2015), were assistants for Pat Hurst at the 2021 Solheim Cup, which the European side won 15-13 at Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio. Europe also won in 2019.

“I just love her passion and her energy for the Solheim Cup,” Lewis said. “She’s great in the team room with the girls. Last week we announced the stats kind of program that I’m working on, and I think Angela has a really good brain for that.

“So that was honestly, when I got the stats thing done I was like, I need Angela on board. So I think she’s going to bring a good mindset there and going to help me a lot the week of with that.”

The U.S. won the two Cups prior to that in 2017 and 2015. Stanford earned the winning point for the U.S. in 2015 in Germany.

“I think the thing about Solheim Cups is everybody knows how much I love a Solheim Cup,” Stanford said. “I love playing them, but it’s different when you get to be invited to be a part of the Captain’s team. Not everybody gets to do that.”

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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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Nichols: As some LPGA players draw a moral line against playing in China and Saudi Arabia, the tour must wrestle with doing the same

New commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan must answer this looming and most pressing question.

Should the LPGA continue to stage events in China?

It’s a question all players and tournament officials should be wrestling with given the plight of Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai, who after posting an allegation of sexual assault against a top government official, disappeared from public view.

Last week Steve Simon, Women’s Tennis Association chairman and CEO, announced in a breathtakingly strong show of leadership the immediate suspension of all WTA tournaments in China, including Hong Kong, until Shuai is allowed to communicate freely and her allegation of sexual abuse is investigated in a full, fair and transparent manner.

The LPGA has only one event in China on its 2022 schedule, the Buick LPGA Shanghai, and it’s slated for October.

The tour, of course, has an obligation to the safety of its Chinese members. But it also has an obligation to consider the ramifications of doing business in certain parts of the world for the organization as a whole.

New commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan must answer this looming and most pressing question: What moral line is the tour unwilling to cross when it comes to partnerships?

When asked if the tour has considered standing in solidarity with the WTA by suspending business with China, an LPGA spokesperson told Golfweek that the tour is concerned about Shuai’s well-being and safety and has reached out to partners in the region. They will continue to actively monitor developments on the matter.

Last year, Amy Olson raised concerns with LPGA leadership about competing in China, saying that she didn’t feel it was safe there for players. Olson said too many have turned a blind eye to the mass imprisonment and persecution of the Uyghurs by the Chinese government in the Xinjiang province. What’s more, Olson continued, Chinese officials weren’t transparent with what was happening in their hospitals and within their borders during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“As an organization that stands up for women’s rights and has fought day in and day out for those rights,’’ said Olson, “what China has done flies directly in the face of everything we stand for.”

Like Olson, Angela Stanford has made a personal commitment not to compete in China or Saudi Arabia due to human rights concerns.

Three years ago, a U.N. human rights panel reported that over 1 million Muslims were being held in secret internment camps. That number has since risen, with China expert Adrian Zenz telling NPR that forced abortions and mandatory birth control are routine in the labor camps.

In January, former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo determined that China’s tortuous actions against the Muslim Uyghurs and other minority groups constitute genocide and crimes against humanity.

On Monday, the Biden Administration said it will not send a U.S. delegation to the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics as part of a diplomatic boycott in protest of China’s ongoing human rights abuses. U.S. athletes will still compete in the Games.

“I think we’re in a position now that we have an opportunity to say, we don’t have to play in China,” said Stanford, who implores those on the LPGA now to be mindful of the next generation.

“Do you want those girls going to Saudi Arabia?”

Saudi women watch golfers compete in the Saudi Ladies International on November 15, 2020. Photo by Amer Hilabi/AFP via Getty Images

Stacy Lewis, who like Olson serves as a Player Director on the LPGA Board, believes this is a conversation the tour needs to have. Lewis said she won’t compete in Saudi Arabia, noting that money used to fund the Ladies European Tour events comes directly from the government itself.

“It’s about women’s rights and silencing women,” she said, “and that’s not OK.”

In recent years, the laws in Saudi Arabia have changed to allow women to travel abroad and drive a car. However, the male guardian system that’s still in place requires a male relative’s permission to marry, divorce or leave a shelter or prison.

Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 plan includes the use of sports diplomacy to enhance the country’s image, explained Adam Coogle, Human Rights Watch Deputy Director, Middle East and North Africa Division. Human Rights Watch is an international non-governmental organization that investigates and reports on abuses happening worldwide.

“Frankly, too many sports leagues are ready to take the money,” said Coogle, “even though they are wittingly or unwittingly, participating in what we view as whitewashing serious human rights concerns.”

The hope, of course, is that sports bodies develop rules within their organization. That is to say, surely there’s a line they should be unwillingly cross.

Days before F1 driver Lewis Hamilton won on Saudi Arabia’s Jeddah Corniche Circuit, he told reporters that he’s not comfortable racing in Saudi Arabia.

“Do I feel comfortable here? I wouldn’t say I do,” Hamilton said.

“But this was not my choice. Our sport has chosen to be here and whether it’s fair or not, I think that, while we’re here, it’s still important to do some work on raising awareness.”

While the PGA Tour works to fend off a Saudi-backed takeover, consider how far the Saudi government is already entrenched in the LET with five events that feature purses three times higher than most of the events around Europe.

If an LET member didn’t want to compete for Saudi money, she might have to consider finding another job. It’s not difficult to imagine an LPGA player having to one day do the same.

Stanford said she has asked herself hypothetically — if she had to play an event in China to keep her card, would she do it?

“I wouldn’t,” she concluded.

Years ago, when Renee Powell was competing on the LPGA in Idaho, a reservation she’d made mysteriously couldn’t be found at the player hotel. Kathy Whitworth heard about the trouble Powell was having and came to the front desk declaring, “Either we all stay, or we all walk.”

Powell was the second Black player to ever compete on the LPGA.

“How much pride I have knowing those women stuck together,” said Stanford, “and said ‘No, we’re all the same.’ ”

Choices that are made today impact the future.

Olson wants young girls in China to live out their dreams on the LPGA. Ultimately, she wants the LPGA’s efforts to further women’s rights in other countries and provide opportunities.

The LPGA’s presence in China has inspired young girls to take up the game and envision a career traveling the world. The same could be said for any country the tour has visited.

And yet, there are times when it’s necessary to take a stand and sacrifice those opportunities in the short term in order to create long-term change.

Ultimately each player must ask herself, where is the moral line? And then pressure the tour to hold that line.

To that end, what the LPGA says now publicly can’t be a political stunt or knee-jerk reaction, insists Olson. She instead would like to see a robust conversation about the tour’s values continue behind closed doors.

“My hope is that this generates a lot of discussion,” said Olson, “for us to talk about who we are, what we stand for and what we bring to the world. And that we are able to stay consistent with that in the long term.”

There’s simply too much at stake.

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Some of America’s best attend Solheim Cup practice session ahead of LPGA stop in Texas

At a Solheim Cup practice session earlier this week at Reynolds Lake Oconee, American players did everything but play golf.

At a Solheim Cup practice session earlier this week at Reynolds Lake Oconee, American players did everything but play golf. It was decided that Amy Olson is basically good at everything she tries. Jennifer Song and Brittany Altomare excel at archery. Jennifer Kupcho proved the best at distance darts. And Michelle Wie West convinced fellow assistant captain Angela Stanford to jump in the lake fully clothed.

“I think people think that you just show up that week and you gel as a team,” said Stanford. “That’s not how that works.”

Twelve players stayed on in Georgia for the team bonding session, organized by U.S. captain Pat Hurst, before heading on to this week’s Volunteers of America LPGA Texas Classic. Six of America’s top-ranked players chose not to attend.

With COVID-19 restrictions keeping players from having dinners with Hurst and potential teammates throughout the year, this was a rare chance for players to spend time together face-to-face outside the ropes.

“I think it’s really important,” said Salas, who looks to make her fifth Solheim Cup team.

“I think especially when the team dynamic starts shifting. As I used to be one of the newbies, now I’m sort of the veteran. And now we’re not seeing – it’s just the rotation is now starting – now it’s been almost 10 years.

“So I think it’s important not only to show your face, to show that you’re capable of being a team player, but to also get out of that uncomfortableness and be around your potential teammate. Because at the end of the day, that’s who you’re playing for. That’s who you’re grinding and fighting with for three days or for however many matches you’re playing.”

Stacy Lewis of Team USA putts during the second day morning foursomes matches of The Solheim Cup at Des Moines Golf and Country Club on August 19, 2017, in West Des Moines, Iowa. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

Americans have won six of 15 events on the LPGA this season, and Nelly Korda moved to No. 1 in the world after claiming her first major title at the KPMG Women’s PGA.

Stanford, 43, heads into this week as defending champion of the VOA, just down the road from where she was raised in Saginaw, Texas.

When asked about the importance of having over-40 players in contention on the LPGA, Stacy Lewis went beyond the winning to say that the example players like Stanford set, and the perspective she carries is vital for the tour, particularly in transition times like this.

Lewis noted that players left some bottles on the ground at the Oconee event, and Stanford picked up after them.

“It’s little stuff like that,” said Lewis, “of setting a good example for the younger players. At some point we’re going to hand the tour over to them, and they need to know how to do it like the older players taught us.”

As for big things, Lewis points to pro-ams, saying that watching the way older players interacted with sponsors made a lasting impression on her as a rookie.

“Pro-ams are huge for our tour,” she said. “You know, I think that’s something that some of the younger players don’t get.

“They see it as a hassle and it interferes with practice, but it’s the most important day of our week. So it’s little things like that of what sells our tour and what really makes it work. Sometimes it takes a downturn in our tour or the economy for the younger players to see that. So hopefully we can spread the word about just we have to make our tour better as a whole.”

Cheyenne Knight, who joins Stanford and Lewis as Texans who have won the VOA, first met Stanford more than a decade ago in Fort Worth. Knight said she was so shy that she didn’t even know what to say, but that the next time she out at Shady Oaks, Stanford had left her a pair of shoes from the 2009 Solheim Cup.

“It was so cool,” Knight said. “I think I still have them, honestly.”

Angela Stanford and Gerina Piller of the United States Team react after Stanford made a putt on the 16th hole during the afternoon Four-Ball matches at the 2013 Solheim Cup on August 16, 2013, at Colorado Golf Club in Parker, Colorado. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

Lewis said she flew into Texas on Tuesday morning and played nine holes and her body hurt in places she hadn’t felt in years after Monday’s all-sports session.

The badminton, pickleball, fishing and shooting range, as Stanford said, laid the foundation for what comes next at the Inverness Club in September.

“There is so much that week,” said Stanford. “The last thing you want to do is try to figure out a teammate.

“I just think it matters more than people think it matters.”

***

The top seven players from the USA Solheim Cup standings automatically qualify, along with the top two players in the Role Rankings not already eligible plus three captain’s picks.

Current Team USA Points Standings:

  1. Nelly Korda 570.50
  2. Danielle Kang 476
  3. Ally Ewing 290
  4. Lexi Thompson 260.50
  5. Jessica Korda 256.50
  6. Austin Ernst 238
  7. Megan Khang 228
  8. Brittany Altomare
  9. Amy Olson 169.50
  10. Angela Stanford 164.50
1 Nelly Korda 570.50
2 Danielle Kang 476.00
3 Ally Ewing 290.00
4 Lexi Thompson 260.50
5 Jessica Korda 256.50
6 Austin Ernst 238.00
7 Megan Khang 228.00
8 Brittany Altomare 184.00
9 Amy Olson 169.50
10 Angela Stanford 164.50

 

 

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.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CJ9rfqYFkXi/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

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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