Defending champs Cydney Clanton, Jasmine Suwannapura take co-lead into final round of Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational

Suwannapura and Clanton posted their third straight 65 a jumping into a tie for the lead with Pajaree Anannarukarn and Aditi Ashok

Experience and consistency are keys to success on the LPGA. For Jasmine Suwannapura and Cydney Clanton, the experience part — at least in terms of the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational — is something they’ve got firmly in their back pocket, as the duo still holds the title of reigning champs at the team event in Midland, Michigan.

And through three rounds, the pair certainly has shown consistency. On Friday, Suwannapura and Clanton posted their third straight 65 and while other teams ebbed and flowed, Team All In stayed the course in jumping to a tie for the lead with Pajaree Anannarukarn and Aditi Ashok. Carlota Ciganda and Mel Reid are a stroke behind heading into the final day of play at Midland Country Club.

“I think we stayed pretty patient. I don’t think just because we win two years ago it doesn’t mean that the golf course was easy. Doesn’t mean that we’re going to be able to play some good golf,” Suwannapura said. “It’s just golf. Like we just stay patient and find opportunities for ourselves to make birdies and have fun with each other.”

There’s plenty at stake on Saturday as eight different teams are within five shots of the lead at 10 under, including the sister duo of Jessica and Nelly Korda. A string of four straight birdies on the front helped the Kordas finish with a 66. Among the teams also at 10 under are Minjee Lee/Yuka Saso, Maria Fassi/Stacy Lewis and Brittany Lang/Brittany Lincicome.

Lincicome said she’s eager to get the final round started and feels like her team can make a run.

“Absolutely. Two balls in play, two looks at birdie on every hole, and I think you’re less afraid to mess up then when it’s not alternate-shot. So we’ll be a little bit more free tomorrow, and hopefully we’ll just start rolling them in,” she said. “Having all these fans, too. It’s so great to hear them cheering for us and rooting us on. We haven’t had that in so long, so we can’t thank them enough for coming out and supporting.”

For Suwannapura and Clanton the Dow defense has been an impressive one. While the pair ran away with the title in 2019 — the event wasn’t held last year due to the pandemic — this year’s tournament has been more taxing, yet they’re still in position to win.

“I think it would be really special. There’s so many good memories, especially for me in this situation in 2018. But to come back and play good again, and I feel like we’ve grinded all week, I feel that 2019 felt a little bit easier than this week. I feel like we’ve grinded really hard,” Clanton said. “So that’s what the goal is. The goal is to grind. All of us want to win, and so it would be really cool to do it two times in a row.

“I think we’d probably be speechless tomorrow to be honest with you. I’m sure all the emotions will come, but can’t really worry about tomorrow until tomorrow.”

Angela Stanford signs up for LA Marathon hoping for a system reboot

Angela Stanford signed up to run a marathon in the middle of the LPGA season, her first marathon, in hopes of rebooting her system.

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. – Angela Stanford signed up to run a marathon in the middle of the LPGA season. Her first marathon. Actually, her first race outside of a 5k Turkey Trot.

Phil Mickelson fasts to reboot. Stanford races.

It’s a big, bold goal that she talked about out loud in public for the first time on Wednesday at the Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions. She’ll run the LA Marathon on March 8 before starting the LPGA’s West Coast swing.

“I played just about every sport except soccer growing up because I didn’t like to run,” said the 42-year-old Stanford. “And I feel like I’m hopfairly athletic, and running has always been really hard. So I thought, you know, I didn’t feel very strong mentally last year. I felt pretty weak in general. I thought, you know what, I’m going to figure out how to beat this. I have to be stronger mentally out here, and I guess the best way to do that is to train for something. So I’m going to do it. And not qualifying for Asia was a blessing for me at this time in my life. I’ve always enjoyed going to Asia and playing there, but it was nice to be at home in October.”

Tournament of Champions: Leaderboard | Tee times

After Wednesday’s pro-am round, Stanford planned to run four miles with Cydney Clanton. She recently ran 16 miles on the treadmill to avoid the rain and watch football.

“My legs have never hurt like that,” she said.

She already has pulled so many things from the experience that she can relate back to golf, and the race is still two months out. She’s been conscious about staying healthy too, working closely with a trainer. Last year Stanford had the LPGA physios look at her stride. She’s trying to change her diet too, though some days are better than others.

“Some of my best runs have been after I’ve had pizza,” she said, laughing.

After winning a major for the first time at age 40, Stanford came down out of the clouds and experienced her first serious injury in a 20-year career. Coming back from that has proved difficult. The 2019 season couldn’t end quick enough.

But there’s a pep in her step this week at the Diamond Resorts, where coming face-to-face with Justin Verlander stopped her cold. Stanford is a sports fan in general, but baseball is a particularly strong passion. In 2014 she visited the Twins’ Target Field, her final stop on a tour of the nation’s ballparks.

She’s in heaven this week, but the goals don’t stop at fun.

“First and foremost, I need a top 20 because last year was the first year in my career I didn’t have a top 20,” said Stanford. “So I think that one hurt the most because I’ve always taken a lot of pride in being consistent and always having a top 20, top 10, always being in the top 50, 60 in the money, and I just wasn’t. So I have some small goals like that. Then I have that outrageous goal of the Olympics. You just never know.”

[lawrence-related id=778020517,778020484,778020332]

Cydney Clanton lost her tour card by $8, then clawed her way into LPGA’s most elite field

After losing her tour card by just $8, Cydney Clanton is making the most of her spot in the LPGA’s debut event of 2020.

Two years ago, Cydney Clanton lost out on her full card by $8. The cost of a burrito. She went to Q-Series to try and improve her LPGA status, but after a deflating eighth-round 80, took six weeks off. It marked her biggest break from golf since age 10.

She felt defeated.

“If you let the game identify you,” said Clanton, “you can get beat up pretty quickly.”

Professional golfers walk a razor-thin line between success and trunk-slamming. Clanton hired a sports psychologist for the first time in her pro career and dug into a book her pastor had referenced, Joyce Meyer’s “Battlefield of the Mind.”

Managing mental health ranks high on the priority list these days for Clanton, who tasted the spoils of victory at the highest level for the first time on her 30th birthday at last year’s new Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational.

With the motto “All In” emblazoned on their caps, Clanton and Jasmine Suwannapura won the team title along with a spot in this week’s season-opening Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions, a celebrity pro-am party that features the smallest, most elite field on the LPGA schedule.

Winners only.

“I want more,” said Clanton of her goals for 2020, “and I think I can be more.”

While the odds of winning an LPGA event will never been better than at the TOC, there are a number of heavy-hitters in the field – Lexi Thompson, Jessica Korda, Nelly Korda, Brooke Henderson and Ariya Jutanugarn. Not to mention LPGA Hall of Famer Inbee Park, who is starting her season much earlier than usual.

Of course, the list of players who took a pass is equally as interesting as it includes all the major winners from 2019, most notably World No. 1 Jin Young Ko. (AIG British Open winner Hinako Shibuno isn’t eligible as she’s not an LPGA member.) And Michelle Wie, who recently announced that she’s expecting her first child, a girl, this summer.

Clearly some of the LPGA’s biggest stars wanted a longer offseason. Clanton, who’s a bit of an outlier in this field as a late bloomer, took all of one week off before getting after it back home in Concord, North Carolina.

Her consistency faded late in the season last year, and she was eager to figure out why. That first LPGA title came with a two-year exemption on tour. While that gives Clanton some breathing room, the Auburn grad’s main focus is to capitalize on what’s ahead.

“My biggest goal is I want to be competitive week in and week out,” she said.

While Clanton said she hadn’t given the list of celebrity participants too close of a look, she fancies playing alongside an MLB pitcher. Though part of a team, Clanton said, a pitcher stands alone on the mound. A Hall of Fame pitcher, John Smoltz, happened to win last year’s celebrity division.

“A pitcher is gonna be about as close to what we have to face every day, in every shot,” she said.

Clanton has three brothers and knew she wanted to be a professional golfer as early as the sixth grade. She played nearly everything growing up – tennis, swimming, travel soccer, AAU basketball. She pitched on a boys’ team in the third grade and played first base.

“They didn’t really like that a whole lot,” she said.

Mom wouldn’t let her play football.

“I was always trying to find a better team,” said Clanton, “move up in age or try to get on a travel team.”

Golf was the first sport that she really had to work at, and that piqued her interest. At every level, Clanton proved a slow cooker in a microwave age. Youth rules, in women’s golf especially.

Clanton said she has learned the importance of not comparing herself to others. Even in something that seems positive, like, trying to go an entire tournament without making a bogey. Once she started focusing on trying to make fewer mistakes, she also ended up making fewer birdies. Clanton learned not to set goals that didn’t match her strengths.

She tells college players all the time – figure out who you are as a player and own it. And another thing too ­– the biggest difference between the Symetra Tour and the LPGA is that a round of even par will typically throw a player out of the mix on the LPGA. Whatever numbers you’re putting up in college – think lower.

“I can talk golf all day long,” said the self-described golf nerd, “and not a lot of girls are that way.”

Clanton loves mechanics. Loves to watch tournament golf. Adam Scott and Luke Donald own some of her favorite swings in the game. Right now she and swing coach Davis Ross are studying Justin Rose’s action. Ross has been Clanton’s swing coach since the beginning, and she has long told him that the only teacher she’d leave him for is Butch Harmon.

One of the toughest pieces of the professional puzzle for Clanton has been figuring out how to use a caddie. She has a great relationship with her current looper, Randy Wilkins, but has found that the less information she receives, the better.

“Honest to goodness if they said in 2021 you didn’t have to have a caddie and you could carry your own bag,” she said, “I’d probably try it for a long time.”

Clanton said she talked to Angela Stanford shortly after winning about resetting after reaching a goal.

“We are all chasers at heart, I believe,” said Stanford, who won her first major at age 40. “Set a new goal and go get it.”

There aren’t many 30-year-old first-time winners on the LPGA. That’s another thing Clanton finds herself telling youngsters, that PGA Tour players typically don’t hit their peak until late 20s, early 30s.

“Golf,” she said, “kind of has its own time-table.”

And $8 doesn’t have to be the end of the world.

[lawrence-related id=778017913,778019811,778019782,778019537]