Meet Cathy Gerring, the former Solheim Cup player whose career was cut short by a devastating fire

Cathy, who’d been doused with fuel, was on fire from the waist up.

GAINESVILLE, Va. — After the second round of the 1992 Sara Lee Classic, Jim and Cathy Gerring talked about a terrific shot she’d hit on her 17th hole Saturday afternoon at Hermitage Golf Course in Old Hickory, Tennessee. She’d come out of a 3-iron, and the ball had dribbled down into the water. Gerring took off a shoe and sock and hit it from the hazard to 2 inches.

“We were laughing about how lucky I was,” she recalled.

Cathy wanted to go hit balls. Jim, the head pro at Muirfield Village, wanted to eat. The players had gotten little notes from the tour, as they often did, asking them to visit the hospitality tent to thank the sponsors. Cathy had just sat down with her plate of food when Jim started raving about the chicken. She went back to the buffet line, where the chef told her that his burner had just gone out and that it would be a minute. A 30-year-old Cathy leaned up against the table to wait.

As a catering employee began to refill the burner with denatured alcohol, he realized that the flame had not gone out. There was an explosion and Cathy, who’d been doused with fuel, was on fire from the waist up.

“You know you hear that stop, drop and roll,” she recalled. “My face was – I could hear it sizzling. … I just ran.”

Jim shot up from his chair and ran after her, pulling off a tablecloth and smothering Cathy as he tackled her to the ground. She turned over and saw the skin dripping from her hands and face. As everyone in the room stood there frozen in shock, it was Cathy who yelled out, “Somebody call 9-1-1!”

Cathy was at the peak of her career when the unthinkable happened. Two years prior, she’d won three times on the LPGA and earned a spot on the inaugural Solheim Cup team. The 1990 Solheim Cup was a who’s who list of American superstars who combined to win 214 LPGA titles and 24 majors.  The dream team included Nancy Lopez, Pat Bradley, Patty Sheehan, Beth Daniel, Betsy King, Dottie Pepper, Rosie Jones and Gerring, whose name might be the only one among the eight that modern fans don’t recognize.

As the EMS worker screamed for a MedEvac flight, Gerring thought she might not survive. She asked her husband to take good care of their 3-year-old son, Zach.

Solheim Cup: Scoreboard, rosters | How to watch | Photos

“I was standing on the 10th tee when they air-vac’d her out,” said Pepper, Gerring’s close friend and Solheim Cup partner. “They stopped play.”

The nurse in the helicopter told Gerring that she couldn’t give her any pain medication because her throat was swelling shut from ingesting the alcohol. When she landed at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, there was a line of medical staff pouring saline on her hands and face every 5 feet.

“I knew my career was over,” said Gerring, “there was just no way. I had five layers of skin burned off both hands. They did skin grafts. I knew I would never have the same pair of hands.”

American golfers Dottie Mochrie (later Dottie Pepper, left) and Cathy Gerring competing in the Solheim Cup tournament at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club, Orlando, Florida, USA, 16th-18th November 1990. (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images)

Inkster, who often stayed with the Gerrings in Ohio when it was too much to get back to California, went to the hospital after her round.

“Her head was the size of a basketball,” recalled Inkster. “She lost all her eyebrows. It was just such a fluke accident. Everybody has been through a buffet with those things and for it to just blow up in her face.”

Gerring’s mother had taken Zach to Opryland that day. When the mother of six arrived at the hospital, nothing could prepare her for what she saw.

“I will never ever forget the look on my mom’s face when she came into that room,” said Cathy.

It was even harder on her father, Bill Kratzert, the longtime head pro at Fort Wayne Country Club — who’d taught the game to her and older brother Billy, a four-time winner on the PGA Tour. After Bill finished up work Saturday night, he drove to Nashville only to walk out the room in a matter of seconds after taking one look at his daughter.

Bill drove home.

“He couldn’t handle it,” said Cathy.

Laying there in the hospital suffering from immense pain, Cathy often found herself grappling with tough questions.

What did I do for God to allow this to happen to me? Am I being punished? Did I waste the talent that he gave me? Did I not do my best?

She was eventually transferred back home to Ohio, where her primary doctor, who happened to work with the Ohio State athletic department and lived on the first hole at Muirfield, told her that the sooner she could let go of the bitterness, the better.

Cathy took that message to heart and sought the help of a therapist.

“The reality is, accidents happen,” she said. “I could either accept it, or go into a place that was not going to be healthy. I know for certain that having Zach saved me … I had Zach to live for.”

Golf: Solheim Cup: Portrait of Team USA (top row, L-R:) Dottie Pepper, Patty Sheehan, Cathy Gerring, Nancy Lopez, and captain Kathy Whitworth, and (bottom row, L-R:) Betsy King, Pat Bradley, Beth Daniel, and Rosie Jones posing for team photo during ceremony before Friday Foursomes at Lake Nona Lake Nona G&CC.

Jim first met Cathy on the golf course and was struck by her competitive fire. He recalled Jack Grout, the legendary teacher of Jack Nicklaus, once saying he’d never met anyone with a greater intensity and desire to win.

“He was quite fond of Cathy,” said Jim. “They had many conversations about what he called championship golf.”

At that first Solheim Cup, Cathy was the only player on the team with a toddler, and Jim looked after Zach while she worked inside the ropes. Jim recalled going fishing at Lake Nona early in the week, and just as he’d hooked a nice-sized bass, young Zach began to scream after stepping into some fire ants. A panicked Jim took him over to Cathy, who stopped her practice round to get the medic involved, followed by some ice cream.

The reason Jim came down to Old Hickory for the Sara Lee that week was so the couple could try for a second child. The timing was right.

Cathy, a strong ball-striker with an enviable short game, could’ve driven herself insane asking all the what-if questions. On top of all that physical pain, the couple suffered more heartache with four miscarriages. The doctors told Cathy the difficulty was likely due to the accident, only to eventually discover that she didn’t have enough progesterone. She gave birth to a second child, son Jayme, in 1994.

Cathy didn’t even watch the 1992 Solheim Cup. Her first rounds of golf came several years later after the accident with Inkster and her husband Brian at Pebble Beach and Cypress Point. She wore special compression gloves to try to keep the swelling down.

“I was burned past where your sweat glands are,” she explained, “so when the humidity was high, my hands would swell, and I felt like the Michelin man trying to hold a golf club.

“I was never going to have that same pair of hands to play golf.”

Cathy Gerring clips her ball during the 2000 Du Maurier Classic at the Royal Ottawa Golf Club in Alymer, Quebec, Canada. Mandatory Credit: Harry How /Allsport

Cathy settled a $25 million lawsuit against the catering company out of court for an undisclosed amount, her career cut agonizingly short. For two years, Inkster called her every day to check in. Gerring tried to give the tour a second go, but mostly lived vicariously through Inkster’s Hall of Fame career.

A couple months back, Gerring was going through her Solheim Cup travel bag from 34 years ago and found a rules sheet and a pin sheet from Lake Nona folded up in the front pocket. What she also found was an old report card of Zach’s that he’d apparently in stuffed in there to hide from mom.

Zach, now 36, graduated from college magna cum laude with a degree in psychology and works as a registered nurse. Back then, however, he wasn’t too big on school, and that report card showed an “A” in P.E. and “D’s” and “F’s” in everything else.

Gerring got such a kick out of the discovery that she framed the report card.

“I’ve got three big trophies,” she said, “a husband and two children.”

And no room for bitterness.

Annika Sorenstam, Juli Inkster inside top 5 at U.S. Senior Women’s Open, where Kaori Yamamoto leads

JoAnne Carner, 85, shot 80 on Friday, the eighth time she has shot her age or better in the event.

Kaori Yamamoto fired a second straight 4-under 67 on Friday to lead the 2024 U.S. Senior Women’s Open but two of the winningest golfers in LPGA history are in striking distance.

Juli Inkster posted a 3-under 68 in the second round at Fox Chapel Golf Club in Pittsburgh and is 2 under for the tournament, six back of Yamamoto. Right there with Inkster at 2 under is Annika Sorenstam, the 2021 USSWO champ.

Sorenstam leads the LPGA all-time with 72 wins. Inkster is tied for sixth with 31.

“I’m a bit afraid of Annika Sorenstam and Juli Inkster,” Yamamoto said, adding, “but I’m actually excited to escape from them.”

Yamamoto, 50, earned her spot in this year’s field after winning a qualifier by six shots. Her back-to-back 67s gives her the 36-hole tournament record.

A year ago, she was at the USSWO but as a caddie for her best friend, Eika Otake. Now she’s leading it.

“So far I can’t believe my position,” she said Friday. “But yeah, I’m doing well. I’m proud of my golf today.”

2024 U.S. Senior Women's Open
Kaori Yamamoto discusses strategy with her caddie on the 15th hole during the second round of the 2024 U.S. Senior Women’s Open at Fox Chapel Golf Club in Pittsburgh. (Jeff Haynes/USGA)

Yamamoto is playing in a tournament in the U.S. for the first time.

Lisa Grimes got to 5 under, good for solo second, before play was halted for darkness at 8:22 p.m. ET. Stefania Croce is solo third overnight at 4 under and Mikino Kubo is solo fourth at 4 under.

Sorenstam and Inkster are tied for fifth with Christa Johnson. Catrin Nilsmark is ninth at 1 under. No other golfers are under par through two days.

JoAnne Carner, 85, shot her age Thursday and then posted an 80 in Friday’s round. She has now shot her age or better eight times in the U.S. Senior Women’s Open, and has done it in six of her last seven rounds in the championship. But, Carner’s two-day total of of 23 over left her 15 shots off the overnight projected cutline of 8 over.

Big Pickle podcast: Who wins the KPMG Women’s PGA? 7-time major champ Juli Inkster joins us to discuss

Juli Inkster joins our dynamic duo of Beth Ann Nichols and Grant Boone to discuss this week’s major.

We’re deep in the heart of major season now and this week marks the third of the women’s golf season as the 2024 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship starts Thursday at Sahalee Country Club in Sammamish, Washington.

Brooke Henderson won here in 2016 and Ruoning Yin is the defending champion, after she was victorious last year at Baltusrol.

On this episode of “The Big Pickle,” Juli Inkster joins our dynamic duo of Beth Ann Nichols and Grant Boone to discuss the big event. Inkster, who won seven majors in total, won consecutive Women’s PGA titles in 1999 and 2000, both at DuPont Country Club in Wilmington, Delaware.

Watch the episode above or listen here:

Subscribe, comment and tell a friend. As the women’s game continues to gain momentum, “The Big Pickle” will be sure to keep you informed, enlightened and entertained on everything LPGA.

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Juli Inkster on winning in a different LPGA era: ‘We didn’t have maternity leave and daycare’

Inkster is the only woman to win two majors in each of three different decades.

Memorial Tournament honoree Juli Inkster sees what men on the PGA Tour go through when their significant others are pregnant. Stressing over what having kids might do to their careers. Worrying about the baby’s arrival means having to withdraw from a tournament. Complaining about rising for early tee times after getting only three hours of sleep.

Inkster observes it all – the wondering, whining and whimpering – and here is her takeaway: Cry me a river.

You want stress? You want sleep deprivation? You want career risk? Try being the one who births the baby, then takes only six weeks off before teeing it up again on the LPGA Tour. Try winning tournaments as a mother, you poor Mr. Professional Golfer. Then we can talk.

“The wives are actually having the kids and having to take six or seven months off. Guys take the week off and come back as heroes because their wife had to give birth,” Inkster said last week before traveling to Muirfield Village Golf Club, where she will be celebrated Wednesday as one of two player honorees. (Tom Weiskopf is being honored posthumously.)

Inkster, a queen of sarcasm, is not taking shots at male golfers so much as wanting everyone to know how hard it was, and is, for LPGA players to juggle motherhood and life on tour. So hard, in fact, that the 63-year-old Californian who won 31 tour events, including seven major championships, said that successfully balancing the roles of super mom and championship golfer is the crown jewel of her 29-year career.

“Winning the U.S. Open would be my No. 1 highlight,” she said. “It’s our national championship. Winning three U.S. Amateurs in a row (1980-82) is pretty good. Solheim Cup captain three times. Awesome. Winning the Bobby Jones Award is pretty impressive. But my most impressive (accomplishment) is traveling the tour with two kids and winning tournaments.”

Salute.

Inkster’s incredible career – she is the only woman to win two majors in each of three different decades and one of only seven to have completed the LPGA grand slam – reminds me of the line about Ginger Rogers being able to do everything her dance partner, Fred Astaire did. Except she did it backward and in high heels.

“When I had kids, we didn’t have maternity leave and daycare,” Inkster said. “So six weeks after I had Hayley (in 1990) I was out playing. It was hard adjusting from being a single person to all the sudden having a kid and bringing all the stuff with you to every tournament, with a 6-week-old, and breastfeeding, and we didn’t have videos and GPS and a lot of the stuff that gets you from A to B.”

Inkster didn’t play her best golf when her kids were little; second daughter Cori was born in 1994.

“I was trying to figure it out,” she said.

Juli Inkster won more as a mother than before having kids

2023 Memorial Tournament
Former LPGA golfer Juli Inkster tees off on the first hole during the Workday Golden Bear Pro-Am at the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club.

Eventually she did, winning five times in 1999, including two majors, and qualifying for the World Golf Hall of Fame.

“When I kinda figured it out my game got back going. I won more tournaments being a mom than not being a mom,” she said.

That’s not to suggest Inkster was a great golfer because she was a mom. But motherhood did not slow her down, as if that were even possible. Growing up with two older brothers in Santa Cruz, California, Inkster learned quickly “how to hold my own.”

“I enjoyed the competition, which is why I love match play,” she said. “Mano a mano.”

Apparently so. Her 6-1-2 record in the Solheim Cup underscores her ability to stare down opponents and come out on top. A grinder, she claims she was never the best ball striker, putter or chipper.

“But I could grind for 72 holes. I was going to get that ball in the hole,” she said.

And if you tried to get in her way? Put it this way: Inkster could rip out your heart on the golf course, then give you hers when the round was over.

Former Ohio State golfer Cathy Gerring got to know Inkster when the two were young mothers on tour in the early 1990s. Gerring’s husband, Jim, was the head pro at Muirfield Village from 1984 to 1998, and Inkster would sometimes stay with the Gerrings when traveling from the East to West coasts.

“She was the best friend ever,” Gerring said. “Our lives took different paths, but to this day if I called Jules and asked, ‘Can you help me out?’ She would do anything for me.”

Showing compassion to a friend in need

Juli Inkster as seen on Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022. (Copyright USGA/Robert Beck)

When Gerring suffered serious burns over her face and arms in an accident involving a liquid burner at an LPGA tournament in Nashville in 1992, Inkster was the first player to visit the hospital.

“I had layers and layers of skin burned off my hands and face,” Gerring said. “My mom and Juli were there and she said it looked like my head was a basketball with two slits in it for eyes.”

The wisecracking Inkster then proceeded to call Gerring every day – for two years – to make sure her friend was healing.

“It’s amazing what she has been able to accomplish,” Gerring said. “To be as successful as she was at golf? To juggle all that and still have time for others? She’s a great person and role model.”

Inkster returns this week to Muirfield, where she is a member of the captains club. It is her favorite course in the world.

“Because of the history I have with it,” she said, estimating she has played the golf course more than 20 times.

Juli Simpson Inkster with the trophy after winning the 1980 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship at Prairie Dunes Country Club in Hutchinson, Kansas. (Copyright unknown/Courtesy USGA Archives)

Inkster still enjoys playing golf, but retired from competition she is able to reflect on what mattered most to her. And what she would like to be remembered for.

“When you’re going through all that, golf is your identity,” she said of grinding on tour. “It took me a while to know golf is what I did, not who I am. Being a mom really helped me with that.”

Mothers must be both tender and tough. Inkster nailed the landing on both counts.

“She just refused to lose,” Gerring said. “I never saw a better competitor. She and Jack (Nicklaus) were similar that way. It’s what separated them from everyone else. When Jack would step on that tee, not only did he know he was going to beat you, but he knew you knew he was going to beat you. Same thing with Jules.

“Yet if you asked her, she would give every single trophy to be a mom. Her kids are it to her.”

Fortunately, Inkster need not choose between trophies and children. She raised both equally well.

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What’s it like getting mentored by an LPGA Hall of Famer? Jenny Bae found out on a recent trip

Juli Inkster recalls being an impatient player when she turned pro and joined the LPGA in 1983.

Juli Inkster recalls being an impatient player when she turned pro and joined the LPGA in 1983, the first step of what would become an LPGA and World Golf Hall of Fame career. And while Inkster won an LPGA event in 1983 and two majors in 1984, including the Nabisco Dinah Shore in Rancho Mirage, California, she wants others to heed her advice about taking their time.

“It’s all about a process. It’s not ‘I need to win now,’” said Inkster, the part-time La Quinta resident and winner of 31 LPGA titles. “I hate to say it, but I was super impatient myself. You’ve got to just kind of let it happen. Let it come to you.”

That’s just part of the advice Inkster was dispensing this month as a mentor for budding women’s golf star Jenny Bae, the 2023 winner of the Inkster Award. As part of that award, given to the highest-ranking Division I collegiate golfer in her final year of eligibility, Bae earned a mentoring retreat with Inkster at Tradition Golf Club in La Quinta.

“She’s talked to me a lot ever since I got off the flight,” said Bae, a former top player at the University of Georgia who set numerous school records as well as going to a playoff at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur before falling to Rose Zhang. “I’ve been just starting to warm up with all my questions for her.”

Bae is the fourth winner of the Inkster Award sponsored by Workday, something that Inkster, a four-year player at San Jose State and a three-time U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, hopes is different from other postseason golf awards. Inkster wanted to honor golfers who stay in school rather than leave after a year or two for the professional life.

“As an amateur, you could go to the LPGA qualifying school and if you make it, you can get your card and you can leave (school), so you can start on the LPGA in January,” Inkster said. “But as a college coach or a college player, you are taking your best player off the team and you might have a chance to win a national championship. And now that’s gone.’

“So my thing was to reward a person who stays all four years in college, or five as it is now. Workday was great, because they are our South Bay company, which is where I’m at,” Inkster added.

Juli Inkster during the second round at the 2019 Senior LPGA Championship. Photo: Rick Sharp

The other key was Inkster didn’t want to just hand over a trophy to the winner. She wanted to have an impact as a mentor, something she did for dozens of players in her more active days on the LPGA.

“I wanted something that I could put my hands on and kind of make a difference,” Inkster said. “College golf, everything is done for you. What to eat, all your travel, what tournaments you play in. All of a sudden on the LPGA, it is just really different. So I wanted to give them one, the opportunity to come out and play a couple of days and talk about what they are going through. I also want them to know that they can call me any time and ask questions.”

The money helps, too

The award also comes with $50,000, something that Bae has already appreciated as she starts her pro career. In just 10 starts on the Epson Tour last year, Bae won two tournaments, and the $50,000 was important to her start.

“I can’t lie, it was one of the small issues that I have is financial. How we are going to move, where we are going to stay and all,” Bae said. “It really helped a lot. It allowed me not to have to worry about the financial piece and just also gave me that space to grow up and compete and do what I love.”

At Tradition, Bae not only had a chance to talk with Inkster, but played a round with Inkster as well as major championship winners Ingee Chun and Danielle Kang. But Bae also took the chance to ask Inkster about professional life seriously.

“I’ve actually put a lot of thought in this. She told me scheduling and being able to prepare for everything first, before I even had a chance to ask her. So that was actually great,” Bae said. “This morning I asked her about mental golf. There are a lot of distractions out there but also a lot of people who are able to help me. And maybe I just haven’t had the chance to meet them. So I asked her a few things about that.”

For Inkster, the ability to talk to young players lets her fall back on the experiences she’s had over 40 years as a pro.

“I’ve gone through it all. I’ve been on top, been on the bottom, raised kids,” Inkster said. “Golf is super hard. You can have a lot of success in college and all of a sudden you come out on the LPGA and it is really hard. And they don’t really have anyone to talk to. I’m kind of that.”

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Angel Yin, sponsor-less the past four seasons, on pace to win $1 million Aon bonus

It’s quite the turnaround for a player who considered writing tournaments on the tour’s spring Asian swing.

Angel Yin currently leads the Aon Risk Reward Challenge, and if she holds on, will earn a $1 million bonus on top of $1,617,216 she’s made on tour this season. That’s without any money made at the no-cut, season-ending CME Group Tour Championship, which boasts a $7 million purse and $2 million winner’s check.

It’s quite the turnaround for a player who, earlier this season, considered writing tournaments on the tour’s spring Asian swing to ask for a sponsor exemption to get an infusion of cash.

Yin ultimately decided against it, thinking it might be good to play a lighter schedule to be more refreshed for CME, but the money situation is striking for a Solheim Cup player who hasn’t had a personal sponsor in four years.

“It’s tough when you have a bad stretch of a few years,” said Yin. “Your bank gets pretty dry.”

Yin, 25, isn’t bitter about the lack of sponsors, however, saying that she’s had a change of heart about the situation in recent months.

“I don’t think I’m as desperate as I used to be,” said Yin. “I used to be really desperate. Now I’m not as desperate. I think throughout this journey of not being sponsored, I think it really helped me learn my own value as a person in life.”

The sponsor situation doesn’t surprise LPGA and World Golf Hall of Famer Juli Inkster, who Yin said became like a second mom to her after she played on Inkster’s 2017 Solheim Cup team. While sponsor money might be increasing for those at the top of the game, Inkster still doesn’t see it filtering down ranks.

“I think a lot of these companies don’t value women’s golf to sell product,” said Inkster, “and I think they’re missing the boat.”

2023 Solheim Cup
Angel Yin takes a selfie of herself with The United States team with their captain Stacy Lewis and her husband and daughter behind during the official photo call prior to The Solheim Cup at Finca Cortesin Golf Club on September 19, 2023, in Casares, Spain. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

Even Yin’s signature headwear, the G/Fore hat with HACI stretched out like a giant billboard on top of her head, came from the pro shop at her home course, Hacienda Golf Club. Yin said G4 started sending her hats because the club’s pro shop couldn’t carry enough. Members like it, she said, because they can easily spot her.

“Exactly, see, it’s in your face,” she said. “You can spot it a mile away. Cameras are not always that close to you, and when you have a small logo, the imperial ones, can’t really see.”

Yin, however, isn’t paid to wear the hats.

Last month in China, Yin’s hat couldn’t be missed as the power player with soft hands won the 2023 Buick LPGA Shanghai for her first LPGA victory in her 159th career start. Yin beat former World No. 1 Lilia Vu in a playoff. The pair squared off against each other earlier this year at the Chevron.

Unfortunately, Yin couldn’t keep the momentum going as she pulled out of Malaysia last week with back pain. She has decided to take off next week’s event, the Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican, as well. The Aon winner will be decided after Pelican.

“The truth is everybody is doing math,” said Yin, who had her caddie help her understand how the system worked.

“But the last two months, everybody is just talking to me about Aon. Anyone and their moms are texting me about Aon. It’s hard not to know about and do the math on it because you would be kind of stupid not to. It’s $1 million. Doesn’t matter how much inflation is going on in this world, it’s a lot of money.”

Yin is 28 under par on the 30 holes played over the course of the season. Attahaya Thitikul ranks second to Yin and needs at least two eagles to pass her.

Inkster picked Yin for that 2017 Solheim Cup team and saw a player with a ton of potential who needed maturing in her course management.

“She’s super stubborn,” said Inkster. “It has taken me a while to kind of get to her.”

Angel Yin
Angel Yin and Juli Inkster of the United States play with the crowd on the first tee before her match against Karine Icher of Team Europe during the final day singles matches of the Solheim Cup at the Des Moines Golf and Country Club on August 20, 2017, in West Des Moines, Iowa. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Inkster, who plays quite a bit of golf with Yin in Palm Springs, also encouraged the outgoing Yin to show more of that personality on the golf course, where she’s often stoic. Yin made a point to do that in Shanghai.

“I think you can show your emotions and also be super successful,” said Inkster. “You could tell if I was shooting 78 or 68.”

While Yin stands to win a boatload of cash this season, she said the most impactful piece of advice Inkster has given her over the years is “Don’t do it for the money.”

“It’s our job; we do it for the money,” Yin said with a laugh. “I mean, everyone is here doing it for the money.

“She always tells me to not look at it like that. If you look at it like that, you don’t really see more than that. Do it for the love of the golf, why I play, why you win, something beyond the money.

“I really take that to heart.”

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Should the Solheim Cup have a playoff? U.S. captain Stacy Lewis, Golf Twitter weigh in

For the first time in Solheim Cup history, the 2023 matches ended in a 14-14 tie.

Stacy Lewis sat next to LPGA commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan during the Solheim Cup’s closing ceremony in Spain and the topic of a playoff came up.

For the first time in Solheim Cup history, the matches ended in a 14-14 tie. Because Europe won in 2021, they retained the cup. While members of Team Europe carried Spanish hero Carlota Ciganda around Finca Cortesin on their shoulders, Lewis’ squad had a good cry.

Captain and commish got to talking: Should the Solheim Cup institute a playoff?

“I don’t know, I mean, it obviously would be better TV,” Lewis told the media when it was over. “It would be a better experience for the fans if there was a – whether it was a team playoff or something like that, I think that would be pretty cool.

“But if you want to stick with the history of the event and history of what the men do as well, you probably stick with retaining the Cup.

“I don’t know how I feel about that either way, to be honest.”

2023 Solheim Cup
Team Europe captain Suzann Pettersen celebrates with the Solheim Cup at Finca Cortesin Golf Club in Casares, Spain. (Photo: Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

While this was a first for the Solheim, on two different occasions the Ryder Cup has ended in a tie. In 1969, the United States retained against Great Britain, and in 1989, Europe retained at The Belfry.

After the 2003 Presidents Cup ended in a 17-17 tie in South Africa, Tiger Woods and Ernie Els went into a sudden-death playoff to determine the winner. After three holes, it was decided between captains Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player that the two teams would share the Cup.

Woods called the playoff one of his most nerve-wracking experiences in golf.

“To have two guys decide the fate of the whole team in extra holes like that, I don’t think any of the sides felt comfortable with that to begin with,” said Woods 20 years ago. “It’s just part of the captains’ agreement and part of the rules of the competition.

“But we didn’t like it. It’s a team event, not an individual event. We’re here as a team together and we’d like to decide as a team together and not on an individual basis.”

Nowadays, if the Presidents Cup ends in a 15-15 tie, the two teams will share the trophy.

In the aftermath of the Solheim, players and fans weighed in on social media. Juli Inkster, a three-time captain for Team USA, said the captains should have to play for it.

In a Golfweek Twitter poll that saw 2,513 votes cast, opinions were split on the implementation of a playoff, with 51 percent voting yes, including former Solheim Cupper Brittany Lincicome.

Here’s what other folks had to say about the event’s first tie:

After first going silent on Juli Inkster, Jenny Bae now leans on star as she prepares for LPGA debut

For all her accomplishments, Bae’s phone etiquette went out the window when Hall of Famer Inkster was on the line.

It’s not like the ring of her phone came as a total surprise; Jenny Bae was tipped off in advance. Her coach at the University of Georgia mentioned to the senior star that a call from seven-time major champion Juli Inkster could be coming and she should be prepared.

Bae had a record-setting 2022-23 season, finishing in the top five on eight different occasions, and Bulldogs coach Josh Brewer hinted that something special could be in the works.

“He said make sure you keep the phone on, and you’re wide awake. You’re going to get one of the biggest important phone calls of your entire life tomorrow morning at 9,” Bae recalled. “I was like, oh, okay. So I was freaking out the entire night. Woke up super early. Just couldn’t sleep. I got the phone call and she says, ‘Hi, I’m Juli Inkster,’ and she announced the award and I think I was quiet for about 30 seconds or so.”

Bae had been selected as the 2023 recipient of the Inkster Award presented by Workday, an honor that recognizes the highest-ranked women’s Division I collegiate golfer in her final year of eligibility for the 2022-23 college golf season. A fifth-year senior, she finished the season as the fifth-ranked women’s college golfer in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings and fourth in the Golfstat rankings.

But for all her accomplishments, Bae’s phone etiquette went out the window when Hall of Famer Inkster was on the other end of the line. On Wednesday, in advance of the LPGA’s Portland Classic, the award’s namesake wondered if she’d even properly connected with the rising star.

“I was like, are you there?” Inkster said.

“I was so in shock,” Bae added. “I was like, is this really Juli Inkster on the phone with me right now telling me I just got the biggest award of the year? I was super excited, super pumped. After our phone call, I called my coach, my parents, guess what just happened and who just called me. That day, I can say, is one of my best mornings I’ve ever had in my life.”

The honor was well-deserved for Bae, who captured titles at the Illini Invitational and the Athens Regional, where she posted the two lowest scores in Georgia history. She compiled a 70.75 season stroke average, the lowest single-season stroke average in Georgia history. She also finished runner-up at the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, falling to Rose Zhang on the second playoff hole.

As a result of winning the award, she received an exemption for this week’s event, which takes place at Columbia Edgewater Country Club in Portland, and Bae will automatically advance to the second stage of LPGA Q-School from Oct. 16-20 at Plantation Golf and Country Club in Venice, Florida.

And while this week’s LPGA debut will certainly test her nerves, Bae has plenty of experience to draw on. On top of her stellar collegiate career, she’s added a pair of wins on the Epson Tour this summer.

Juli Inkster walks on the 17th green during the second round of the 2013 U.S. Women’s Open at Sebonack Golf Club on June 28, 2013 in Southampton, New York. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images)

Inkster, who has 31 LPGA titles and a pair of U.S. Opens under her belt, said she thinks the Georgia product is well-equipped to play with the world’s best this week. When asked if she offered Bae much advice, Inkster insisted she simply told the 22-year-old to savor the experience.

“She’s done a great job all right,” Inkster said. “I think she knows what she’s doing. I think Georgia really prepared her for the next stage. But also right now it’s maybe a little overwhelming, but it’ll settle in. The main thing is right now I’m sure she’s trying to soak in everything, play in everything, practice, but my philosophy is you really need that time to get away from the game and have other outside activities that keep your mind fresh.

“So my thing is, yeah, when you’re out there, you play, you play, you play, but then you’re home you need time to rest, you need downtime. Then you get back to working. It’s not about the quantity it’s more about the quality. That’s kind of what I try to stress to these players just starting out.”

As for her first taste of the LPGA, Bae knows that Portland will offer a special test where many of the game’s greats have previously thrived.

A total of 10 past champions of the event are LPGA Hall of Famers, including Inkster. The others are Judy Rankin, Donna Caponi, Amy Alcott, Nancy Lopez, Betsy King, Patty Sheehan, Dottie Pepper, Annika Sorenstam and Lorena Ochoa.

But she insists she’ll keep Inkster’s advice top of mind.

“I think as expectations go, I’m just going to go out there and try my best on every hole and shot that I have. Just being able to have the opportunity to participate in this tournament is a huge accomplishment for me,” Bae said.

“I think I’m just going to go out there and try to enjoy myself as much as I can.”

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Georgia senior Jenny Bae named recipient of 2023 Inkster Award, earns LPGA exemption

Bae will receive an exemption into the LPGA’s 2023 Portland Classic.

Georgia senior Jenny Bae has been named the recipient of the 2023 Inkster Award presented by Workday.

The Inkster Award recognizes the highest ranked women’s Division I  collegiate golfer in her final year of eligibility for the 2022-23 college golf season.

Bae, a fifth-year senior, finished the season as the fifth-ranked women’s college golfer in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings and fourth in the Golfstat rankings.

As a result of winning the 2023 Inkster Award, Bae will receive an exemption into the 2023 Portland Classic on the LPGA, taking place Aug. 31-Sept. 3 at Columbia Edgewater Country Club in Portland, Oregon.

Additionally, Bae will automatically advance to the second stage of LPGA Q-School from Oct. 16-20 at Plantation Golf and Country Club in Venice, Florida.

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Bae will also join Juli Inkster, who the award is named after, for a two-day mentorship retreat in Northern California. Workday will provide $50,000 to the Juli Inkster Foundation to help support Bae’s transition to her professional golf career. The $50,000 will support Bae’s mentorship retreat with Inkster and assist with Bae’s travel expenses.

Inkster, a World Golf Hall-of-Fame member and LPGA legend, was a three-time All-American at San Jose State. She elected not to turn professional until finishing her four-year commitment to her school, winning 17 individual titles during her college career.

“Juli Inkster is an inspiration and such a role model on and off the course, her Hall-of-Fame career speaks for itself,” Bae said in a release. “To receive this award from Juli and to have her as my mentor is an honor beyond words.”

Inkster added: “Jenny had a remarkable career at Georgia, persevered through the challenges of the global pandemic to earn her college degree and excelled on the golf course with an amazing senior season,” said Inkster. “That says a lot about not only her performance on the course but also about her goals and passions away from it and putting education as a priority. I look forward to mentoring Jenny as she navigates the next stage in her professional and personal journeys.”

Bae finished 14th last week at the NCAA Women’s Golf Championship at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona. She had a record-setting 2022-23 season, finishing in the top five an astounding eight times, including victories at the Illini Invitational and the Athens Regional, where she scored the two lowest scores in Georgia history. She compiled a 70.75 season stroke average, the lowest single-season stroke average in Georgia history. She also finished runner-up at the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, falling to Rose Zhang on the second playoff hole.

Last weekend, Bae made her professional debut on the Epson Tour, competing in the Nova Mission Inn Resort and Club Championship in Howey-In-The-Hills, Florida.

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‘How can we get involved?’: Greg Norman hints at growing interest for women’s LIV Golf League

“I have personally had discussions with individual LPGA Tour players … They love what our product is showcasing.”

On the eve of the first women’s major championship of the year in Texas, Greg Norman hinted at a growing interest in a women’s LIV Golf League while speaking ahead of the upstart circuit’s next event in Australia.

The CEO and commissioner of LIV Golf was asked about the future of LIV both from a men’s and women’s perspective and admitted there have been internal discussions “on a regular basis” about the latter.

“I have personally had discussions with individual LPGA Tour players, LET Tour players, Ladies European Tour. They love what our product is showcasing,” claimed Norman during a press conference at Grange Golf Club ahead of LIV Golf Adelaide. “They ask all the time, ‘How can we get involved? We’d love to see a LIV ladies series.’”

It’s important to note that while LPGA Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan has previously said she would meet with LIV Golf officials, there has been no public indication that meeting has taken place.

“We can only drink out of a fire hydrant so much, so we have a lot of opportunities and initiatives coming across our plate,” Norman explained. “Our focus is to make sure this year we produce what we’re producing (with the LIV Golf League) from day one, 2023, and then going forward we’re looking what are the best opportunities to build on to what we have today.”

Believe him or not, Norman has been adamant that his goal for LIV was to coexist within the golf ecosystem. For the sake of their tour, LPGA players past and present can only hope Norman is good on his word.

“I think if Norman does do this, it’s going to totally ruin the LPGA, because I think most of the girls would go, just because the money is a game-changer,” said 31-time LPGA winner Juli Inkster last August.

“If it’s the money that they have on the LIV, you know they’re going to crush the LPGA,” said 10-time major champion Annika Sorenstam. “Hopefully they have the intention of growing the game and working together with the LPGA.”

Seven-time major winner Karrie Webb said she’d hold a grudge against players who doesn’t agree with her fellow Aussie Norman.

“If the LPGA were to suffer because a group of players went and started playing on a tour similar to (LIV) and the LPGA would suffer, I would hold that against them,” Webb said. “I know that (Greg Norman has) had this vendetta against the PGA Tour as long as I’ve known him, So I don’t think there would be any changing him. I would just ask him that in his ambition to succeed, that he doesn’t ruin women’s golf in the process.”

“I hope we survive it,” added former world No. 1 Stacy Lewis. “Should we talk to them? Absolutely. Ultimately, I think we have to find a way to co-exist.”

LIV Golf has long been criticized as a way for Saudi Arabia to sportswash its controversial human rights record. The Kingdom has been accused of politically motivated killings, torture, forced disappearances and inhumane treatment of prisoners. Members of the royal family and Saudi government were accused of involvement in the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist.

How can a women’s organization reconcile doing business with a regime that has such a horrendous record of human rights abuses, especially toward women?

“I think that’s maybe one of the reasons we should partner,” said Sorenstam, “to be able to make a difference.”

Contributing: Golfweek senior writer Beth Ann Nichols.

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