Juli Inkster passes Solheim torch to best friend Pat Hurst: “This is your time.”

Pat Hurst served as Juli Inkster’s assistant captain on three different occasions, but Inkster won’t be returning the favor.

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It’s tough asking anyone to fill Juli Inkster’s signature Converse shoes. The LPGA legend could’ve captained at the Solheim Cup forever with few complaints.

But if anyone knows how to be a team player, it’s Inkster. And when her great friend, Pat Hurst, was given the nod to be Team USA’s captain in 2021 at Inverness, Inkster made it known that she’d be stepping aside. Hurst served as Inkster’s assistant captain on three different occasions, but Inkster won’t be returning the favor.

“It needs to be about Pat,” Inkster said.

Even now, it’s difficult to talk about 50-year-old Hurst as a captain without talking about Inkster. Hurst actually went to school at San Jose State on the Juli Inkster Scholarship. The pair became fast friends after teaming up to represent the U.S. at the World Cup in the mid-2000s.

They played countless practice rounds together on the LPGA. Inkster calls Hurst, who won six times on the LPGA, the “skins queen.”

“We love sports,” said Inkster of their bond. “We love family. We love a cocktail.”

The two moms from Northern California travel well together. No one worries about who’s picking up the check. Inkster knows that whatever she says to Pat won’t leave Pat.

Such friendships are invaluable in any walk off life, but especially in the high-stakes, nomadic life of a tour player.

It’s difficult to believe that anyone has come into the role of captain more prepared than Hurst. She played on five U.S. Solheim Cup teams, compiling a 10-7-3 record. And during the course of her three stints with Inkster, she’s had a front-row seat to three of the biggest, most compelling Cups in women’s golf history. Not to mention transitioning in a new generation of players.

“It was a journey together,” said Inkster. “I really didn’t make a decision unless I talked to Pat about it.”

Perhaps the burden of following Inkster was lessened a bit by the sting of defeat in Scotland. The first three-time captain in the history of the Solheim Cup didn’t sweep.

But even then, Hurst learned something. She watched Inkster handle a five-alarm fire controversy in Germany, where the Americans orchestrated the greatest comeback in Solheim Cup history. At Gleneagles, she watched Inkster teach a team full of rookies how to gracefully handle a heart-breaking loss.

“Basically she said, ‘Look, the sun is going to come up tomorrow,’ ” said Hurst.

Many of the core values Inkster held as captain will carry on with Hurst. Chief among them is an emphasis on fun.

“She wants them to enjoy what the Solheim experience should be,” Inkster said.

Hurst will be more organized than Inkster. She’ll be on top of the little things. She won’t dance on the first tee. And if there’s a pond somewhere at Inverness, don’t expect her to swim.

She famously waded into the lake at Mission Hills after winning the 1998 Nabisco Dinah Shore Invitational because she can’t swim. To be fair though, Hurst did leap in last year at the ANA Junior Inspiration after her playing partner, Cindy Kou, won the event.

Hurst plans to carry on the pod system that Inkster adopted from Paul Azinger’s 2008 Ryder Cup stint. Because Hurst has a full-time job as assistant coach at her college alma mater, she’ll have to get out on the road these next two years to scout the talent.

Brittany Lincicome was at Morgan Pressel’s charity event earlier in the week and said players were over the moon when they heard that Hurst was selected captain.

“We all freaked out,” she said.

While in some ways the Inkster era is over, it’s almost certain that the Hall of Famer will be out there as a helper, driving around a golf cart and delivering anything that might be needed – a banana, intel, a hug.

They’ll be in constant contact, per usual. Only this time, Hurst will step into the spotlight.

“This is your journey,” Inkster told her friend. “This is your time. Make it your own.”

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Q&A: Juli Inkster on college golf and the new award that bears her name

Golfweek caught up with Juli Inkster and asked her a few questions about college golf and the new award that bears her name.

It’s tough to think of a more beloved figure in the women’s game than Juli Inkster. Before she was an LPGA Hall of Famer and Solheim Cup legend, Inkster enjoyed an extraordinary amateur career. In addition to her three consecutive U.S. Women’s Amateur titles, she won 17 times in college at San Jose State.

The new Juli Inkster Senior Award speaks not only to the quality of a player’s game, but her level of commitment too. The award will be presented to the highest ranked women’s college golfer, as determined by Golfstat and Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, who is in her final year of NCAA eligibility.

The winner will receive a sponsor exemption into the Cambia Portland Classic as well as the chance to spend two days with Inkster during a mentorship retreat.

With so many top-ranked players leaving school mid-season to turn professional, Inkster’s award couldn’t be timelier.

“If I can get one kid to stay in school for another semester,” she said, “it’s great.”

Golfweek recently caught up with Inkster to talk about the award and her time as a Spartan:

GW: What does the essence of the award mean to you? Why is it important?

JI: I think when these universities give these kids a chance at an education and a commitment to their teammates … you know a lot of these universities have a great shot at winning a national championship and then their top studs leave, and I don’t blame them for leaving, it’s just part of the situation, but you go from trying to win a national championship to just trying to fill a roster.

You only have four years to win a national championship, that you can never look back on and try to get back. I think everybody’s always looking at the long-term picture instead of the short-term picture. The LPGA is always going to be there. I just think to have a chance to win a national championship, not only for your university but for your teammates that are still there, that’s kind of why I did it.

GW: What was the most important thing you learned in college?

JI: I learned a lot about myself. Time management – school and golf. Just being a good teammate. Trying to win a national championship. And it was fun. I had fun. College was fun.

GW: Complete this sentence: Back when I was in college…

JI: We never had to work out. I know that much.

You know, it wasn’t as structured as it is now. We didn’t have a time limit on practice. Our coach knew that we were going to practice, so if we didn’t want to go hit balls and we wanted to play, we could do that. If we didn’t want to putt and we just wanted to hit balls, we could do that. … And, I would have to say, we played an amazing schedule. We played against the best teams. That’s because our coach was a great fundraiser, and we had good teams. I never felt short-changed competition-wise. It’s definitely a lot more structured than it was back then.

GW: You’re going to spend a little time with the winner. What are some pearls of wisdom that you plan to pass along?

JI: I think there’s a lot of questions. I’ve talked a lot with Albane Valenzuela and Andrea Lee. Just on tour life, caddies, trying to work out a schedule. Playing in Monday pro-ams versus not playing in Monday pro-ams. Just trying to be yourself and not trying to be anybody else out there. … It’s more just about hanging out, playing some golf, having some dinners. It’s not going to be school. It’s going to be fun. Hopefully get to know them and let them know that I will always be there for them if they ever need anything.

GW: You won 17 times in college. Which victory stands out the most?

JI: I can’t remember any of them. (laughs) The one I know I didn’t win was the NCAAs, and that one kind of gnaws at me because I had a good chance.

GW: Do you think more players need to stay four years in college golf?

JI: It’s hard. I get why these girls leave. I know they probably get a lot of pressure from their parents, and they feel like they’re ready. But what’s one more semester? Depending on what your number is, if you get a high number at qualifying school and you’re getting into everything that’s different. But if you got a lower number and you’re only going to get in one or two tournaments, why not just stay? I just think if you commit to the university, you should stay four years.

Juli Inkster Senior Award will shine a light on skill, commitment in women’s college golf

Female collegians in their final year of NCAA eligibility will now be able to play for the Juli Inkster Senior Award.

Female collegians will now have an additional honor to play for with the creation of the Juli Inkster Senior Award. The award will be presented to the highest ranked women’s college golfer, as determined by Golfstat and Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, who is in her final year of NCAA eligibility.

The award is appropriately named for Inkster, given that the LPGA legend was a three-time All-American at San Jose State, and in the span of her college career (1979-1982), won 17 individual titles.

“This is a great honor to have this award named after me,” said Inkster.  “It’s a privilege to be able to play college golf at all levels. To have a player be honored for her commitment to the school, coaches and her teammates is what this award is about.”

The creation of the award was announced Tuesday at the annual college golf coaches convention in Las Vegas.

The Inkster award will be administered by the Women’s Golf Coaches Association and presented across all three NCAA divisions. The recipient must be academically eligible, per NCAA rules, and must meet a minimum round requirement – 15 rounds for Division I players and 12 rounds for Divisions II and III players.

The creation of the Inkster Award will shine a light on a senior who commits a full college career to her team in a climate where leaving early for the LPGA has become more and more enticing for the top players. It also bolsters postseason honors in the women’s game. While the men have many honors and awards to play for, women’s golfers only recently have been eligible for a player of the year award – the ANNIKA Award – which is voted on by players, coaches and media.

“On behalf of the Women’s Golf Coaches Association, I’d like to thank Juli for her support of this award as well as the college golf experience,” said WGCA President Todd Oehrlein. “To have our top ranked seniors recognized with an award bearing her name is an incredible honor. We’re thrilled to have the opportunity to create this award.”

The first Inkster awards will be presented after the completion of the 2019-20 women’s collegiate golf season. The Division I women’s golf recipient will receive a sponsor exemption into the next Cambia Portland Classic and have the opportunity to spend time with Inkster during a two-day mentorship retreat.

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