Annika Sorenstam puts together first bogey-free round in more than a decade at her home course to lead celebrities at LPGA Tournament of Champions

“I’m very happy where I am. But the competitive part doesn’t go away.”

ORLANDO, Florida — Annika Sorenstam put together her first bogey-free round in more than a decade to open the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions, where she leads the celebrity division. Caddie Mike McGee was quick to point that out to his wife after her round.

“Obviously I’m very pleased,” said Sorenstam, who amassed 39 points in the Stableford format after shooting 3-under 69 at her home course, Lake Nona Golf and Country Club.

Sorenstam, who lost in a playoff here last year to World Series champion Derek Lowe, leads Mardy Fish by two points. When the 72-time LPGA winner was asked whether she finds herself checking out the LPGA side of the board from time to time, where Brooke Henderson leads after a 5-under 67, Sorenstam replied: “Of course.”

“I’m competitive, but it’s not like I look there and say, I wish I was there,” she said. “I’m very happy where I am.

“But the competitive part doesn’t go away.”

Brooke Henderson reacts with caddie Brittany Henderson after making her putt on the 18th green during the first round of the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club on January 19, 2023 in Orlando, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

After competing in the PNC Championship with son Will last month, the family jetted off to Tahoe for several weeks of skiing at their second home. The early part of the year has been filled with foundation work, with the Hilton Grand Vacations Annika Invitational wrapping up a few days ago.

Ashleen Kaur made a 40-foot downhill putt for eagle to win by one, and with her victory, received a spot to compete in this week’s field.

“I saw her this morning, and her dad is like joy,” said Sorenstam, beaming herself. “That’s what we want to provide is amazing experiences that they won’t forget. Very happy for her.”

Sorenstam played alongside TOC rookie Gemma Dryburgh on Thursday. The Scot told Sorenstam that she competed in her junior tournament when she was 17 years old.

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“So it was pretty crazy looking back now and now playing with her in an event, said Dryburgh. “Very cool. I asked her a few questions. Hopefully I didn’t bombard her too much, but wanted to soak up as much information as I could.”

While Sorenstam didn’t get as much preparation time as she would’ve liked coming into this event, she does have new Callaway clubs in the bag.

After she put a new Paradym driver in the bag and found an extra 8 yards, Sorenstam asked Callaway for more new clubs. A recent tweak to her new Paradym irons, and she’s zipping along.

“I’m searching for things to give me one extra mile an hour of club head speed, one extra yard,” she said, “whatever I can get. And right now they’re doing it for me.”

Sorenstam said she’s starting the tee the ball higher and launch the ball higher with her driver.

“If I can get it up in the air,” she said, “it’s actually staying up there a little longer, and that’s what I need. Then I can feel like it’s almost 10 yards. That’s the goal.”

While she’s feeling good after her opening round at home, Sorenstam isn’t sure what the rest of her competitive schedule will look like this year. She will head to Portugal in two weeks to play in a senior event.

“I know obviously LPGA is not where I belong anymore,” said the 2021 U.S. Senior Women’s Open champion. “So just kind of see how it goes and how I feel.”

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NBC meteorologist Dylan Dreyer, a mother of three, makes debut in LPGA Tournament of Champions celebrity division, where Annika Sorenstam leads

Dreyer is one of four women in a celebrity division that includes Super Bowl and World Series champions.

ORLANDO — In a way, playing golf in the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions felt a bit like being on the “Today” Plaza for NBC meteorologist Dylan Dreyer. At least when it came to taking selfies and talking to fans on a sun-splashed day.

Dreyer, 41, is one of 56 celebrities competing in the LPGA’s season-opener with husband Brian Fichera, an NBC News producer and cameraman on the bag. Fichera is the one who introduced Dreyer to golf when they started dating in 2010 while working together at WHDH in Boston.

“Now, she’s gotten so great,” said Fichera, “I don’t give her strokes anymore. We’re playing straight up from now on. She’s an athlete.”

Of course, casual golf hits a little different than a round alongside LPGA pros and professional athletes across all sports. Coming out of the cold in New York City, the mother of three boys – Calvin, 6, Oliver, 3, and Rusty 1 – felt overwhelmed from the start at the first LPGA TOC.

“When I’m in the studio, you could throw any curveball at me and I can talk through it, that’s my wheelhouse,” said Dreyer, “that’s what I can do, whether it’s a storm, whatever. This, I can’t pull myself out of it.”

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Dreyer posted only one point in the Stableford format in the first round, but felt good about the chances of her golf improving as the week progressed. She’s hoping for two points on Friday.

“I think I didn’t have enough beers on the course,” she said, laughing. “That would have settled my nerves, everything would have felt more normal.”

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Dylan Dreyer, Savannah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb, Craig Melvin and Sheinelle Jones on the set of NBC’s Today on Dec. 7, 2022, in New York. (Photo: Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty Images)

Annika Sorenstam, the greatest player in the modern era who won 72 times on the LPGA and happens to live on the 16th hole at host course Lake Nona Golf and Country Club, leads the celebrity division with 39 points in the Stableford format.

Brooke Henderson, the winningest Canadian golfer in history, leads the LPGA field of 29 players after a 5-under 67. World No. 2 Nelly Korda trails by one.

Dreyer captained the field hockey and softball teams in high school and got hooked on golf during the couple’s dating years. The instructor that she hired in those early years approached their lessons scientifically, and Dreyer enjoyed learning about the physics behind the swing.

“I grasped that,” she said, “because that’s how my brain works. And I fell in love with it immediately.”

Three kids later, however, it’s often tough to get in more than one round of golf a month, especially with Dreyer working morning shifts on the “Today” and Fichera working evening shifts at NBC News.

“We’re passing ships around 10 a.m.,” said Fichera.

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To prepare for this event, Dreyer played mini-golf for her 3-year-old son’s birthday – his request. Her two oldest children adore the game and spend a good deal of time on their putting mat.

“There’s a little chip-and-putt out by our house,” she said. “We can take them out there and it’s $5 to play. We play a best ball within the family.”

Two of three times that Dreyer has competed in the American Century Championship celebrity event in Lake Tahoe, she has played pregnant. Last year in Tahoe, she was eight months removed from the birth of her youngest. Dreyer believes she actually plays better when pregnant.

“My arms are forced to stay out,” she said. “And if you see the pictures, it’s funny, my belly has shifted before my body has shifted. It’s like that whole medicine ball theory.”

2022 the American Century Championship
NBC Meteorologist Dylan Dreyer at the 2022 the American Century Championship at Edgewood Tahoe Golf Course in Stateline, Nevada. (Photo: Isaiah Vazquez/Clarkson Creative/Getty Images)

Dreyer is one of four women in a celebrity division that includes Super Bowl and World Series champions and NBA All-Stars. What advice would she give to women who might not feel their games are good enough to accept an invitation to get out and play?

“I think that’s why it’s great that I’m here,” she said. “I have a very public job, so people recognize me to know who I am. I love to do it, and I’m not good at it. If you enjoy doing something, go out and do it. Who cares what other people think?

“I interviewed Justin Thomas once, and I was really nervous, because we were going to play a few holes together. I was really nervous, and he said, ‘Listen, you’re not going to impress me.’ I was like, ‘That’s the best thing you could have said.'”

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Photos: LPGA stars and celebrities at 2023 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions

One of the most fun events on the LPGA is underway in Orlando.

The LPGA 2023 opener is here.

The Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions doesn’t just feature stars like Nelly Korda, Danielle Kang and Brooke Henderson, but also a slew of celebrities including Derek Lowe, John Smoltz and the GOAT, Annika Sorenstam.

Lake Nona Golf and Country Club in Orlando is the host and will play as a par-72 track measuring 6,617 yards this week.

At last year’s event, Kang used a final-round 68 to take home the title. Lowe took down Sorenstam in a playoff to claim the amateur division.

Check out some of the best photos from the fun week in Florida below.

HGVTOC: Leaderboard

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LPGA season off to a rocky start — no locker room access, practice facilities restricted at TOC

“I’m not mad at the club; I’m not mad at the sponsor. I’m annoyed at the LPGA for that just being an overlooked factor.”

ORLANDO — There’s no locker room for players here at the LPGA’s season-opener, an event designed to celebrate those who have hoisted trophies over the past two years. Don’t be surprised to see players at the Hilton Grand Vacation Tournament of Champions changing their shoes in the parking lot.

Lake Nona Golf and Country Club has a men’s locker room that would’ve been more than suitable for the 29 players in the field. LPGA players can use the bathrooms and showers in the women’s facility, but there’s no place for them to store anything while they’re on the course. That area is also not private.

UPDATE: Thirty-six temporary lockers arrived at Lake Nona Golf and Country Club on Wednesday afternoon for LPGA players to use.

Matilda Castren can’t imagine something like this playing out on the PGA Tour. Grant Waite, a former winner on the PGA Tour, was on the range at Lake Nona on Tuesday working with his student, Jodi Ewart Shadoff, and confirmed that he never played in a PGA Tour event that didn’t have access to a locker room.

Castren was as shocked about the locker room situation as she was about the player fact sheet that came out on Jan. 14, laying out restrictions for when players had access to practice facilities at Nona. In the memo, players were informed that they “may not use the practice facilities more than one hour prior to their practice tee times. Use of the practice facilities is not available unless playing a practice round.”

Castren inquired with an LPGA rules official about the situation on Monday and was told that it was non-negotiable with the tournament, but that the LPGA wouldn’t be strictly policing it.

“The guys would never agree to an hour of practice each day,” Castren said.

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Danielle Kang reacts after winning the 2022 Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club on January 23, 2022, in Orlando. (Photo: Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

An LPGA official said what was written on the memo applied to last Sunday only, though there’s a section on the memo directly underneath the lines in dispute that read, “Sunday, January 15th” in bold and underlined type, followed by four lines explaining the rules specifically laid out for Sunday.

Aaron Stewart, VP of sports marketing at Hilton Grand Vacations, said that players were never restricted to one hour of practice and were free to practice even without scheduling a practice round.

“Once they have their credentials,” he said, “it’s their course.”

As for the locker room, a tour official said that due to the hospitality setup, the men’s locker room had to remain open to the public to utilize the restrooms, and that they were unable to create a private and secure locker room for LPGA players.

Stewart said they planned to order lockers for the week and use an area on the lower level of the clubhouse next to player dining for players in the field, but the tour itself changed course.

“I don’t know why they canceled the lockers,” he said.

An LPGA statement on the situation noted that the space offered to add temporary lockers did not include a bathroom area, and that due to a prioritization of that space for other player uses, the tournament team opted not to pursue that option.

“We are always open to player feedback,” the statement continued, “and work with our tournament partners to allocate finite space.”

Ryann O’Toole is sharing a car with a player this week, which makes working out of the trunk less than ideal.

“I’m not mad at the club; I’m not mad at the sponsor,” said O’Toole. “I’m annoyed at the LPGA for that just being an overlooked factor.”

One veteran LPGA player said that, in general, she often viewed how a club felt about hosting an event based on the locker room situation. If LPGA players were allowed to use the men’s locker room, typically the larger and nicer facility at a club, she felt particularly welcomed. Often times the club member would leave a note inside the locker wishing her luck.

The locker room isn’t just a place to store valuables and a change of clothes. It’s also an oasis for players to gather their thoughts away from the rest of the world.

“You should have a certain standard,” said Castren.

While the TOC has always been known for its party atmosphere with concerts, on-course music and a celebrity division, it’s also billed to be an elite event filled with the LPGA’s brightest stars, though a number are notably absent this year with the tour taking a full month off after the TOC.

Stewart said 43 playing professionals who compete on tours around the world call Lake Nona home.

World No. 1 Lydia Ko, who isn’t in the field this week because she recently got married and went on her honeymoon, has a house here. Annika Sorenstam, who will be competing in the celebrity portion of the event, has called Lake Nona home for decades. This is where the first Solheim Cup was contested in 1990. Players rave about the place.

LPGA commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan has talked often about placing an emphasis on performance excellence. She’s focused on putting together a strong schedule with big purses, but also on the small, important things that are needed to help players perform.

“So how do we create an environment for everyone within our ecosystem to reach their own peak performance?” she asked during a press conference last year in Singapore.

“And that goes to the things I just talked about, making it as easy as possible for our women to get the most sleep that they need, to eat properly when they come to tournaments, to have the administration taking care of them so they can focus on being the best that they can be.”

That would, of course, include the basics of a proper locker room setup and practice facilities, as well as strong, clear communication.

An LPGA official confirmed that Marcoux Samaan was unaware of either situation prior to Tuesday.

The year is off to a rocky start.

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Blair O’Neal opens up about fertility struggles, plans return to LPGA’s Tournament of Champions celebrity division after birth of second child

Blair O’Neal, due to have a second son in December, plans to compete in the LPGA’s Tournament of Champions.

There’s been a lot of mom talk on the LPGA of late, and at the season-opening Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions, that extends to the celebrity division, where Blair O’Neal plans to compete for the first time as a mother of two.

O’Neal, who is due to have her second son Dec. 3, plans to compete Jan. 19-22 at Lake Nona Golf and Country Club in Orlando. The event brings together LPGA winners and 50 celebrities, with former pro athletes including Major League Baseball stars John Smoltz, Roger Clemens and Justin Verlander, NFL Hall of Famer Marcus Allen and country music stars Toby Keith and Lee Brice.

Danielle Kang won the 2022 edition by three strokes over Brooke Henderson.

For a while, O’Neal was the only woman who competed in the celebrity division of the TOC until LPGA Hall of Famer Annika Sorenstam, another mother of two, started playing a couple years ago. Sorenstam lost in a playoff last January to former MLB pitcher Derek Lowe.

O’Neal, 41, played collegiate golf at Arizona State and started a modeling career after college. In 2010, she won the Golf Channel’s Big Break Dominican Republic and then played on the then-Symetra Tour for several seasons before joining the “School of Golf” show in 2015.

In 2020, O’Neal competed in the TOC while six months pregnant with son Chrome and finished sixth, playing from the same set of tees as the men.

Blair O’Neal reports that son Chrome is obsessed with golf. (courtesy photo)

For O’Neal and husband Jeff Keiser, growing their family has been a challenge. It took several years for O’Neal to get pregnant with Chrome, undergoing six IUI (intrauterine insemination) procedures before finding success.

This time around, after a series of three IUI procedures, the couple decided to undergo IVF last spring. After the first embryo transfer failed to implant, O’Neal fell ill with West Nile virus last fall.

“I thought I was dying,” she said, “It was awful.”

After O’Neal recovered, the couple was down to their last frozen embryo.

“We had to become OK with the fact that if it didn’t work, that it was alright,” said O’Neal. “That was just the path that we were supposed to be on. I feel like once we got to that point and didn’t expect everything just to work out perfectly, it made us a little bit calmer, made us little bit happier through the process, that it was going to be OK.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 1 in 5 women in the United States with no prior births struggle with infertility, though it’s a subject that’s not often talked about.

O’Neal said they didn’t tell anyone in their families about fertility treatments that first time around.

“I get it when people don’t talk about it,” said O’Neal, “because it’s just so sensitive and you don’t want to have to explain yourself all the time when it doesn’t work. It’s just like delivering bad news when you’re already handling it yourself.”

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When she did get pregnant, O’Neal shared the good news on social media. The ugly comments and body shaming that followed, however, was the worst she’d ever experienced on social platforms. O’Neal said she has shared less this time around, “just because, who wants that?”

She reports that son Chrome is obsessed with golf. His simple mantra “see ball, see hole” would serve most well.

This week, O’Neal will be on hand to host HGV’s Viva! Las Vegas member pro-am Sept. 19-20 at Bali Hai Golf Club. O’Neal, who already has her “School of Golf” shows taped for the rest of the year, always envisioned herself as a working mom.

At the TOC in Orlando, organizers have announced a three-night private concert series that will include En Vogue, Grammy-winning country-pop star Maren Morris, pop star Ellie Goulding and Paris Hilton.

“I’m going to do everything in my power to be there,” said O’Neal of the LPGA’s biggest party.

It’s family tradition.

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