Epson Tour announces another record-breaking season in 2023 with $4.9 million in prize money

The 2023 season will be another record-breaker for the Epson Tour.

The 2023 season will be another record-breaker for the Epson Tour. In 2013, players competed for $1.6 million in purses across 15 events. This season, they’ll play for $4.915 million in 22 tournaments, the tour announced on Thursday.

Two events will boast the largest prize fund in Epson Tour history as both the Carlisle Arizona Women’s Golf Classic and the French Lick Charity Classic moved to $335,000. That’s more than double what the highest purse was a decade ago.

“I think our best sales people are our existing events,” said Tim Kramer, vice president of tournament business affairs for the Epson Tour, on what has kept momentum flowing in recent years.

Longstanding events on the tour’s schedule include the Twin Bridges Championship (39 years), the Florida’s Natural Charity Classic (14 years), the Island Resort Championship (12 years), the Four Winds Invitational (12 years) and the IOA Championship  (11 years).

This year, the IOA Golf Classic and the FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship celebrate 10 years on the Epson Tour schedule.

“We are so thrilled to be celebrating our 10th year of the IOA Classic,” said IOA Golf Classic Tournament Director John Ritenour in a release. “This has been one of the best events that we do to entertain our customers and our insurance company partners. Playing with these young ladies is the most fun that any of our guests have playing golf. Every year our invited guests ask if they can play in it the following year.”

The average purse size this season will be $223,000, up from $210,000 in 2022. The tour graduates the top 10 players on the money list each season to the LPGA.

It’s been a year of transition for the Epson Tour, with more change on the way.

Mike Nichols, who joined the LPGA staff in 2006 and was named chief business officer of what was then known as the Symetra Tour in July 2012, left the LPGA last summer. It was Nichols who transformed the LPGA’s official qualifying tour in substantial ways over the course of a decade before leaving to become the Chief of Sponsorship Strategy and Activation for Group 1001.

The LPGA is expected to announce his replacement Monday, Jan. 9.

2022 Epson Tour Championship
Xiaowen Yin, Gabriella Then, Yan Liu, Kiira Riihijarvi, Linnea Strom, Gina Kim, Celine Borge, Grace Kim and Hyo Joon Jang celebrate receiving their LPGA cards following the 2022 Epson Tour Championship at LPGA International in Daytona Beach, Florida. (Photo: Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

The tour will welcome three new stops in 2023.

The Hartford HealthCare Women’s Championship will be held July 13-16 at Great River Golf Club in Milford, Connecticut.  There will also be a second stop added in Utah with the addition of the Black Desert Resort Championship in September, where players will compete for $300,000, the second-largest purse of the season.

The tour will also return to North Carolina in 2023, with more details coming at a later date.

Date Tournament Course Location Purse
Feb. 27-March 5 Florida’s Natural Charity Classic Country Club of Winter Haven Winter Haven, Florida $200,000
March 13-19 Carlisle Arizona Women’s Golf Classic Longbow Golf Club Mesa, Arizona $335,000
March 20-26 IOA Championship presented by Morongo Casino Resort & Spa Morongo Golf Club at Tukwet Canyon Beaumont, California $200,000
March 27-April 2 Casino Del Sol Golf Classic Sewailo Golf Club Tucson, Arizona $200,000
April 24-30* Copper Rock Championship presented by KSLSPORTS.com Copper Rock Golf Course Hurricane, Utah $220,000
May 1-7 Garden City Charity Classic at Buffalo Dunes Buffalo Dunes Golf Club Garden City, Kansas $200,000
May 15-21 IOA Golf Classic presented by LPT Realty Alaqua Country Club Longwood, Florida $200,000
May 22-28 Inova Mission Inn Resort & Club Championship El Campeon Golf Course Howey-In-The-Hills, Florida $200,000
May 29-June 4 TBA TBA TBA, North Carolina $200,000
June 5-11 FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship Battle Creek Country Club Battle Creek, Michigan $200,000
June 19-25 Island Resort Championship Sweetgrass Golf Club Harris, Michigan $225,000
July 10-16 Hartford HealthCare Women’s Championship Great River Golf Club Milford, Connecticut $200,000
July 17-23 Twin Bridges Championship Pinehaven Country Club Guilderland, New York $200,000
July 31-Aug. 6 French Lick Charity Classic The Pete Dye Golf Course at French Lick French Lick, Indiana $335,000
Aug. 7-13* Four Winds Invitational South Bend Country Club South Bend, Indiana $200,000
Aug. 14-20 Wildhorse Ladies Golf Classic Wildhorse Golf Course Pendleton, Oregon $200,000
Aug. 21-27 Circling Raven Championship Circling Raven Golf Club Worley, Idaho $225,000
Sept. 4-9* Black Desert Resort Championship TBA Salt Lake City, Utah $300,000
Sept. 11-17 Guardian Championship RTJ Golf Trail at Capitol Hill Golf Club Prattville, Alabama $200,000
Sept. 18-24 Murphy USA El Dorado Shootout Mystic Creek Golf Club El Dorado, Arkansas $225,000
Sept. 25-Oct. 1 Tuscaloosa Classic Ol’ Colony Golf Course Tuscaloosa, Alabama $200,000
Oct. 2-8 Epson Tour Championship LPGA International – Jones Course Daytona Beach, Florida $250,000

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Mike Nichols, the man who transformed the Epson Tour, is leaving the LPGA

Purse sizes have drastically increased under Nichols’ leadership.

Mike Nichols is leaving the LPGA after 16 years of leadership, Golfweek has learned. As chief business officer of the Epson Tour for the past decade, Nichols transformed the LPGA’s qualifying tour in substantial ways.

Nichols joined the LPGA in 2006 and served as vice president of tournament business affairs with oversight of the LPGA schedule until being named chief business officer of what was then known as the Symetra Tour in July 2012.

In 2013, the qualifying tour’s season had 15 events and $1.6 million in prize money. This year, players will compete in 21 events for $4.5 million.

Earlier this year, Nichols oversaw the five-year title deal that brought on Epson as the tour’s title sponsor. The level for minimum purses was raised to $200,000 while player-entry fees were lowered by 10 percent per tournament (as much as $1,000 per player for the year). In addition, the yearly Epson Tour Ambassador Program grants $10,000 to each of the 2021 Epson Tour graduates to help aid their move to the LPGA.

Even Shaquille O’Neal took part in promoting the new Epson sponsorship.

“I knew that it was time for me to hand the ball to someone new once we onboarded Epson,” Nichols told Golfweek. “They are a tremendous partner, and we are only just scratching the surface on what their involvement will mean for this tour and our members over these first five years.”

Rachel Rohanna and NBA star Shaquille O’Neal team up to take part in a promotion for the Epson Tour. (courtesy of Epson)

Nichols, who is leaving the golf industry for the corporate world, joined the LPGA after serving as championship director of the 2005 U.S. Senior Open at NCR Country Club in Dayton, site of this year’s U.S. Senior Women’s Open.

“I don’t think people understand how much Mike has done for the developmental tour of the LPGA,” said veteran player Kim Kaufman. “We are often talking about the growth of the LPGA but forget about how this tour has grown as well. I played in 2013 and came back in 2020 and I couldn’t stop telling people how much better the courses and the purses were. I know the team at the LPGA will find someone great to replace him, but they are going to have very big shoes to fill.”

Last week, LPGA rookie Sophia Schubert nearly won the Amundi Evian Championship, finishing one stroke behind Brooke Henderson. Schubert was one of 10 players who earned her LPGA card via the Epson Tour money list last season.

“Mike’s been great,” said LPGA commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan.

“He’s been really awesome for the Epson Tour, and we’ll build on that for sure.”

Lucy Li of United States tees off on the 15th hole during the third round of Honda LPGA Thailand at Siam Country Club Pattaya Old Course on March 12, 2022 in Pattaya, Thailand. (Photo by Thananuwat Srirasant/Getty Images)

This week’s Epson Tour event, the FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship, is in Battle Creek, Michigan. Former child prodigy Lucy Li, now 19, leads the money list with $107,241.

“I’m so proud of the progress we have made as a team with an incredible group of partners who bought into our vision,” said Nichols.

“In my first full year, the leading money winner on tour made less than $50,000 for the season.  Next week in French Lick, the winner will take home more money in four days than the top player did in the course of 15 events in 2013. You don’t make that kind of progress without the commitment and belief of a lot of people with a common goal.”

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Coronavirus: Symetra Tour postpones five more events

The Symetra Tour postponed five more events due to the coronavirus outbreak, extending its hiatus through mid-June.

The Symetra Tour has announced that the next five events on its schedule have been postponed due to the coronavirus outbreak, extending its hiatus through mid-June. The tour has also rescheduled two events, moving the IOA Championship, originally slated for March 27-29, to Aug. 21-23 in Beaumont, California, and the Four Winds Invitational to July 31-Aug. 2 at Blackthorn Golf Club.

The Windsor Golf Classic, originally scheduled for April 2-4 in Windsor, California, will remain postponed until 2021.

“The Symetra Tour is only as good as its partners,” said Mike Nichols, the Chief Business Officer of the Symetra Tour in a release. “We are grateful for IOA, Morongo Casino Resort & Spa, and the City of Beaumont, as well as the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi and its Four Winds Casinos for working with us to find times that work to bring professional golf to their respective regions.

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“They’ve kept the dream alive for players, as there’s no ‘Road to the LPGA’ if there’s no competition. We couldn’t be more thankful for their loyalty to the Symetra Tour and complete dedication to women’s professional golf.”

The five events that have been postponed include: IOA Invitational in Milton, Ga., from May 7-9; the Symetra Classic in Davidson, N.C., from May 13-15; Zimmer Biomet Championship hosted by Nancy Lopez in Opelika, Ala., from May 20-23; The CDPHP Open in Albany, N.Y., from May 29-31; and Four Winds Invitational in South Bend, Ind., from June 12-14.

The tour completed one event in March before the coronavirus halted play.

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