LPGA pushes back 2020 restart to mid-July

After planning to resume its 2020 season in June, the LPGA pushed back its restart date to mid-July.

The LPGA won’t be back in action until mid-July at the earliest. On Wednesday morning the tour released its latest revised schedule with the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational, a team event in Midland, Michigan, now in the lead-off position July 15-18.

The final event of the season, the CME Group Tour Championship, moves to Dec. 17-20 in Naples, Florida, immediately following the U.S. Women’s Open in Houston, Texas.

“One thing that has become clear is that there will be no ‘opening bell’ regarding a return to safe play in this new normal of the COVID-19 pandemic,” said LPGA Commissioner Mike Whan in a statement. “To be honest, being ‘first’ has never been the goal when it comes to returning to play in this new normal. We have built a schedule that we think is as safe as possible given what we know about travel bans, testing availability, and delivering events that our sponsors and our athletes will be excited to attend.

“While July seems like a long way away, we are certainly aware that restarting our season in Michigan, Ohio and New Jersey will require a continued improvement in the situation in each of those states.”

MORE: KPMG Women’s PGA rescheduled for October

The Walmart NW Arkansas Championship, originally scheduled for June 19-21, will now be held Aug. 28-30, taking the place of the now canceled UL International Crown.

The KPMG Women’s PGA is the latest major to move to a fall date. Originally scheduled for late June, the championship will now be held Oct. 8-11 at Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania.

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Four other events that were scheduled to take place earlier this spring and then postponed – Volvik Founders Cup, LOTTE Championship, HUGEL-AIR PREMIA LA Open and LPGA MEDIHEAL Championship – have now been canceled for this season. That’s now a total of eight canceled events for 2020 plus the International Crown.

The Marathon Classic, Meijer LPGA Classic, new Pelican Women’s Championship and Volunteers of America Classic have all moved to later dates on the schedule featured below.

The AIG Women’s British Open remains on the schedule in late August even though the men’s British Open has been canceled for 2020.

There are four events still in the fall Asian swing, with tournaments scheduled for China, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan. The Korean LPGA is scheduled to return to action in mid-May with no spectators.

Players will compete for more than $56 million for the remainder of the year.

Updated LPGA schedule

Date Event and location Money
July 15-18 Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational
Midland C.C., Midland, Michigan
$2.3M
July 23-26 Marathon LPGA Classic presented by Dana
Highland Meadows G.C., Sylvania, Ohio
$2M
July 31 – Aug. 2 ShopRite LPGA Classic presented by Acer
Seaview, A Dolce Hotel, Galloway, New Jersey
$2M
Aug. 6-9 The Evian Championship
Evian Resort G.C., Evian-les-Bains, France
$4.1M
Aug. 13-16 Aberdeen Standard Investments Ladies Scottish Open
The Renaissance Club, North Berwick, Scotland
$1.5M
Aug. 20-23 AIG Women’s British Open
Royal Troon G.C., Troon, Scotland
$4.5M
Aug. 28-30 Walmart NW Arkansas Championship presented by P&G
Pinnacle C.C., Rogers, Arkansas
$2M
Sept. 3-6 CP Women’s Open
Shaughnessy G. and C.C., Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
$2.35M
Sept. 10-13 ANA Inspiration
Mission Hills C.C., Rancho Mirage, California
$3.1M
Sept. 17-20 Cambia Portland Classic
Columbia Edgewater C.C., Portland, Oregon
$1.75M
Sept. 24-27 Kia Classic
Aviara G.C., Carlsbad, California
$2M
Oct. 1-4 Meijer LPGA Classic for Simply Give
Blythefield C.C., Grand Rapids, Michigan
$2.3M
Oct. 8-11 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship
Aronimink G.C., Newtown Square, Pennsylvania
$4.3M
Oct. 15-18 Buick LPGA Shanghai
Qizhong Garden G.C., Shanghai, People’s Republic of China
$2.1M
Oct. 22-25 BMW Ladies Championship
LPGA International Busan, Busan, Republic of Korea
$2M
Oct. 29 – Nov. 1 Taiwan Swinging Skirts LPGA
Miramar G. and C.C., New Taipei City, Chinese Taipei
$2.2M
Nov. 6-8 TOTO Japan Classic
Taiheyo Club (Minori Course), Ibaraki, Japan
$1.5M
Nov. 12-15 OFF
Nov. 19-22 Pelican Women’s Championship presented by DEX Imaging
Pelican G.C., Belleair, Florida
$2M
Nov. 26-29 OFF (Thanksgiving)
Dec. 3-6 Volunteers of America Classic
Old American G.C., The Colony, Texas
$1.75M
Dec. 10-13 U.S. Women’s Open
Champions G.C., Houston, Texas
$5.5M
Dec. 17-20 CME Group Tour Championship
Tiburon G.C., Naples, Florida
$5M

 

 

Golf commissioners Jay Monahan, Mike Whan named to council by President Trump

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan and LPGA commissioner Mike Whan are among the sports figures named to an advisory group by President Trump

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan and LPGA commissioner Mike Whan are among the multitude of U.S. sports figures named to an advisory group by President Trump.

The council is one of the several coronavirus task forces put together by the Trump administration as it looks towards re-opening the economy.

Trump discussed this new council, dubbed the Great American Economic Revival Industry Group, during Tuesday’s Rose Garden press briefing. According to Shams Charania of The Athletic, the council is scheduled to take part in a call on Wednesday.

Monahan and Whan are on the committee along with the commissioners of the NFL, NBA, MLB and NHL as well as the heads of UFC, NASCAR, WWE, USTA and WNBA and others.

“We have to get our sports back. I’m tired of watching baseball games that are 14 years old,” President Donald Trump said on Tuesday. “But I haven’t actually had too much time to watch. I would say maybe I watch one batter then I get back to work.”

The panel of advisers, whom Trump said he will consult by phone, will operate separately from the White House task force that’s leading the administration’s public health strategy to contain and mitigate the pandemic, though there is expected to be some overlap.

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As Mike Whan works through ever-changing LPGA schedule, players weigh heavily on his mind

LPGA commissioner Mike Whan faces an ever-changing puzzle when it comes to his tour’s schedule. His mind remains on the needs of players.

Mike Whan was on his way to the gas station recently, wearing the protective gloves his wife had given him, when the plight of several players came to mind.

He thought about Sierra Brooks, the promising Symetra Tour rookie with grand plans for the LPGA. He thought about LPGA rookie Albane Valenzuela, a former Olympian and Stanford All-American who played three tournaments before the world hit pause. He thought about Mel Reid, the feisty English player who grinded on the Ladies European Tour for years before coming to America.

He thought about them all sitting at home.

“They’ve done all the work to earn this,” Whan said. “They’re there. They’re at this stage. Yeah, it sucks. I feel like we’re letting them down.”

During these unprecedented times, Whan met with the media for the first time via a Zoom video call. Earlier on Friday, his team had released a revised schedule that puts the LPGA back in action on June 15. They’ve been on ice since mid-February, feeling the brunt of the cononavirus earlier than most due to the Asia spring schedule.

“We were COVID before COVID was cool, I guess,” Whan said, “because nobody really knew what coronavirus was back in January when we first started talking to China, Thailand and Singapore about it.”

Back then, when a health minister told Whan that his tour might be put in quarantine if someone at the tournament site tested positive for coronavirus, Whan thought there might be a translation issue. Isn’t quarantine a military thing?

“He goes, ‘No, no, we would actually put you in a hotel for two weeks and then just check temperatures and make sure no one gets sick,’” Whan recalled. “And I’m thinking, can you imagine the LPGA being quarantined in a foreign country?”

Now the word “quarantined” is a part of the global conversation.

One year ago, Whan was boasting to his board about how recession-proof he thought the tour was because of its global diversity. Lightning should’ve struck then, he said, because the idea of a global economic shutdown never entered his mind.

The very thing that fueled the LPGA’s rapid growth these past 10 years might be what ultimately slows down the tour’s recovery.

Whan was part of a meeting via phone with President Donald Trump on Saturday afternoon that included commissioners of all major sports leagues.

Whan said he talks to a formalized task force in golf every couple of days. The pandemic has actually brought the game’s leadership even closer. He wouldn’t mind being the first tour, or even sports league, to host an event, provided that three things are true: 1) local government and gathering restrictions were in the tour’s favor, 2) the health guidelines where they’re playing were in their favor and 3) 75 to 80 percent of the players could get there.

Whan estimates that 35 to 40 percent of his membership is overseas right now.

Part of the reason he announced that four more events are being postponed and one, the Pure Silk Championship at Kingsmill, had been canceled, was to relieve the anxiety of players and caddies who were concerned about getting back into the U.S.

Gemma Dryburgh played twice this season before heading home to Scotland for the indefinite break. She set up a net in her garden to be able to hit balls after the golf courses in her area closed two weeks ago.

The new schedule release, she said, at least gives a more realistic date to aim toward.

“I think one of the hardest things about this situation is that it is hard to motivate yourself when you have no idea when we will play again,” she said.

Azahara Munoz is hunkered down in Florida and grateful that her family back in Spain remains healthy. She’s eager to get back on tour, of course, but only when it’s safe for everyone.

“Not just when it’s good for us,” she said.

As of now, there are four canceled events on the LPGA schedule: three events in Asia and Kingsmill. Whan said there will likely be more. It’s possible that title sponsors will partner up for events later in the season. He doesn’t want to fill every open date on the calendar in case he needs to move another major championship.

Right now, the U.S. Women’s Open has moved to December. It could be the tail end of the season, or if summer events get wiped out, Whan could introduce a wrap-around schedule that goes into 2021. He’s calling it the “year of the asterisk.”

The scenarios seem endless. Some have fans, some don’t. Limited hospitality. Multiple dining rooms or media rooms to cut down on crown size. Safety measures can increase the costs.

“We’ve had a few sponsors say to us, if you need me in 2020, tell me where you need me,” said Whan, “and if I don’t fit, tell me that you just need me to be back in 2021.”

It’s an ever-changing puzzle, and Whan, the compassionate, tireless, outside-the-box-thinking commissioner who turned around the LPGA, won’t rest until he no longer has to worry about his players on his way to the gas station.

But even then, he sees the bigger picture.

“I’ve said this many times: My desire to play golf has never been higher,” said Whan. “My worry about my desire getting in the way of what’s right has to be just as high. We want to play. Don’t get me wrong. And my players want to play, and I think if you said to them, let’s go play, they’d be there before I got there. But we can’t – while we want to be a force of good, we can’t be a force of setback, either.”

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Forecaddie: With altered LPGA schedule, UL International Crown could see changes

Full-field opportunities will be a priority for LPGA commissioner Mike Whan so the UL Crown, scheduled for August, could have some changes.

The Man Out Front can only imagine what it’s like inside the head of LPGA commissioner Mike Whan these days. Thank goodness there’s no shortage of caffeinated diet drinks.

Anyone who knows Whan knows that the membership is top of mind in the midst of these uncertain days. On March 24, Whan sent out a video message to players that included information on a cash advancement program on future earnings for anyone who needs help. The PGA Tour has announced something similar. Details are forthcoming.

Whan encouraged players to reach out, but he also created a call list for his staff. In the coming days, every player on tour will receive a check-up call from a staff member.

The LPGA always has been a family atmosphere.

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To that point, there will need to be playing opportunities for all, which means that full-field events must be a priority for Whan and his staff. In addition to combining title sponsors, the Forecaddie hears that one possibility on the table is moving the UL International Crown to the U.S. and making it a full-field event. The Crown, of course, is a biennial event that pits the top eight countries against each other. Teams are made up of four players. This year’s event is scheduled for Aug. 27-30 at Centurion Club in London.

It’s difficult, of course, to have a qualifying system for individuals and countries with the potential of so few tournaments on the spring and summer calendar. And the Crown field is made up of a total of 32 players. What if it changed to 144?

The scenarios are endless. And any company that not only sticks with the tour, but steps up to fill a need would be lauded.

The LPGA’s current schedule has the next event, the inaugural Pelican Women’s Championship, taking place May 14-17. With President Trump extending social distancing guidelines through April, that restart dates seems unlikely.

Imagine a U.S. Women’s Open in December? Q-School might have to move back toward Christmas to account for the largest purse in women’s golf.

Who needs a winter offseason? Right now it’s all about finding opportunities to play.

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LPGA postpones three more events, announces new dates for ANA Inspiration

LPGA commissioner Mike Whan gave his players a glimmer of hope by rescheduling the ANA Inspiration despite postponing three additional events on the schedule.

The LPGA has announced that it is further delaying its season in the wake of the coronavirus. The tour most recently postponed its first major of the year, the ANA Inspiration, in addition to two more domestic events. Now, the LPGA has informed its players that three more domestic events will be postponed: the Lotte Championship in Ko Olina, Oahu, Hawaii (April 15-18), the Hugel-Air Premia L.A. Open in Los Angeles (April 23-26) and the LPGA Mediheal Championship in Daly City, California (April 30-May 3).

But the LPGA also sent some good news on Friday morning. The ANA Inspiration has been rescheduled for Sept. 10-13 at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California. The Cambia Portland Classic in Portland, Oregon, which had previously been scheduled for those dates, will now take place Sept. 17-20.

LPGA commissioner Mike Whan informed his players of the changes with a personal letter in which he wrote that he and the tour had held out on postponement of those next events as long as they could – hoping the situation would improve. He told his players “you deserve better,” and also noted that he had made a promise to himself not to send any more cancellations without also sending positive news, hence the rescheduling of the ANA Inspiration.

“The truth is, every time I think we’ve made a plan to address changes, it never seems to be ‘long enough,’” he wrote. “I wish I could tell you when the LPGA Tour will resume our schedule, but the truth is, no one has those answers. Virtually all our events are concerned given the conditions they currently face in their respective markets. At this point, the only option is to reschedule what we can and hope the COVID-19 situation starts to improve. Trust me, patience is NOT my best quality, so this situation is hard on me, too.”

Whan also filmed a message of encouragement for social media this week, in which he spoke directly to fans and sponsors.

LPGA players are in the unique position of also having lost three international events in February and March that were to be played in the Asia Pacific region. The LPGA  has arguably been hit harder than many professional tours by the coronavirus. Nine consecutive events have now been canceled or postponed.

The next event on the Tour’s schedule is the Pelican Women’s Championship, to be played May 14-17 in Belleair, Florida. It would be a first-year event. The PGA Championship was scheduled to take place that weekend in San Francisco, however, and already has been postponed.

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GWAA honors Mike Whan with Richardson Award; Patrick Cantlay, Adam Scott also recognized

LPGA commissioner Mike Whan is being honored by the GWAA with the 2020 William D. Richardson Award for outstanding contributions to golf.

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Mike Whan has sparked a significant turnaround for the LPGA since taking over as commissioner 10 years ago and is being honored by the Golf Writers Association of America with the 2020 William D. Richardson Award for outstanding contributions to golf.

In addition to Whan, the GWAA has also named Patrick Cantlay winner of the 2020 Ben Hogan Award, given to a player who has overcome a physical handicap or serious injury to remain active in golf, while Adam Scott, the 2013 Masters champ, will receive the ASAP Sports/Jim Murray Award, given to a player for his or her working relationship with the media.

The numbers behind Whan’s work are staggering. In his tenure, the LPGA has experienced more than a 50 percent increase in tournaments, more than an 80 percent increase in purses and a 100 percent increase in television coverage. It’s fitting, perhaps, that he was announced as the Richardson Award winner this week, as the Gainbridge LPGA, a new stop on the tour’s competition calendar, is played in Boca Raton, Florida.

“I want to express a heartfelt thank you to the Golf Writers Association of America for honoring me with the William D. Richardson Award,” said Whan. “It’s very humbling to be included in a list of past honorees that includes names like Bob Hope, Bob Jones, Arnold Palmer, and LPGA Founders like Babe Zaharias, Patty Berg and Louise Suggs.

“The LPGA is the ultimate TEAM effort, so I hope all the players, teachers, and staff understand this award is really recognizing ALL of us!!  I’m honored to be a small part of this incredible LPGA family, and I’m proud of all that we are doing to leave the game even better for the next generation of golfers.”

Cantlay spent more than a year as the No. 1 ranked amateur as he made his way to a pro career that stalled for more than three years because of a stress fracture in his back. He reached the 2017 TOUR Championship without full status on the PGA TOUR and won the 2017 Shriners Hospitals for Children event. In 2019, Cantlay won The Memorial and is currently No. 7 in the world.

“It’s an honor to be associated with Mr. Hogan and join a long list of honorees who have greatly contributed to the game,” said Cantlay.” While the injury process was certainly difficult, I’ve learned a lot about myself and what I am capable of in the process. I’m excited to be in the top 10 in the world and look forward to a long career ahead.”

As for Scott, he becomes the second consecutive Australian to win the ASAP Sports/Jim Murray Award. Geoff Ogilvy won it in 2019.

“I want to thank the Golf Writers Association for honoring me with this award,’’ Scott said. “As athletes and writers, we do different jobs, but we all love the game of golf and it’s values.

All three players will be honored along with 2019 GWAA Players of the Year Brooks Koepka, Jin Young Ko and Scott McCarron at the 48th ISPS HANDA GWAA Annual Awards Dinner on April 8 in Augusta, Georgia.

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R&A and European Tour commit to help grow LPGA-LET partnership

The newly-formed LPGA-LET joint venture now has the official support of the R&A and European Tour. Both organizations will have a seat on the board of directors. They’ll also give financial support and leverage other assets they manage to help the …

The newly-formed LPGA-LET joint venture now has the official support of the R&A and European Tour.

Both organizations will have a seat on the board of directors. They’ll also give financial support and leverage other assets they manage to help the women’s European tour, according to an LPGA release.

“Building a strong and sustainable Ladies European Tour is fully consistent with the aims of The R&A Women in Golf Charter,” said Martin Slumbers, Chief Executive of The R&A in the statement. “We support the vision of the LPGA-LET joint venture to create significantly more opportunities for women and girls to pursue their dreams in golf here in Europe and to inspire future generations to take up the sport. We look forward to working with the LPGA-LET team as a board member of this important venture.”

Ladies European Tour players voted overwhelmingly in favor or the new joint venture last November after LPGA commissioner Mike Whan made a presentation at the player meeting in Spain.

“The European Tour has already had the opportunity to host events involving LET members and we’ve seen their talent and drive first-hand,” added Keith Pelley, Chief Executive of the European Tour.

“Looking ahead to our 2020 schedule, we have added another new and exciting co-sanctioned event with the LET in Sweden and are pursuing similar opportunities in other markets. The women professionals bring a different dynamic and fan base to the game – all of which improves our sport – and we look forward to building a strong women’s professional presence through this new collaborative approach.”

Commissioner Whan headed to Spain to lay out proposal for LPGA-LET partnership

Commissioner Mike Whan is traveling to Spain this week to lay out a proposal for a LPGA-LET partnership.

NAPLES, Fla. – Mike Whan won’t be at Tiburon on Sunday for the historic finish at the CME Group Tour Championship. He’s off to Spain instead on Saturday night for his first Ladies European Tour player meeting.

At his annual season-ending press conference, Whan addressed the 50-50 proposal on the table that would unite the LPGA with the struggling LET. He said boards of both tours voted unanimously to move forward. The proposal includes having six board members from each side with all proceeds staying in Europe.

The initial move would provide access to Q-Series, but not the chance to earn full cards, though Whan said that might come after the schedule has been significantly bolstered.

‘I’M NOT DONE’: Whan signs long-term contract extension
2020 SCHEDULE: See the 2020 LPGA schedule

European players will have the final vote on Tuesday.

“I want to make sure the European Tour players know that this is not some American growth strategy,” said Whan. “I’m not expecting to make money at the LET.”

The LPGA’s mission, Whan said, is to provide women the opportunity to pursue their dreams in the game of golf. In his pitch to the LPGA board, Whan said that doesn’t see a boundary or a fence around that statement.

“So I said to my board, I think we should do this because we can,” said Whan. “We really can. And I think it’s our responsibility. Our founders would have done it if they would have had this ability, so why shouldn’t we?”

Whan compared the LET’s thin schedule to what the LPGA looked like in 2009, shortly before he took over. In other words, it’s dire.

In 2008 the LET had 28 tournaments. In 2017 it dropped to 15 events.

This year’s schedule includes 20 tournaments, but three of those are jointly sanctioned by the LPGA: AIG Women’s British Open, Evian Championship, Ladies Scottish Open. They’ll play for almost $15 million this season, though roughly $10 million comes from those three co-sanctioned tournaments. The LPGA competed for $70.2 million this season.

“I don’t see why we shouldn’t go into this partnership,” said Nicole Broch Larsen, who got her start on the LPGA and will compete in Spain next week to keep her membership.

Broch Larsen, the 2015 Ladies European Tour Player of the Year, won the Helsingborg Open in Sweden that year, about an hour away from her home in Denmark. Several dozen friends and family came out to see her. She couldn’t defend the next year because the LET lost the event.

“There’s plenty of players that want to just stay in Europe and stay at home and play in Europe,” said England’s Jodi Ewart Shadoff, “which I totally understand. But there’s obviously not many tournaments throughout the year. Everyone wants to see more tournaments, more prize money, more TV time.”

Whan said he views the LET as a tour that one day can be built into a place where players can compete their entire careers.

“I’m not sure if that’s a realistic short or long-term goal on Symetra,” said Whan, “but I think it’s a real, realistic, even short-term goal on the LET.”

If the European players don’t take him up on the offer, Whan said there won’t be any animosity. It’s wouldn’t be the first time that a partnership between the two organizations never got off the ground.

“It’s their decision,” said Whan, “and I think we’re going to put a really good case together on how this can be impactful. But if people feel that that’s just a little bit too either threatening or too American or too Mike Whan, any of those things, that would be fine if it doesn’t work out.”

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LPGA 2020 schedule reflects growth through record prize money, new Florida stops

he LPGA has released the 2020 schedule, which includes 33 official events and a record $75.1 million in prize money.

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The LPGA has released the 2020 schedule, which includes 33 official events and a record $75.1 million in prize money. There will be more than 500 hours of global television coverage, with at least seven events on network TV.

“As I enter my second decade as commissioner,” LPGA commissioner Mike Whan said in a statement, “we find ourselves in a new phase of the LPGA Tour. We’ve grown, but now we must flourish. We talk a lot about the next generation, but we will lift this generation.”

Whan recently signed a long-term contract extension with the LPGA.

With the LPGA schedule full and healthy, players now want to see purses increase. The most significant purse jump for 2020 comes from the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship, which will grow to $4.3 million, up $450,000 from 2019 and $1 million from when KPMG came on board in 2015.

Both the Meijer LPGA Classic and Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational are up $300,000 to $2.3 million.

CME Group Tour Championship: Tee times | Photos

The Blue Bay LPGA event in China returns to the schedule after a one-year break, moving to the spring Asian swing. Earlier in the year, the LPGA announced two new Florida events. The first will take place in Boca Raton after the season-opening Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions and the second will take place in Belleair, Florida, in mid-May. That gives the tour four stops in Florida, good news for so many of the players who call the Sunshine State home.

It’s also worth noting the gap in the schedule for the 2020 Olympic Games in Toyko. After the Evian Championship in late July, the tour takes a break for the Olympics before returning for three weeks in the United Kingdom starting with the Ladies Scottish Open, AIG Women’s British Open at Royal Troon and UL International Crown at the Centurion Club outside of London.

Date Event Venue Purse
Jan. 16-19 Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions Four Seasons Golf and Sports Club Orlando, Lake Buena Vista, Fla. $1.2M
Jan. 23-26 Gainbridge LPGA at Boca Rio Boca Rio GC, Boca Raton, Fla. $2M
Feb. 6-9 ISPS Handa Vic Open 13th Beach GL, Barwon Heads, Australia $1.1M
Feb. 13-16 ISPS Handa Women’s Australian Open Royal Adelaide GC, Adelaide, Australia $1.3M
Feb. 20-23 Honda LPGA Thailand Siam CC, Chonburi, Thailand $1.6M
Feb. 27-March 1 HSBC Women’s World Championship Sentosa GC, Singapore $1.5M
March 5-8 Blue Bay LPGA Jian Lake Blue Bay GC, Hainan Island, China $2.1M
March 19-22 Founders Cup Wildfire GC, Phoenix $1.5M
March 26-29 Kia Classic Aviara GC, Carlsbad, Calif. $1.8M
April 2-5 ANA Inspiration Mission Hills CC, Rancho Mirage, Calif. $3.1M
April 15-18 Lotte Championship Ko Olina GC, Kapolei, Hawaii $2M
April 23-26 Hugel-Air Premia LA Open Wilshire GC, Los Angeles $1.5M
April 30-May 3 LPGA Mediheal Championship Lake Merced GC, Daly City, Calif. $1.8M
May 14-17 ­­ Pelican Women’s Championship Pelican GC, Belleair, Fla. $1.75M
May 21-24 Pure Silk Championship Kingsmill Resort, Williamsburg, Va. $1.3M
May 29-31 ShopRite LPGA Classic Sea View Dolce Hotel (Bay), Galloway, N.J. $1.75M
June 4-7 ­ U.S. Women’s Open Champions GC, Houston $5.5M
June 11-14 Meijer LPGA Classic Blythefield GC, Grand Rapids, Mich. $2.3M
June 19-21 Walmart NW Arkansas Championship Pinnacle CC, Rogers, Ark. $2.0M
June 25-28 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship Aronimink GC, Newtown Square, Pa. $4.3M
July 9-12 Marathon LPGA Classic Highland Meadows GC, Sylvania, Ohio $1.85M
July 15-18 Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational Midland (Mich.) CC $2.3M
July 23-26 The Evian Championship Evian Resort GC, Evian-les-Bains, France $4.1M
Aug. 5-8­ Olympics Kasumigaseki CC, Saitama, Japan
Aug. 13-16 ­ Aberdeen Standard Investments Ladies Scottish Open The Renaissance Club, North Berwick, Scotland $1.5M
Aug. 20-23 AIG Women’s British Open Royal Troon GC, Troon, Scotland $4.5M
Aug. 27-30 UL International Crown Centurion Club, St. Albans, England $1.6M
Sept. 3-6 CP Women’s Open Shaughnessy Golf and CC, Vancouver, Canada $2.35M
Sept. 10-13 Cambia Portland Classic Columbia Edgewater CC, Portland, Ore. $1.3M
Oct. 1-4 Volunteers of America Classic Old American GC, The Colony, Texas $1.4M
Oct. 15-18 Buick LPGA Shanghai Qizhong Garden GC, Shanghai $2.1M
Oct. 22-25 BMW Ladies Championship LPGA International Busan, Busan, South Korea $2M
Oct. 29-Nov. 1 Taiwan Swinging Skirts LPGA Miramar Golf and CC, New Taipei City, Taiwan $2.2M
Nov. 6-8 Toto Japan Classic Taiheyo Club (Minori Course), Ibaraki, Japan $1.5M
Nov. 19-22 CME Group Tour Championship Tiburon GC, Naples, Fla. $5M

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