NAPLES, Fla. — Lydia Ko promised herself she wouldn’t cry. Made a note of it, actually, on her speech.
But when Annika Sorenstam and Nancy Lopez surprsing her by coming on stage to welcome her to the LPGA Hall of Fame Wednesday night at the Rolex Awards, Ko put the bouquet flowers in front of her face to hide the tears.
“To think that I’m in that prestigious club with them, it’s honestly hard to wrap my head around that,” said Ko after her opening round at the CME Group Tour Championship. “But just how welcoming they’ve been. Every time I win or play well, Nancy texts me like messages with, like, so many hearts and she’s just become more than just someone that played generations ahead.
“She’s been like an aunt, somebody that’s taken me in and I have really relied on. I’ve been fortunate to actually been able to spend some time with Juli Inkster and Pat Hurst the past few weeks before Pelican.
“To hear some of their stories it’s funny, but back of my mind I’m like, oh, my God. I’m in the Hall of Fame with her. It’s just crazy.”
My favorite moment from last night! Lydia Ko said she wouldn’t cry, but Nancy Lopez and Annika Sorenstam got her! Special moment welcoming her to the toughest Hall of Fame in all of sports. pic.twitter.com/hkKzDIqdCc
Before Ko even walked on stage to accept the Heather Farr Perseverance Award, the emotions started to kick in as she watched a highlight reel. The LPGA had sent her a similar video earlier in the year that showed her winning putt at the Olympics before transitioning to the putt that won her first LPGA title at age 15 and everything that followed.
“It’s weird because that’s really the only video I’ve been watching,” said Ko, “but I think it’s because it’s just like given me like flashbacks of all those moments. You know, the things in between as well that I can vividly remember.
“Like I have actually sat in the car and like watched that and shed a tear as well.”
Lydia Ko is recognized by Nancy Lopez and Annika Sorenstam for qualifying for the LPGA Hall of Fame during the 2024 LPGA Rolex Players Awards at Tiburon Golf Club. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
Ko opened the season-ending CME with a 5-under 67 to trail by three. A three-time winner this season on the LPGA, Ko won her third career major at the AIG Women’s British Open at St. Andrews two weeks after winning Olympic gold.
The winner of this week’s event earns a record $4 million. Ko won $1.5 million the the first time she claimed the CME title in 2014 (for winning the tournament and $1 million bonus). In 2022, she claimed the $2 million winner’s check.
True dominance on the LPGA might be a thing of the past. There was a time when Mickey Wright won a staggering 10 times or more over the course of four consecutive seasons.
It’s been a decade since a player has won more than five times in a single season. Yani Tseng was the last player to win seven times in 2011.
Compare that to Annika Sorenstam’s double-digit years or when Lorena Ochoa won six, eight and seven times from 2006 to 2008.
Is anyone capable of matching those efforts in the modern game?
As the tour gets deeper by the decade, here’s a closer look at most wins by year on the LPGA:
Lopez sat down with Golfweek during the PGA Show this week.
ORLANDO, Fla. — Nancy Lopez has never been one to do anything half-heartedly.
When she realized her game was good enough to compete with the pros, Lopez left the University of Tulsa, and she won nine times in her rookie year on the LPGA, including an incredible stretch of five straight victories in May and June of 1978.
She finished her career with 51 professional wins, including three majors, in 25 full-time seasons on the tour. On one of women’s golf’s biggest stages, the Solheim Cup, Lopez helped the U.S. win the first Cup in 1990. She later captained the team to victory in 2005.
Now she’s joined forces with Lt. Dan Rooney and Folds of Honor, a non-profit organization that provides educational scholarships for children and spouses of fallen or disabled military service members and first responders.
Since the foundation started, it has granted 51,000 scholarships or about $240 million worth of education.
Rooney, the group’s CEO and founder, and Mike Arbour, who is the chairman of the board of directors, recently asked Lopez to become part of the board. She accepted.
“We never dreamed, especially 16 years ago when I was above my garage, that Nancy Lopez would say yes to joining our national board,” Rooney said. “I just think it’s a testament to the mission that brings people together, and that’s taking care of our military and first responders. In a world where you have to pick red or blue, this is red, white and blue. And I think people are starving for common ground.”
Lopez sat down with Golfweek during the PGA Show this week at the Orange County Convention Center to discuss why she became part of the organization, what she thinks of phenom Rose Zhang and what the Americans need to do to recapture the Solheim Cup.
Check out our favorite summer tops and bottoms from 11 different golf brands including Nike, Lululemon, Adidas, Puma and more.
With women’s golf taking center stage this week at the Evian, we thought it would be the perfect time to showcase some of the best summer apparel drops you may have missed.
As temperatures reach their annual peaks stay cool and look cool with some of the best new shirts, skorts, shorts and more! We’ve combed through brands both big and small to help find you your new favorite piece of apparel to wear the next time you tee it up.
Be sure to check out our list of top women’s golf shoes for the summer to help you complete your perfect summer golf look before the calendar turns to autumn in a few months!
View photos of Nancy Lopez throughout her Hall of Fame career, including three major victories.
One of integral pillars of women’s golf celebrates her 66th birthday today. Nancy Lopez is widely regarded as a living legend, not just to the women’s game, but golf as a whole.
After leaving the University of Tulsa as a sophomore in 1977, Lopez immediately lit it up on the LPGA, as she took home five wins in her first full season (1978). In total, she racked up 51 professional wins, including three majors, in 25 full-time seasons on the LPGA.
On one of women’s golf’s biggest stages, the Solheim Cup, Lopez helped the U.S. win the Cup four times.
Clearly a winner, Lopez is arguably more well known for her infectious personality and passion for the game of golf. Her smile, laugh and love beam through even the cloudiest of days.
Without Nancy Lopez, there’s no telling what women’s golf would look like today. By just being herself, Lopez elevated the tour to new heights and continues to do so today through her countless philanthropic ventures and continuous ambassadorship.
So on her 66th birthday, we raise a glass to one of the best to ever grace our game. Happy birthday, Nancy!
Dale McNamara was the head coach of the Tulsa women’s golf program for 26 years.
Dale McNamara, the legendary college golf coach who helped launch the women’s program at Tulsa where she coached Nancy Lopez died Sunday after her second battle with cancer. She was 86.
McNamara was the head coach of the Tulsa women’s golf program for 26 years (1974-2000), bringing the Golden Hurricane to national prominence. She won four national titles and 81 tournament victories. In just her second season, she led Tulsa to a second-place finish at the AIAW National Championship.
“A fierce competitor, a caring coach and a Golden Hurricane through and through, Dale will always be remembered as a formidable force within collegiate women’s golf,” Tulsa president Brad R. Carson said in a release. “It is fitting for Dale to have lived to see the 50th anniversary of Title IX, which gave rise to the program she nurtured, as well as the 40th anniversary of the team’s historic win of two national championships. Our university and our city owe her a great deal of gratitude for putting Tulsa on the map just as women’s golf was gaining ground.
“She brought an immeasurable amount of acclaim to TU and continued to support our athletics programs for decades. We mourn this tremendous loss and send our sympathies to Dale’s family and friends.”
TU mourns the loss of legendary Golf Coach Dale McNamara.
McNamara led Tulsa to 22 national tournament appearances and in addition to her four national titles, finished national runner-up five times. Along with the 81 tournament titles, McNamara’s teams placed second 30 times. Her teams captured a school single-season record eight tournament wins in the 1976-77, 1983-84 and 1984-85 seasons.
She coached 28 first or second-team All-Americans and produced 32 professional golfers.
This breaks my heart! She was my coach and Mom when I played at TU. She was a great woman and leader. She helped women in moving us forward. Love you Dale! I know God is holding your hand.
“Coach Dale is going to be missed greatly by those that played for her and our current players,” Tulsa coach Annie Young said. “She put TU on the map in women’s golf with their many championships and dominant play. She has been a great support to the program in my time as coach at Tulsa. My thoughts are with her two girls, Melissa and Cathy, at this difficult time.”
McNamara led TU to both the NCAA and AIAW titles in 1982, as well as the 1980 AIAW title and the 1988 NCAA championship. Three of her golfers also won national individual crowns: Nancy Lopez, Kathy Baker and Melissa McNamara. In 1988 at the national tournament, her daughter, Melissa, was the NCAA medalist.
Melissa (McNamara) Luellen is now the coach of the women’s golf team at Auburn. The release stated Melissa and daughter Cathy were at McNamara’s side at her passing.
We are saddened to announce that Dale McNamara, mother of head coach Melissa Luellen, has passed away today. Coach McNamara was a legendary coach at @TulsaWGolf and an active supporter of our program. Our thoughts are with Coach Luellen and her family. pic.twitter.com/nPsbhb8Rjy
McNamara closed out her coaching career in the 1999-2000 season as Tulsa won the WAC Championship and made NCAAS. McNamara also served as assistant athletic director during her tenure at Tulsa.
McNamara won a record seven Oklahoma State Amateur golf titles.
In 1988, McNamara was inducted into the National Collegiate Golf Coaches Hall of Fame. She was inducted into the Oklahoma Sports Hall of Fame and was a recipient of the Jim Thorpe Association’s “Legends in Sports” award, both in 2003. McNamara was inducted into the TU Athletic Hall of Fame in 1999 and the Women’s Oklahoma Golf Association (WOGA) Hall of Fame in 2006.
A celebration of Dale McNamara’s Life is planned for Monday, Nov. 28, 3 p.m. local time at Sharp Chapel on the Tulsa campus.
In lieu of flowers, the family is requesting that gifts in Coach Dale McNamara’s honor can be made to the University of Tulsa in support of the women’s golf program.
Annika Sorenstam, Juli Inkster, Nancy Lopez and Stacy Lewis address potential for disruption to LPGA.
While it might have shocked many to hear LPGA commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan say she’d talk to LIV Golf, Annika Sorenstam thought it was the right call. As did Juli Inkster.
These LPGA legends understand one crucial point: If Greg Norman and LIV Golf aim to create a rival tour that’s anything like what they’ve done in the men’s game, it would wreck the LPGA, the longest continuous-running professional women’s sports organization in the United States.
“I think if Norman does do this,” said Inkster, “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.”
As the best in the women’s game gather at historic Muirfield for the first time this week, they’ll compete for a purse of $6.8 million. This season, the LPGA will play for a total of $97 million, roughly one-fifth the amount of money as the PGA Tour. Last week, LIV Golf announced its players will compete for $405 million in 2023 across 14 events.
With a schedule made entirely of limited-field, no-cut tournaments, even a fraction of that would be enough to lure plenty of big-name LPGA players to a LIV women’s league. Not to mention the prospect of signing bonuses.
“I hope we survive it,” said former No. 1 Stacy Lewis. “I’m scared for this tour. I’m scared to lose all the opportunities that we’ve created.”
Greg Norman, CEO and commissioner of LIV Golf, looks on from the first tee during the final round of the LIV Golf tournament at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club. (Soobum Im/USA TODAY Sports)
Sorenstam believes it’s the job of the commissioner to listen to potential opportunities, and that includes LIV. Because the LPGA is part of a 50-50 joint business venture with the Ladies European Tour, there already exists a partnership with the Saudi-backed Aramco Series, which feature prize money that’s three to four times a typical event on that tour, totaling $6 million.
Sorenstam, a 10-time major winner who won 72 times on the LPGA, looks at the rival league that has formed in the men’s game and sees the need for a more LPGA-fitted version.
“If it’s the money that they have on the LIV, you know they’re going to crush the LPGA,” said Sorenstam. “Hopefully they have the intention of growing the game and working together with the LPGA.
“To crush the LPGA doesn’t do anybody good, history-wise, future-wise, sustainability-wise. There’s so much negativity around this. I think that we need to somehow find a way to get a positive image with all this, if you know what I mean.”
It’s not a stretch to imagine the LPGA being forced to make a decision between going into business with the Saudis in a big way – or complete destruction.
While there have been calls to conduct talks with LIV officials, it’s not clear exactly what the talking points might be – there are many ways this all could shake out. An independent rival tour that poached dozens of top players would cripple the LPGA. Instead, a series of Saudi-backed official LPGA events is one possible way the two could work together, much like the Aramco Team Series on the LET. It’s impossible to know what LIV wants, of course, without having a conversation.
What seems most unlikely, however, is that top players will band together to stiff-arm the Saudis on principle.
“I think you have a handful that feel the same way as me,” said Lewis. “I think you have a majority that would ask, ‘What’s the number?’
“Should we talk to them? Absolutely. Ultimately, I think we have to find a way to co-exist.”
Critics of LIV often point to the wide-ranging human rights abuses Saudi Arabia has been accused of, including 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.”
Marcoux Samaan told Golfweek last week that she has not yet had a conversation with LIV, and that it’s too early to speculate on potential outcomes or options.
“We’ve been breaking down barriers for a long time,” Marcoux Samaan said. “I think we always fall back on our values and our goals before making any decision.”
Phachara Khongwatmai putts on the 18th green during the opening round of the LIV Golf Invitational at The Centurion Club near London in June. (Chris Trotman/LIV Golf/Getty Images)
A voluntary state of the tour meeting was held last month at the Dow Great Bay Lakes Invitational to discuss the potential threat of LIV, among other things, and only a couple dozen players attended.
Nancy Lopez has always worried about the LPGA. As a rookie in 1978, she was convinced the LPGA would close the pay gap. She’s still baffled by the fact that such a large chasm continues to exist between the tours and is even more confused by what could be on the horizon.
“I’m such a loyal person,” said Lopez when asked what she might have done in her prime if faced the with possibility of piles of cash.
“I would be hard to say ‘No, I wouldn’t want the money,’ but God it would be really hard to leave the LPGA. It would just eat me up.”
Lopez thought she would retire from the LPGA after she had her first daughter, Ashley, but the competitive fire was still there, and she needed the money.
“The money I made was good,” said Lopez, “but it wasn’t going to keep me until I got to 93 and needed to pay somebody to take care of me someday.”
While the PGA Tour has the best retirement plan in sports, the LPGA’s pension guarantees that most will need a second career.
As so many PGA Tour players talk about going to LIV to create generational wealth, consider what it would mean to an LPGA player to play five more years and then retire to start a family without having to worry about money.
For some, continuing to chase major titles and Hall of Fame points pales in comparison to children and financial security.
Jessica Korda, Alexandra O’Laughlin, Karolin Lampert and Lina Boqvist, winners of the Aramco Team Series (Photo submitted by the Aramco Team Series)
Saudi activist Omaima Al Najjar said there’s no denying the fact that conditions have improved for women in recent years, though she maintains that the right to drive and the right to travel are basic fundamental rights and not a sign of substantial progress.
“It’s important to remind the women who are participating in this tour,” said Al Najjar, “that the Saudi women activists who made those changes happen are still on trial, being prosecuted, banned from activism and banned from traveling.”
Al Najjar, now a surgical doctor living in Ireland, was a prominent blogger who took part in the right to drive campaign in Saudi and fled when she felt the risks were too great. It’s still too dangerous for her to return now.
Al Najjar is head of campaigns for ALQST for Human Rights, documenting conditions in prisons and advocating for the release of activists.
Al Najjar wants players to speak out not only about the activists, but the conditions of many migrant workers in Saudi Arabia. Women come from developing countries to work in the kingdom as maids and often have their passports confiscated as they are made to work seven days a week with no set schedule, “which is a sort of slavery,” Al Najjar said.
Meanwhile, Saudi-born women are fleeing the country, she continued, despite recent reforms because there are no safe houses in the kingdom for victims of domestic violence.
“There’s an issue of killing women in Saudi,” said Al Najjar, “and a lot of husbands kill their wives or a lot of fathers kill their daughters and the Saudi authorities do not do much about it.”
These are the issues Al Najjar hopes that LPGA players who compete in Saudi Arabia will speak out against, even it means financial loss.
“It’s important that they make such a statement,” she said, “and stand with Saudi women.”
Georgia Hall poses with the trophy after winning the 2022 Aramco Saudi Ladies International at the Royal Greens Golf & Country Club in King Abdullah Economic City, Saudi Arabia. (Ladies European Tour)
Few have chronicled the LPGA as diligently and passionately as Ron Sirak, the 2015 recipient of the PGA Lifetime Award in Journalism. For those who question how LIV Golf is any different than the LET’s Aramco Series or players sporting the logos of Golf Saudi on their hats and shirts, Sirak said it’s important to recognize the difference between sponsoring a tournament and owning a tour. Much like there’s a difference in sponsoring a player and owning a player.
“I think that’s a difficult situation for the LPGA to figure out what their relationship would be with the people who want to bankroll them,” said Sirak. “Would they be being supported by the tour and the LPGA still be an autonomous entity? Or would they be owned by the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia?”
Given the Saudis’ seemingly endless supply of money and little regard for market value – this seems to be more about power and image – the LPGA is in no position to throw money at a potential threat, and therefore has little leverage.
LPGA veteran Ryann O’Toole believes the PGA Tour made a mistake in not engaging with LIV Golf. If what Norman says is true, and LIV plans to build a women’s league, O’Toole would like to see the LPGA work with them so that players don’t have to choose.
“I think that it would be a great opportunity to utilize, like, the possibility that there could be some major financial opportunities,” said O’Toole, “and that we come together as two organizations, versus having two separate organizations.”
Whatever happens, it’s important that Marcoux Samaan maintains a model that’s sustainable, even if the Saudis decide to suddenly pull out of the golf business. One that, even if the LPGA took a financial hit, it would still survive.
Imagine if the Saudis – a country that’s widely reported to have a gender pay gap of 49 percent – became the first to pay elite male and female professional golfers equally. Or even came close.
“Financially, it is life-changing money,” said Maria Fassi, whose agency, GSE, has a number of LIV clients including Bryson DeChambeau, Sergio Garcia, Louis Oosthuizen, Paul Casey, Jason Kokrak, Branden Grace, Abraham Ancer and Carlos Ortiz.
“Whatever they come and offer me, $10 million, $20 million, 15, 7, whatever it is, it is money 99 percent of the girls out here aren’t seeing.”
And to many, where the money comes from, ultimately might not matter.
The documentary focuses on what built Sorenstam the champion, but also on how she was received by her peers.
There’s a moment early on in the new “Becoming ANNIKA” documentary when a young girl approaches the legend at a clinic and asks if she has any advice for competing against boys.
Sorenstam bent down to eye level and said, “Yes, you know you can beat them, right? You know that. Beat them. Be tough.”
Perhaps one day that youngster will grow to fully appreciate the beauty of that exchange. The new film, produced by NBC Sports in conjunction with the USGA, premieres on May 10 at 9 p.m. ET on Golf Channel.
Academy Award-winning actress Hilary Swank narrates and World Golf Hall of Famers Laura Davies, Juli Inkster and Nancy Lopez offer insight along with two-time major winner Dottie Pepper, former caddie Terry McNamara, USGA CEO Mike Whan and longtime journalist Ron Sirak, who covered Sorenstam’s LPGA career more thoroughly than anyone.
And, of course, Sorenstam’s family: doting husband Mike McGee, her parents Tom and Gunilla, children Will and Ava, and sister Charlotta all help tell the story of the 10-time major winner.
Mike McGee and Annika Sorenstam as seen during the Becoming Annika Premier at Sunrise Theater in the Southern Pines, N.C. on Tuesday, April 26, 2022. (Copyright USGA/Jason E. Miczek)
“Watching a movie about yourself, it’s a bit surreal,” said Sorenstam, who viewed the film for the time alongside her husband at the Sunrise Theater in Southern Pines, North Carolina, last month during media day for the U.S. Women’s Open.
“It’s interesting to hear other people’s perspectives. Of course, I’ve spoken with my caddie many times and with my kids all the time, but for them to speak when I’m not there, the film just captures it all beautifully.”
Emmy Award-winning director Adrienne Gallagher began production of the film at the 2021 U.S. Senior Women’s Open, won by Sorenstam. In January, the crew went to Sweden for 10 days to film where Sorenstam got started in the game and better understand the culture that shaped her.
The documentary focuses on what built Sorenstam the champion, of course, but also on how she was received by her peers.
“When you are winning a lot,” said Lopez, “it’s a shame that the players don’t think that’s really a good thing. I think women are tough on other women sometimes.”
Sorenstam acknowledged that she knew there was a lot of chatter in the locker room, a lot of whispers behind her back. Charlotta chalked it up to jealousy.
“This is kind of a harsh thing to say, but you don’t become taller by chopping someone else’s head off,” Sorenstam said in the film. “I honestly told myself I’m not here to make the most friends, I’m here to make the most out of my career.”
Adrienne Gallagher, Staci Green as seen during the Becoming Annika Premier at Sunrise Theater in the Southern Pines, N.C. on Tuesday, April 26, 2022. (Copyright USGA/Jason E. Miczek)
Gallagher worked with an all-female production crew for the film and believes it made a difference in the way Sorenstam opened up about her divorce to David Esch.
“Dreams can be expensive,” said Gallagher. “The idea that she was achieving so much in her professional life and yet there was some profound emptiness.”
One of the most impactful sections of the film centers around Sorenstam’s son Will, who was born premature at 27 weeks. Will’s enthusiasm for his mom and the game is a big reason why the 51-year-old decided to compete in this year’s U.S. Women’s Open at Pine Needles.
“Becoming ANNIKA” will also be shown on NBC on Sunday, June 5, ahead of final round coverage of the U.S. Women’s Open.
Nancy Lopez won the Sara Lee Classic for her 44th of 46 LPGA titles. She did so while five months pregnant with her third child.
(Editor’s note: This is part of our Remember This series, looking back at memorable moments in golf history.)
By the time the Sara Lee Classic rolled around in 1991, Nancy Lopez had seen just about everything the golf world could throw at her.
She already had 43 LPGA Tour victories under her belt, including three majors. She already two children with her then-husband and former Major League Baseball star Ray Knight.
She’d been the LPGA player of the year four times and she’d already been inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame.
But winning a golf tournament while pregnant? Wouldn’t that be a first? Well, no —yet it’s still a pretty amazing feat.
Lopez marched out to a substantial lead in the 1991 event at Hermitage Golf Course in Old Hickory, Tennessee, tying the course record with a scintillating seven-under 65 in Friday’s first-round action
Pro golfer Nancy Lopez gets a hug from her 20-month-old daughter, Ashley Marie, after winning the LPGA Mazda Hall of Fame Championship at Sweetwater Country Club in Sugarland, Texas, on July 7, 1985. Lopez won by three strokes, finishing 7-under-par 281 for the 72 hole event.
In the final round on Sunday, however, she started to fade. It’s not surprising, especially when you consider she was more than five months pregnant with her third child.
Kris Monaghan took the lead on Sunday when she birdied No. 7, and then extended her lead to three strokes with eight holes to play.
That’s when Lopez’s experience took hold.
Lopez matched par on the back nine until reaching the par-four 15th, where she rolled in a 30-foot putt. She added a 10-foot putt on No. 16 and on this day — May 5, 1991 — Lopez captured the Sara Lee Classic for her 44th of what would be 46 LPGA titles, taking home a $63,750 winner’s check.
“I know myself,” Lopez told the Associated Press. “I’m convinced that if I play my own game, I can win. I felt if I let myself get involved in what everybody else is doing, I’ll fail.”
Later that year, she gave birth to her third daughter, Torri Heather.
Incredibly, it’s not the only time she pulled off a tournament win while pregnant. She was two months pregnant with first child Ashley in 1983 when she won the J&B Scotch Pro-Am. Second daughter Erinn was born in 1986, but as soon as Lopez recuperated, she played in four tournaments at the end of that year and finished in the top 5 in three of those.
(The Associated Press contributed to this article.)