LPGA: Alison Lee rebounds with 66 after chat with hype man, mentor Fred Couples

“My boyfriend can go on and on and tell me how great I am … (but) I’m like, you’re supposed to say that.”

Alison Lee felt like she’d been put on ice after finishing the 2023 LPGA season with three consecutive runner-up showings. For Lee, it was a shame that the season had to end at all.

But then her offseason got even longer after a nasty dog bite left her hospitalized and on the sidelines for two extra weeks. She felt rushed heading to her first start to the season in Singapore and left shaken by the poor start.

“You know, my biggest fear, too, is losing it, right?” said Lee. “Like I had such a great end of the year last year. Golf is such an unpredictable game. Anything can happen. I can have a really good stretch of events and then the next week you can play terribly.

“That’s what your mind always goes to even though you shouldn’t.”

Lee’s mind went there after a T-51 at the HSBC Women’s World Championship that included rounds of 77 and 79. But the former UCLA star dug deep to keep herself from getting too down. She saw her putting coach and her swing coach. A call from hype man Fred Couples helped, too.

2024 HSBC Women's World Championship
Alison Lee plays her shot from the second tee during the first round of the 2024 HSBC Women’s World Championship at Sentosa Golf Club in Singapore. (Photo: Yong Teck Lim/Getty Images)

“My boyfriend can go on and on and tell me how great I am,” said Lee. “Doesn’t mean anything because I’m like, you’re supposed to say that.

“When you have someone like him [Couples] who’s a legend who says all these nice things – he doesn’t have to say any of that – for him to put some time aside and give me a little bit of confidence and tell me things that sometimes I don’t believe myself is a lot. It means a lot to me.”

At the newly renamed Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship, Lee got some confidence back after an opening 5-under 66 at Palos Verdes Golf Club in California put her two strokes back of Canada’s Maude-Aimee Leblanc.

There’s a lot on the line for the 20th-ranked Lee as she looks to qualify for the Summer Olympics in Paris and make another U.S. Solheim Cup team.

“Yeah, feels good,” said Lee. “I had a lot of nerves coming into this week for sure.”

Danielle Kang makes her 17th (!) ace at LPGA stop in Palos Verdes

“It’s sometimes luck,” said Kang, “but I absolutely pured it.”

Danielle Kang notched the 17th ace of her life during the opening round of the Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship on Thursday.

“It’s sometimes luck,” said Kang, “but I absolutely pured it.”

Kang struck a 5-iron exactly as she planned on the par-3 11th hole (her second of the day) from 174 yards. She wanted to land the ball short and let it run up to the hole.

“I just hit my 5-iron exactly where I wanted to hit it and we all just kind of stared it down, and Andrea (Lee) just reacted so cute,” said Kang. “She was just like, ‘Oh, my God, oh, my God.’ She screamed.”

Kang, who opened with a 71 at Palos Verdes Golf Club in California, said 17 is her lucky number.

“Actually, I’ve had four hole-in-ones on the 17th day,” she said. “I’ve had five holes-in-one on the 17th hole. … I’ve had three holes-in-one in on the 17th hole with the 17 number ball.”

The list goes on: Kang was 17 years old when she won her first U.S. Women’s Amateur title on the 17th hole at Charlotee Country Club. She won her first major title in 2017. She played in her first Solheim in 2017, too.

“Yeah, just there is so much that has happened at 17, that it’s just been my lucky number,” she said.

“And then I’ve been waiting for my 17th hole-in-one for a while.”

Rose Zhang returns to LPGA action during hectic finals week at Stanford

Zhang is one of five past winners of the Therese Hession Regional Challenge in the field this week.

Rose Zhang’s pre-tournament press conference at the Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship got moved because of a final exam in her media psych class. Later that night, she had a 15-page paper due for a political science class.

“That class is a little bit more niche,” she explained, “so it requires more research and reading and integration of real-life context versus the context that we learned in class. So it’s a little bit more difficult there.

“But after these are done, I’ll be golden for the next couple days and going forward until I come back to winter quarter next year.

Just over a year ago, Zhang was at Palos Verdes Golf Club with her Stanford team for the Therese Hession Regional Challenge. The three-shot victory marked Zhang’s eighth title in 15 career collegiate starts. As a team, the Cardinal finished second that week without two of their starters.

This week marks the third time Palos Verdes has hosted an LPGA event. Zhang is one of five past winners of the Therese Hession Regional Challenge in the field this week, joined by World No. 1 Lilia Vu (2018), Andrea Lee (2019), Lindy Duncan (2012) and Carlota Ciganda (2011).

Fans look on as Rose Zhang and Rory McIlroy warm up on the range during Capital One’s The Match IX at The Park West Palm on February 26, 2024 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images for The Match)

Zhang teed it up in the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions in January, where she tied for seventh, and flew back to Florida in February for Capital One’s The Match IX with Rory McIlroy, Max Homa and Lexi Thompson.

Zhang skipped the second LPGA event in Florida, the Drive On, won by Nelly Korda, as well as all three events in the Asian swing.

Even so, there wasn’t much downtime during Zhang’s extended offseason. Trying to find a balance between part-time student and full-time golf professional remains a priority for the 20-year-old.

Though Zhang hardly returns to the LPGA refreshed, she called her winter quarter back at Palos Verdes “fulfilling,” pointing toward time spent with her non-golf friends. The lack of sleep and academic grind, she said, has tested in her ways that golf can’t. She’s also recovering from a recent battle with the flu that left her bedridden.

“But we’re out here thriving,” she said smiling. “I think a lot of the stress has come on to me, especially this week, it’s finals week, everyone is dying back at Stanford as well. All my friends are just going through it.”

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As for her golf game, Zhang admits that finding time to practice has been difficult. Trying to balance 20 units in 10 weeks with all the other obligations that come with sponsorships as well as a social life has cut into time spent on her game.

When asked whether she’d considered not going back to campus in the future, Zhang, who has a residence in Las Vegas, said it’s a possibility.

“I mean, I’m pretty excited to come back out here to be fair,” she said. “Actually, school stresses me out a little bit more than golf does.

“I have considered taking online classes while I’m here on tour, so that’s a to-be-determined plan. As of now, I’m taking the spring quarter off and then we’ll evaluate what I do in the fall.”

Legendary Seri Pak returns to LPGA in 2024 as tournament host at Palos Verdes

The 2024 Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship, March 21-24, will feature a field of 144 players and a $2 million purse.

LPGA pioneer Seri Pak will return to the tour in 2024, joining Annika Sorenstam and Michelle Wie West as tournament hosts. The South Korean will host the newly renamed Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship at Palos Verdes Golf Club in suburban Los Angeles. (Pak, who went by Se Ri during her LPGA career, is now going by Seri.)

Last year the Palos Verdes event, won by Ruoning Yin, was called the DIO Implant LA Open.

The 2024 Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship, set for March 21-24, will feature a field of 144 players and a purse of $2 million, up $250,000 from last season.

Pak, 46, retired from the LPGA in 2016 following a career that transformed the women’s game. As an LPGA rookie, Pak won two majors in 1998, including the U.S. Women’s Open at Blackwolf Run that inspired generations of South Koreans to follow in her footsteps. She won 25 times on the LPGA and amassed 39 titles worldwide.

Seri Pak was the only Korean player on the LPGA Tour in 1998. When she retired in 2016, there were more than 40 Korean LPGA Tour regulars. Pak’s spectacular win in the 1998 U.S. Women’s Open inspired many Korean women to take up golf. (Getty Images)

When Pak joined the LPGA in 1998, she was the only South Korean on tour. When she retired eight years ago, 34 South Koreans were competing full-time on the LPGA, and among those, 27 had secured an LPGA win. Pak’s victory didn’t just inspire South Koreans to pursue the game, but to dominate it.

“In America, you would say it’s Tiger Woods,” major winner Hyo Joo Kim once said. “In Korea, it’s Seri Pak.”

Pak left the game with $12,583,713 in career earnings and 123 career top 10s. She became the first South Korean inducted into the LPGA Hall of Fame.

“It is an honor to return to the LPGA Tour as host for the Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship at Palos Verdes Golf Club,” Pak said in a release. “Mentoring the next generation of golfers and giving back to the game I love is at the core of everything I do. I’m excited to kick off this new partnership and elevate this tournament to new heights on the LPGA Tour.”

Fir Hills, a Silicon Valley-based investment firm, has entered a multi-year agreement with the LPGA as a tournament sponsor.

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Prize money payouts for each LPGA player at 2023 Dio Implant LA Open

Yin has now earned $453,799 in her LPGA career to date.

For the second week in a row, there was a $1.75 million purse and first-place prize good for $262,500 on the line on the LPGA.

At the Dio Implant L.A. Open, the LPGA’s fifth event of the 2023 season, 20-year-old Ruoning Yin won by a shot over Georgia Hall, narrowly avoiding a playoff at Palos Verdes Golf Club.

Yin has now earned $453,799 in her LPGA career to date.

The money ramps up at the Lotte Championship in two weeks, where the purse goes to $2 million and the week after that with the first major of 2023 with the $5.1 million Chevron Championship near Houston.

Position Player Score Winnings
1 Ruoning Yin -15 $262,500
2 Georgia Hall -14 $159,720
T3 Hyo Joo Kim -12 $102,749
T3 Patty Tavatanakit -12 $102,749
T5 Nelly Korda -11 $65,858
T5 Carlota Ciganda -11 $65,858
T7 Nasa Hataoka -10 $43,869
T7 Danielle Kang -10 $43,869
T7 Minami Katsu -10 $43,869
10 Atthaya Thitikul -9 $35,416
T11 Lilia Vu -8 $31,698
T11 Perrine Delacour -8 $31,698
T13 Megan Khang -7 $26,233
T13 Lizette Salas -7 $26,233
T13 Maja Stark -7 $26,233
T13 Maude-Aimee Leblanc -7 $26,233
17 Hinako Shibuno -6 $22,736
T18 Hye Jin Choi -5 $19,438
T18 Charley Hull -5 $19,438
T18 Jessica Korda -5 $19,438
T18 Pajaree Anannarukarn -5 $19,438
T18 Wichanee Meechai -5 $19,438
T18 Lucy Li -5 $19,438
T18 Hae Ran Ryu -5 $19,438
T25 Jennifer Kupcho -4 $14,351
T25 Hannah Green -4 $14,351
T25 Jin Young Ko -4 $14,351
T25 Jodi Ewart Shadoff -4 $14,351
T25 Sarah Schmelzel -4 $14,351
T25 Chella Choi -4 $14,351
T25 Mina Harigae -4 $14,351
T25 Moriya Jutanugarn -4 $14,351
T25 Matilda Castren -4 $14,351
T34 Lydia Ko -3 $10,975
T34 Xiyu Lin -3 $10,975
T34 Gemma Dryburgh -3 $10,975
T34 Frida Kinhult -3 $10,975
T38 Marina Alex -2 $9,112
T38 Thidapa Suwannapura -2 $9,112
T38 Esther Henseleit -2 $9,112
T38 Caroline Inglis -2 $9,112
T38 Mi Hyang Lee -2 $9,112
T43 Stacy Lewis -1 $7,586
T43 Gina Kim -1 $7,586
T43 Lauren Hartlage -1 $7,586
T43 Yuna Nishimura -1 $7,586
T47 Cheyenne Knight E $6,196
T47 Amy Yang E $6,196
T47 Lauren Coughlin E $6,196
T47 Yealimi Noh E $6,196
T47 Sung Hyun Park E $6,196
T47 Pernilla Lindberg E $6,196
T47 Sarah Kemp E $6,196
T54 A Lim Kim 1 $5,072
T54 Jenny Shin 1 $5,072
T54 Pauline Roussin-Bouchard 1 $5,072
T54 Brittany Altomare 1 $5,072
T54 Paula Creamer 1 $5,072
T59 Grace Kim 2 $4,460
T59 Amanda Doherty 2 $4,460
T61 Leona Maguire 3 $4,154
T61 Allisen Corpuz 3 $4,154
T61 Wei Ling Hsu 3 $4,154
T61 Yu Liu 3 $4,154
T65 Paula Reto 4 $3,716
T65 Ryann O’Toole 4 $3,716
T65 Alison Lee 4 $3,716
T65 Lauren Stephenson 4 $3,716
T65 Linnea Strom 4 $3,716
T65 Jennifer Song 4 $3,716
T71 Melissa Reid 5 $3,410
T71 Stephanie Kyriacou 5 $3,410
T71 Jaravee Boonchant 5 $3,410
T74 Haeji Kang 7 $3,303
T74 Ruixin Liu 7 $3,303
76 Polly Mack 8 $3,241
77 Mariajo Uribe 9 $3,200
78 Cristie Kerr 10 $3,159

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LPGA: 20-year-old Ruoning Yin wins 2023 Dio Implant LA Open

Yin is the second golfer from China to win, joining Shanshan Fang.

Ruoning Yin of China parlayed her first 36- and 54-hole leads into her first LPGA victory.

Yin, 20, shot 68-63-67-71 for a 1-shot victory at 15 under Sunday at the Dio Implant LA Open at Palos Verdes Golf Club in Palos Verdes Estates, California, fending off England’s Georgia Hall.

Yin turned pro at age 17 on the China LPGA and promptly won her first three events there. Now she’s a winner on the LPGA. She is the second golfer from China to win, joining Shanshan Fang.

There was almost a playoff for the second time in seven days on the LPGA. Up a shot, Yin had a 25-footer for birdie on 18 that would’ve iced it but lipped it out. The door was open for Hall to force a playoff for the second straight week but her six-foot birdie slid past the hole on the left. After making her par, Yin then closed it out with a par of her own to win by one.

At 20 years, 6 months and 5 days, Yin is the youngest winner on the LPGA since Atthaya Thitikul at the Walmart NW Arkansas Championship last season at age 19 years, 7 months, 5 days.

She earned $262,500 for her win.

Patty Tavatanakit and Hyo Joo Kim tied for third at 12 under. Carlota Ciganda and Nelly Korda tied for fifth at 11 under. Danielle Kang, who withdrew last week at the LPGA Drive On Championship and was later hospitalized, returned to action and tied for seventh at 10 under.

Jin Young Ko tied for 25th at 4 under. World No. 1 Lydia Ko tied for 34th at 3 under. Rookie Lucy Li, who shot 76-76 last week to finish last in the 144-gofler field, shot 67-73-6673 to post a tie for 18th.

Yin is the second first-time winner in 2023, joining Lilia Vu. Golfers from five countries have now won the five LPGA events this season: Yin (China), Celine Boutier (France), Brooke Henderson (Canada), Jin Young Ko (Korea) and Vu (U.S.).

There’s just one more event until the first LPGA major of 2023. The Lotte Championship in Hawaii in two weeks is the final tune-up for the 2023 Chevron Championship (April 20-23), which has moved from Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, to its new home at The Club at Carlton Woods near Houston.

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LPGA’s LA Open moves to Palos Verdes in 2023, with Los Angeles events now held one month apart

The DIO Implant LA Open is moving locations.

The DIO Implant LA Open is moving to Palos Verdes Golf Club in Los Angeles in 2023, the LPGA and Outlyr have announced. The event will be played March 30-April 2 and feature a field of 144 players and a purse of $1.75 million, up $250,000 from this year.

The LA Open was previously held at Wilshire Country Club in Los Angeles. Next year, Wilshire will host the new JM Eagle LA Championship April 27-30 with a $3 million purse, double last year’s winnings.

In April 2022, two Los Angeles events were held in back-to-back weeks for the first time in tour history. Next season, they’ll be held one month apart.

The LA Open made its return to the LPGA schedule in 2018, marking the tour’s first time back in the Los Angeles market in more than a decade. Nasa Hataoka won this year’s LA Open at Wilshire. Previous winners include Brooke Henderson (2021), Minjee Lee (2019) and Moriya Jutanugarn (2018).

Marina Alex won the first LPGA event held at Palos Verdes earlier this year. Plenty of tour players were familiar with the course, however, given that the Northrop Grumman (now the Therese Hession) Regional Challenge women’s collegiate championship has been held there for more than 20 years. Past individual winners include Carlota Ciganda, Natalie Gulbis, Brittany Lang, Bronte Law, Andrea Lee, Leona Maguire, Lorena Ochoa and Annie Park.

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Marina Alex battles back from injury to claim second LPGA title, edging No. 1 Jin Young Ko at Palos Verdes

Marina Alex won for the second time on the LPGA and first in three years at the Palos Verdes Championship.

Marina Alex wasn’t sure if winning on the LPGA would ever happen again for her. The 31-year-old’s lone LPGA title came in 2018 at the Cambia Portland Classic.

Since then, it’s been a battle physically, with a back injury keeping Alex away from competition for seven months in 2020.

“I’m kind of not really there with processing what we down today,” said Alex after a hard-fought win at the inaugural Palos Verdes Championship presented by Bank of America.

Alex closed with a 5-under 66 to finish at 10 under for the tournament, one stroke ahead of World No. Jin Young Ko, who also shot 66 and was in the clubhouse for some time at 9 under, the number to chase.

Lydia Ko needed to hole out her final approach for eagle on the 72nd hole to force a playoff. Her second shot landed 5 feet short of the hole. She missed the birdie putt right and walked away shaking her head.

When Ko, playing in the final group alongside Hannah Green, made the turn she held a share of lead with Alex, Jin Young Ko and Megan Khang.

A series of poor tee shots from Lydia Ko, however, kept her from making enough of a run. The tour’s physio came out help stretch out her body as she played down the stretch. When asked by Golf Channel’s Jerry Foltz if she was concerned about her back going forward, Ko said she hoped not.

“It’s that time of the month,” she explained. “I know the ladies watching are probably like, yeah, I got you. So, when that happens my back gets really tight and I’m all twisted. It’s not the first time that (the LPGA physio) Chris has seen me twisted. I felt a lot better after he came.”

Australia’s Green held a three-stroke lead after two rounds, but shot 72-72 over the weekend to finish tied for fifth on the heels of a runner-up at the DIO Implant L.A. Open. Green heads back to Australia for several weeks before getting into the heart of the LPGA’s major season.

“I feel like I played good and I played bad this week,” said Green. “Like this weekend obviously shooting over par is not ideal, but the more you put yourself in those conditions the more you get used to it, and hopefully can excel that one week.”

Alex, who also played in the final group of the LPGA Drive On Championship, said recent work with Claude Harmon III has helped her feel re-inspired coming out to the West Coast.

“It’s been tough,” said Alex. “We’re all getting older. I’m getting older. There are so many amazing players out here. The competition is really, really difficult. So I just didn’t know if my mind and body were going to put me back in a position that I was going to be able to do it again.”

Alex, the first player from Vanderbilt to win on the LPGA, said she tried to stay away from leaderboards, noting that she doesn’t typically respond well when she goes “leaderboard crazy.”

“It can just create extra pressure that I don’t need,” said Alex, “whether it’s to make a birdie or to conserve a lead. It’s just – it doesn’t help my performance, so I kind of have to be really disciplined to just take a deep breath and do me.

“If it’s good enough to win, it’s good enough to win. If someone outplays me, that’s okay, but I don’t want to outplay myself. That’s the mistake I have made in the past.”

Los Angles native Andrea Lee, playing on a sponsor exemption, tied for fifth to secure strong status for the rest of the season. Lee won at Palos Verdes while at Stanford and has been an honorary member of the club since age 15.

The former top-ranked amateur had her instructor Jim Gormley, the club’s director of golf, on her bag for the final round. Lee birdied Nos. 16 and 17 for a late push up the board.

“Jim knows this place like the back of his hand obviously,” said Lee. “There were some reads out there yesterday that I felt like I just couldn’t get down, so asked him to be on the bag today, and he definitely helped out there.

“These greens are really tricky to read, and you got to make putts if you want to be in contention out here.”

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Augusta National champion Anna Davis plays the weekend in LPGA debut, gets taste of the future

Overall, Anna Davis’ take on her first LPGA event: “Really fun.”

Overall, Anna Davis’ take on her first LPGA event: “really fun.”

The 16-year-old high school sophomore from Spring Valley, California, left Georgia last month rather stunned that she’d won the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. A host of invites to LPGA events followed, including three majors.

Davis finished the second round of the Palos Verdes Championship in impressive fashion – eagle, birdie par – to play the weekend. A final-round 76, however, dropped her to 70th for the event.

“I didn’t play that well,” said Davis, when asked what she’d learned abut herself this week.. “Like, nothing about my game was really that great this week, but I would say just staying like – staying together just mentally.

“Like especially on the second day for sure, knowing that I had to do something and then getting it done to make the cut was nice.”

Davis called making the cut in her first LPGA event “a pretty good accomplishment.” The serious, more focused atmosphere of a professional event did not escape the young amateur.

Davis said she’ll be more prepared going into her next LPGA start at the Cognizant Founders Cup later this month. Also on the docket: the U.S. Women’s Open at Pine Needles, Amundi Evian Masters and AIG Women’s British Open at Muirfield. She’ll fill in other events around the majors.

“Super good experience,” said Davis of the week, “and it’s something I look forward to doing in my future.”

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Augusta National champion Anna Davis, rocking her bucket hat, opens with a 71 in LPGA debut at Palos Verdes

The 2022 Augusta National Women’s Amateur champ admitted to feeling some nerves early in the day.

Anna Davis admitted to feeling some nerves Thursday morning in the lead-up to her LPGA debut. But by the time she got to the tee, the Augusta National Women’s Amateur champion said she was fine.

It’s a week of firsts for Davis, 16, who hails from Spring Valley, California, but finds herself in the Los Angeles area for the first time.

“I think it was pretty much like every other tournament I would say,” said Davis, who opened with even-par 71 at the Palos Verdes Championship presented by Bank of America.

“There weren’t like as many people, but I’m expecting for the next few days leading up to see some more people out here. See how that goes.”

Davis, who is playing this week on a sponsor exemption, started on the back nine at Palos Verdes Golf Club and was 2 under through her first five holes. She hit 12 fairways, 10 greens and took 29 putts.

“Yeah, I missed like a few putts leading up, but as I got to the back nine my ball striking was kind of bad,” she said, “so I didn’t give myself very many chances.

“I kind of stayed strong and finished at even.”

Minjee Lee paces the field at 8 under with World No. 1 Jin Young Ko one back.

Davis has a busy summer lined up thanks to her big win at Augusta. She also has an invite to the Cognizant Founders Cup next month as well as the U.S. Women’s Open at Pine Needles, Amundi Evian Masters and AIG Women’s British Open at Muirfield. Davis said she’ll fill in other events around the majors.

The high school sophomore wore her signature bucket hat Thursday at Palos Verdes, making her easy to spot.

“I’ll walk around and some of the girls will recognize me and they’ll say congrats,” said Davis. “That’s kind of funny.”

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