Veteran U.S. players want more captain’s picks for 2021 Solheim Cup

Earlier this year, U.S. Solheim Cup captain Pat Hurst said she had lobbied to increase the number of picks she receives from two to four.

NAPLES, Fla. – With Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker joining Golf Channel’s broadcast at the CME Group Tour Championship and Solheim Cup captain Pat Hurst zooming around Tiburon Golf Club in a cart, it seemed fitting to start thinking about how next year’s teams might shape up.

The 2021 golf season will be a Cup extravaganza. In the wake of fewer playing opportunities due to the COVID-19 pandemic, every team has made changes to how players qualify – with the exception of the U.S. Solheim Cup team.

Stricker’s picks were raised from four to six for 2021. The same goes for European Solheim Cup captain Catriona Matthew. On Wednesday, the European Ryder Cup team announced changes to its points system to better reward the hottest players leading into Whistling Straits.

Sticker said he wanted the six picks due to the uncertainty of how the pandemic would impact the PGA Tour’s schedule.

“Whistling straits is a big course,” said Stricker. “We want to make sure we’ve got guys on there that are hitting it a long ways and playing well. If that means going outside the top 12, then we’ll probably do it.”

Steve Stricker, Ryder Cup captain
Golf Channel’s Steve Stricker, left, and Jerry Foltz provided live analysis from the field during the third round at the CME Group Tour Championship.

As for the PGA of America’s role in the decision, “If we’re OK with it, they seemed to be OK with it too.”

Earlier this year, Hurst said she had lobbied to increase the number of picks she receives from two to four. The Solheim committee that makes such decisions includes LPGA commissioner Mike Whan, the chair of the board, the player president and the three previous U.S. Solheim Cup captains.

The 2021 Solheim Cup will be contested Sept. 4-6 at the Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio, three weeks ahead of the Ryder Cup and about six hours away from Whistling Straits in Wisconsin.

Currently eight players will qualify off of Solheim Cup points, two will get in off Rolex Rankings and two are captain’s picks.

“We should get at least four,” said Solheim veteran Cristie Kerr. “I would think you would have to. Even if it’s only ever this one time in history.”

Assistant captain Angela Stanford would also like to see Hurst get four picks, noting that while points increase in 2021 (1.5 times more points for regular events and two times more for majors), there are no guarantees how next year might go.

“I feel like you can err on the safe side,” said Stanford, “and give us more picks just in case it doesn’t go as planned.”

Stanford, by the way, won in Dallas earlier this month and currently ranks fifth on the points list.

Stacy Lewis’ main concern is that the Rolex Rankings were altered this year to protect players who chose not to compete. In other words, points and divisors only changed and aged on weeks when an athlete competes. It’s how Jin Young Ko never dropped out of the No. 1 position even though she didn’t compete on tour until November.

“I think you take those two Rolex (spots) and make them picks,” said Lewis. “The rankings aren’t running normally still. To me, that’s the bigger issue.”

It would seem that the committee would need to make a decision before the tour restarts Jan. 21-24 at the Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

The current top 8 on the points list include Danielle Kang, Nelly Korda, Ally Ewing, Brittany Altomare, Angela Stanford, Marina Alex, Austin Ernst and Amy Olson.

The next eight: Jessica Korda, Megan Khang, Stacy Lewis, Jennifer Song, Lexi Thompson, Jennifer Kupcho, Cheyenne Knight and Mina Harigae.

Greg Hardwig of the Naples Daily News contributed to this article.

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Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker, Solheim Cup captain Pat Hurst advise next generation of golfers

Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker and Solheim Cup captain Pat Hurst are no strangers to resiliency.

The 2020 WGCA/GCAA Virtual Member Convention has been a fitting representation of golf this year. While each looks a little different, both have been resilient.

On Wednesday, during a recorded session hosted by Golf Channel’s Steve Burkowski, U.S. Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker and Solheim Cup captain Pat Hurst shared past experiences with facing adversity and gave a bit of advice for how coaches and players can continue to grow amid a pandemic.

“You have this dream of taking it to the next level but you never know what that means,” said Stricker. “Fortunately for me, I was able to see some success at each level. At each level I got a jolt of confidence knowing I could potentially play at that level.”

“You go through your ups and downs and you have to persevere, that’s what I did,” explained Stricker, winner of 12 PGA Tour titles. “It wasn’t always great, it took me my fourth time through qualifying school to get my Tour card, there’s always those challenges.”

The first-ever joint virtual convention began Dec. 1 and runs through Tuesday, Dec. 15. Instead of loading the schedule with hours of daily programming, events were spread out, allowing members to pick and choose various online meetings and sessions to attend, much like an a la carte menu.

Unlike Stricker, Hurst wasn’t as fortunate in the confidence department early in her professional career, despite a blistering amateur and collegiate career. The Bay Area native won the 1986 U.S. Girls’ Junior and 1990 U.S. Women’s Amateur. The year prior, Hurst was a medalist at the 1989 U.S. Women’s Amateur and won the team and individual NCAA title with San José State.

All that winning came with a price. After she left school, Hurst quit golf for a year. She had gotten to the point where she hated the game she used to love.

“I remember being out at Spyglass caddying for my now husband,” explained Hurst. “I’m at one of the most beautiful places in the world and I’m carrying his bag caddying and I’m like, ‘I hate golf. What am I doing?’”

Hurst ended up taking some time away from the game before getting the itch to return to competition. She worked her way to LPGA Rookie of the Year honors in 1995, a major championship at the 1998 ANA Inspiration and six LPGA victories. Not to mention decades of Solheim Cup experience, where she boats a 10-7-3 record (3-1-1 in singles).

As student-athletes face COVID-19 uncertainties, both captains stressed the importance of not only time, but body management, while also pointing out how the new generation of players is more prepared than ever.

“These kids start out so young, taking care of their bodies, eating right, practicing correctly, the drills that these kids do is mindblowing to me,” said Stricker. “I never did any drills, still don’t, and these kids come out on Tour with all their putting devices and drills and sticks and everything lined up just right and they’re working at it and they’re working at it correctly. They just dial it in.”

“Back in the day I don’t remember having workouts, which is kind of sad but its true,” added Hurst, who still remembers hitting balls on the football field through the uprights and picking her “range” on the soccer field. “We didn’t have study hall like they do. It’s more demanding on their time and I think it teaches them a lot of time management.”

“It’s definitely changed but for the better.”

 

Team USA’s Pat Hurst lobbies for more Solheim Cup captain’s picks; Team Europe has six

Team USA’s Pat Hurst has lobbied for more Solheim Cup captain’s picks amid the coronavirus pandemic.

With the COVID-19 pandemic shrinking the number of playing opportunities on the LPGA, Solheim Cup captain Pat Hurst thought changing the qualifying criteria for Team USA might be in order. She first inquired about changing the points system, but when that didn’t get far, suggested increasing the number of picks.

“I think four would be great,” said Hurst in a media round table. “I don’t know if we’ll get that.”

Currently eight players will qualify off of Solheim Cup points, two get in off the Rolex Rankings and two are captain’s picks.

The Solheim committee that makes such decisions includes LPGA commissioner Mike Whan, the chair of the board, the player president and the three previous U.S. Solheim Cup captains. The committee is expected to meet later in the year.

European Solheim Cup captain Catriona Matthew said her side has already made the change to two players from LET points, four off the Rolex Rankings and six picks. (Europe previously had four picks.)

“We just felt with the players not playing as much and kind of all the schedules being up in the air,” said Matthew, “that it was just nice to do that and give you a bit more options and what you might do going forward next year.”

Earlier this year the PGA of America announced that U.S. Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker’s picks would jump from four to six after the event was postponed one year. The men’s European Team has three wild card picks.

The 2021 Solheim Cup will be contested Sept. 4-6 in 2021 at the Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio, three weeks ahead of the Ryder Cup and about six hours away from Whistling Straits in Wisconsin.

England’s Georgia Hall won for the first time on American soil on Sunday in Portland, backing up a 2018 victory at the AIG Women’s British Open. Sophia Popov vaulted onto Matthew’s radar with her stunning victory last month at Royal Troon. She’s currently ranked 25th in the world.

On the American side, Danielle Kang, Stacy Lewis and Austin Ernst have all won since the LPGA restart.

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Angela Stanford named assistant captain for 2021 Solheim Cup

LPGA star Angela Stanford was named assistant captain for the 2021 Solheim Cup by captain Pat Hurst.

Angela Stanford was hitting balls in her new at-home hitting bay when Pat Hurst called on April 21. Stanford went back and looked up the date recently because keeping a secret for that long isn’t easy to do.

At last, she can tell the world that she’ll be by Hurst’s side in the role of assistant captain at next year’s Solheim Cup.

“I told (Hurst) it was kind of between tears and total excitement,” Stanford told a group of reporters, “and it was so hard because when you’re in quarantine, I was bouncing off the walls the rest of the night and there was nobody there to enjoy that with me.”

Assistant captains play a more visible role in the pod system, which three-time captain Juli Inkster put in place for the 2015 campaign and Hurst will continue. Each assistant is assigned a pod of players based on personality, and back then, Stanford was actually in Hurst’s pod. Stanford played a vital role in Team USA’s memorable comeback that year, earning the winning point against Suzann Pettersen in Germany.

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“That morning when I walked out on the putting green,” said Stanford, “I remember looking at my caddie and saying, ‘Hey, this is my turn. This is it. Let’s go.’ It felt so good from start to finish, one of the best rounds I’ve ever played in my life … it’s a memory that’s hard to put into words. I kind of get chills just thinking about it.”

A member of six Solheim Cup teams, the 42-year-old Stanford has six career LPGA victories, including the 2018 Evian Championship. Hurst and Stanford paired together in the 2007 Solheim Cup, defeating Iben Tinning and Bettina Hauert, 4 and 2, in foursomes. Stanford said Hurst took her under her wing early on in her LPGA career.

“Angela and I are pretty similar in a lot of ways,” said Hurst. “We both have a passion for the game. We love the red, white and blue, playing for our country. Angela, even playing for TCU, she’s just the biggest supporter of them, and she’s that way with representing the United States. That’s the way I am and that’s the way she is. … She’s level – she’s determined. I wouldn’t say level-headed; let me rephrase that.

“She wants to win. That’s … I see that in me.”

When asked about being a playing assistant at the Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio, next September, Stanford said she’s at peace with whatever happens.

“I’m still a professional golfer and I’m still going tee it up and try to win golf tournaments,” she said, “and whatever that means in 2021, that’s what that means.”

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Juli Inkster passes Solheim torch to best friend Pat Hurst: “This is your time.”

Pat Hurst served as Juli Inkster’s assistant captain on three different occasions, but Inkster won’t be returning the favor.

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It’s tough asking anyone to fill Juli Inkster’s signature Converse shoes. The LPGA legend could’ve captained at the Solheim Cup forever with few complaints.

But if anyone knows how to be a team player, it’s Inkster. And when her great friend, Pat Hurst, was given the nod to be Team USA’s captain in 2021 at Inverness, Inkster made it known that she’d be stepping aside. Hurst served as Inkster’s assistant captain on three different occasions, but Inkster won’t be returning the favor.

“It needs to be about Pat,” Inkster said.

Even now, it’s difficult to talk about 50-year-old Hurst as a captain without talking about Inkster. Hurst actually went to school at San Jose State on the Juli Inkster Scholarship. The pair became fast friends after teaming up to represent the U.S. at the World Cup in the mid-2000s.

They played countless practice rounds together on the LPGA. Inkster calls Hurst, who won six times on the LPGA, the “skins queen.”

“We love sports,” said Inkster of their bond. “We love family. We love a cocktail.”

The two moms from Northern California travel well together. No one worries about who’s picking up the check. Inkster knows that whatever she says to Pat won’t leave Pat.

Such friendships are invaluable in any walk off life, but especially in the high-stakes, nomadic life of a tour player.

It’s difficult to believe that anyone has come into the role of captain more prepared than Hurst. She played on five U.S. Solheim Cup teams, compiling a 10-7-3 record. And during the course of her three stints with Inkster, she’s had a front-row seat to three of the biggest, most compelling Cups in women’s golf history. Not to mention transitioning in a new generation of players.

“It was a journey together,” said Inkster. “I really didn’t make a decision unless I talked to Pat about it.”

Perhaps the burden of following Inkster was lessened a bit by the sting of defeat in Scotland. The first three-time captain in the history of the Solheim Cup didn’t sweep.

But even then, Hurst learned something. She watched Inkster handle a five-alarm fire controversy in Germany, where the Americans orchestrated the greatest comeback in Solheim Cup history. At Gleneagles, she watched Inkster teach a team full of rookies how to gracefully handle a heart-breaking loss.

“Basically she said, ‘Look, the sun is going to come up tomorrow,’ ” said Hurst.

Many of the core values Inkster held as captain will carry on with Hurst. Chief among them is an emphasis on fun.

“She wants them to enjoy what the Solheim experience should be,” Inkster said.

Hurst will be more organized than Inkster. She’ll be on top of the little things. She won’t dance on the first tee. And if there’s a pond somewhere at Inverness, don’t expect her to swim.

She famously waded into the lake at Mission Hills after winning the 1998 Nabisco Dinah Shore Invitational because she can’t swim. To be fair though, Hurst did leap in last year at the ANA Junior Inspiration after her playing partner, Cindy Kou, won the event.

Hurst plans to carry on the pod system that Inkster adopted from Paul Azinger’s 2008 Ryder Cup stint. Because Hurst has a full-time job as assistant coach at her college alma mater, she’ll have to get out on the road these next two years to scout the talent.

Brittany Lincicome was at Morgan Pressel’s charity event earlier in the week and said players were over the moon when they heard that Hurst was selected captain.

“We all freaked out,” she said.

While in some ways the Inkster era is over, it’s almost certain that the Hall of Famer will be out there as a helper, driving around a golf cart and delivering anything that might be needed – a banana, intel, a hug.

They’ll be in constant contact, per usual. Only this time, Hurst will step into the spotlight.

“This is your journey,” Inkster told her friend. “This is your time. Make it your own.”

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Pat Hurst named U.S. Solheim Cup captain for 2021

Pat Hurst represented the U.S. in five Solheim Cups (1998, 2000, 2002, 2005 and 2007) and compiled a 10-7-3 record.

After three stints as assistant captain, Pat Hurst will step into the role of U.S. Solheim Cup captain for the 2021 contest at Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio, following in the footsteps of close friend Juli Inkster.

Hurst, a six-time winner on the LPGA, including the 1998 Nabisco Dinah Shore Invitational, competed on tour from 1995 to 2015. The mother of two currently works as an assistant coach at her alma mater, San Jose State.

In a letter posted on LPGA.com, the 50-year-old Hurst explained that she was in the car, waiting to a few errands with her husband, Jeff, when LPGA commissioner Mike Whan called and offered the job. Hurst said she might have stopped breathing for a bit while Whan talked.

“Deep down I hoped for that same opportunity,” said Hurst “A chance to take what I’d learned from Juli and put my personal touch on it.”

Hurst represented the U.S. in five Solheim Cups (1998, 2000, 2002, 2005 and 2007) and compiled a 10-7-3 record.

She plans to continue using the pod system that Inkster adapted from Paul Azinger’s 2008 Ryder Cup stint.

Pat Hurst, Wendy Ward, Julie Inkster and Nancy Lopez at the start of the Opening Ceremony for the 2017 Solheim Cup at Des Moines Golf and Country Club. Photo by Thomas J. Russo/USA TODAY Sports

Hurst wrote that Inkster was the first person she called after getting off the phone with Whan. Inkster captained the U.S. to victories in 2015 and 2017 and came up short in a nail-biter last September in Scotland. Hurst told Golf Channel that Inkster would not be an assistant captain, wanting to give Hurst the chance to do it her own way.

“We’re two different people,” said Hurst, “but we’re also great friends who love and respect each other. I want to bring the best of what Juli brought and do it with my own personality. I think I’ve built a lot of trust with the players. I’ll have my own assistant captains and we will make sure players know that we’re there for them. We’ll take care of the details. We want them to go out, play, have fun and make birdies.”

On the European side, Catriona Matthew will return as captain after her triumphant run back home at Gleneagles.

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