LPGA might soon see Caitlin Clark in a pro-am after Gainbridge signed the Iowa superstar

The Tournament of Champions celebrity pro-am could use another female participant.

Caitlin Clark has joined sports icons Billie Jean King and Annika Sorenstam as a Gainbridge brand ambassador, the financial services company announced. The partnership means Clark-mania might be soon coming to the LPGA.

The Iowa basketball player, the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer who is revolutionizing the women’s game, is slated to compete in the pro-am at The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican later this season, schedule permitting.

The Annika, the penultimate event on the LPGA’s schedule, is slated for Nov.  14-17 this season at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Florida. World No. 1 Lilia Vu won last year’s edition for her fourth title of the season.

On Sunday, Clark broke the NCAA scoring record set by Pete Maravich.

The Gainbridge announcement comes in concert with the company’s launch of its new product, ParityFlex, a multi-year guaranteed annuity product created for women, by women.

“I am honored to be part of the company’s deepening commitment to advancing opportunities for women, on and off the court, and to help promote this visionary new product for women,’’ said Clark in a release.

Clark recently announced that she’ll forgo her final season in Iowa to enter the WNBA draft. The Indiana Fever has the first pick, and tickets to watch the franchise next season have already doubled in price, according to VividSeats.

The lowest ticket price available to watch Clark play Ohio State on Sunday was $491, a record for women’s basketball.

Iowa at Minnesota
Iowa Hawkeyes guard Caitlin Clark. (Photo: Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports)

“It’s an honor to have Caitlin join us on Team Gainbridge,” said King in a release. “She is an amazing talent on the court, but more importantly, she puts her team ahead of herself and is a leader, an agent of change and a champion on and off the court. Thanks to Gainbridge for once again stepping up and showing their commitment to being a leader in women’s sports.” 

On March 10, Clark’s signature will be included on the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda driven by Colton Herta on Indycar and the No. 77 Group 1001 Camaro driven by Corey Lajoie on Nascar.

2023 John Deere Classic
Caitlin Clar and Ludvig Aberg walk to the fifth hole during the pro-am ahead of the 2023 John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run. (Photo: Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Last summer, Clark created a frenzy at the John Deere Classic Pro-Am when she played alongside Zach Johnson and Ludvig Aberg.

“Honestly, I played (golf) when I was a little kid,” said Clark during a John Deere press conference. “Started golfing with my dad, but then I didn’t play much all throughout high school. Then kind of started again in college. I obviously am pretty busy, so I don’t get to golf as much as I would like.”

Clark enjoys teeing it up with her Iowa teammates and, not surprisingly, they like to keep it competitive, usually playing a quick nine or 12 holes. She also attended the 2017 Solheim Cup, won by Team USA, at Des Moines Golf and Country Club.

Perhaps the Gainbridge pro-am will serve as a warm-up to a bigger commitment. The Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions celebrity pro-am could use another female participant.

2023 The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican prize money payouts for each LPGA player

Lilia Vu earned $487,500 for her fourth win of the 2023 season.

BELLEAIR, Fla. — Lilia Vu crossed the $4 million mark in career earnings after collecting her fourth victory of 2023 at The Annika driven by Gainbridge. Vu earned $487,500 for her three-stroke triumph, bringing her season earnings to $3,252,303. The Annika featured one of the highest non-major purses of the season at $3.25 million.

Seventy-eight percent of Vu’s career earnings have been made this season. The two-time major winner now leads the LPGA money list with one event remaining. Next week’s CME Group Tour Championship boasts a purse of $7 million and a winner’s check of $2 million.

Check out how much money each LPGA player earned this week at The Annika:

Position Name Score Earnings
1 Lilia Vu -19 $487,500
T2 Alison Lee -16 $262,260
T2 Azahara Munoz -16 $262,260
4 Amy Yang -15 $170,594
T5 Stephanie Kyriacou -14 $124,827
T5 Emily Kristine Pedersen -14 $124,827
T7 Ariya Jutanugarn -13 $76,061
T7 Lexi Thompson -13 $76,061
T7 Ruoning Yin -13 $76,061
T7 Megan Khang -13 $76,061
T7 Minami Katsu -13 $76,061
T12 Hae Ran Ryu -12 $54,700
T12 Wei-Ling Hsu -12 $54,700
T12 Gaby Lopez -12 $54,700
T15 Linn Grant -11 $45,714
T15 Rachel Kuehn (a) -11 $0
T15 Amanda Doherty -11 $45,714
T15 Patty Tavatanakit -11 $45,714
T19 In Gee Chun -10 $39,029
T19 Bianca Pagdanganan -10 $39,029
T19 Brooke M. Henderson -10 $39,029
T19 Wichanee Meechai -10 $39,029
T23 Grace Kim -9 $34,952
T23 Sarah Schmelzel -9 $34,952
T25 Charley Hull -8 $30,042
T25 Allisen Corpuz -8 $30,042
T25 Cydney Clanton -8 $30,042
T25 Jasmine Suwannapura -8 $30,042
T25 Chanettee Wannasaen -8 $30,042
T25 Nelly Korda -8 $30,042
T31 Atthaya Thitikul -7 $23,205
T31 Jeongeun Lee5 -7 $23,205
T31 Pornanong Phatlum -7 $23,205
T31 Jin Young Ko -7 $23,205
T31 Ally Ewing -7 $23,205
T31 Lydia Ko -7 $23,205
T31 Lindy Duncan -7 $23,205
T38 Leona Maguire -6 $17,726
T38 Gabriela Ruffels -6 $17,726
T38 Jodi Ewart Shadoff -6 $17,726
T38 Dewi Weber -6 $17,726
T38 Matilda Castren -6 $17,726
T38 Gina Kim -6 $17,726
T44 Maria Fassi -5 $14,979
T44 Soo Bin Joo -5 $14,979
T46 Nicole Broch Estrup -4 $13,398
T46 Caroline Inglis -4 $13,398
T46 Georgia Hall -4 $13,398
T46 Louise Rydqvist (a) -4 $0
T46 Jaravee Boonchant -4 $13,398
T51 Pernilla Lindberg -3 $11,179
T51 Hye-Jin Choi -3 $11,179
T51 Yuna Nishimura -3 $11,179
T51 Carlota Ciganda -3 $11,179
T51 Jeongeun Lee6 -3 $11,179
T51 Muni He -3 $11,179
T57 Sarah Kemp -2 $9,653
T57 Ruixin Liu -2 $9,653
T57 Perrine Delacour -2 $9,653
60 Elizabeth Szokol -1 $8,987
T61 Polly Mack E $8,100
T61 Ashleigh Buhai E $8,100
T61 Olivia Cowan E $8,100
T61 Eun-Hee Ji E $8,100
T61 Hinako Shibuno E $8,100
T61 Aline Krauter E $8,100
T67 Gemma Dryburgh 1 $7,406
T67 Anna Nordqvist 1 $7,406
69 Frida Kinhult 5 $7,158
70 Min Lee 6 $6,989

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5 things to know from The Annika, where American Lilia Vu won her fourth title of 2023

Everything you need to know from a busy Sunday at Pelican Golf Club.

BELLEAIR, Fla. — Lilia Vu rose to No. 1 in the world and took the lead in the Rolex LPGA Player of the Year race when she came from three strokes back to win by three at Pelican Golf Club on Sunday.

Vu, a two-time major winner this season, gave her winner’s press conference right next to Annika Sorenstam, tournament host for the newly renamed Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican.

It always bummed Vu that she didn’t win The Annika Award for college player of year while at UCLA.

“I’m finally super excited to win something with your name on it,” said Vu, who actually won the Rolex Annika Major Award this year, too.

But while much attention is given to the top of the leaderboard, and rightly so, there’s always so much drama going on further down as players vie for a chance to play at CME and keep their cards.

Two of the biggest names who didn’t make the 60-player field in Naples, Florida, include defending champion Lydia Ko and Lexi Thompson, reminding us once again of how quickly things can turn.

Here are five storylines from a sun-splashed Sunday in Florida, where so much was on the line:

5 things to know from The Annika, where scores are low and tensions are high

Catch up on the action here.

BELLEAIR, Florida – There’s really no other tournament on the LPGA schedule quite like this one. Everyone, it seems, has something to play for that’s bigger than this week. Whether it’s Player of the Year points, a chance to tee it up at CME for a $7 million purse or the fight to keep a tour card, there’s no shortage of storylines at the newly renamed Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican.

Lexi Thompson, for example, needs to finish in at least a share of third to have a chance to qualify for CME. She’s currently T-12. Patty Tavatanakit came into this week 61st on the CME points list. The top 60 and ties will play next week in Naples, Florida, at the CME Group Tour Championship. The major champ is currently T-4 and projected to jump to 50th.

Emily Kristine Pedersen came into the week 80th on the CME points list. The top 80 on tour have Category 1 status, which means they’ll get into the limited-field Asian events next spring. Pedersen didn’t come to Belleair just to hang on, however. The surprise Solheim Cup pick who delivered in Spain is enjoying her best week on tour with a three-stroke lead after rounds of 63-65-64.

Sunday at Pelican promises to be a shootout. Here are five things to know from a red-hot day:

Patty Tavatanakit, one of several major champions not yet in CME field, opens with 63 at The Annika

Here’s a look at the CME bubble.

Time is running out for players like Patty Tavatanakit. The top 60 players and ties on the Race to CME Globe points list qualify for the season-ending championship, and this week’s Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican is the final event before the list is finalized.

Tavatanakit, who currently sits 61st on the points list, opened with a 7-under 63 on a picture-perfect day at Pelican Golf Club to hold a share of the lead with former No. 1 Jin Young Ko.

“I’ve been like preparing for this event,” said Tavanatakit, the 2021 ANA Inspiration winner. “Obviously I knew what I had to do. I’m pretty stressed, but at the same time, I feel like I did everything under my control. I did everything with no regrets.”

The CME Group Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club offers the largest non-major purse on the LPGA at $7 million. The CME winner receives $2 million.

There are a number of high-profile major winners currently on the outside looking in. Here’s a list of bubble players as well as some stars who need a big week:

LPGA legend Annika Sorenstam now hosts one of the tour’s premiere events

BELLEAIR, Florida – Nelly Korda first met Annika Sorenstam at the LPGA legend’s namesake AJGA event. Like many in this week’s LPGA field, Korda’s first recollection of Sorenstam is her putting on a junior clinic. Today’s players can quite literally …

BELLEAIR, Florida – Nelly Korda first met Annika Sorenstam at the LPGA legend’s namesake AJGA event. Like many in this week’s LPGA field, Korda’s first recollection of Sorenstam is her putting on a junior clinic. Today’s players can quite literally play in events around the world that bear Sorenstam’s name. The college player of the year wins the Annika Award; the player who fares the best at the LPGA majors each year wins the Rolex Annika Major Award.

It’s only fitting then, that one of the premiere stops on the LPGA schedule now bears her name, too. The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican, which started in 2020 but was rebranded this year, boasts one of the biggest purses on the LPGA schedule outside the majors at $3.25 million and a stacked field.

“I think it’s important to have history involved in the current game,” said former No. 1 Stacy Lewis. “I think it’s important for these girls to know the players that have come before them.”

While other LPGA greats have had their names on events throughout the history of the tour – the Betsy King Classic, the Lorena Ochoa Invitational, the Babe Zaharias Open, to name a few – Sorenstam’s is the only current event that carries a player’s name.

“I love to see these young girls living their dream,” said Sorenstam. “I’ve seen some from 16 years back, whether it’s Nelly Korda, Alison Lee, Leona Maguire.”

Of the 120 players in the field this week, 57 have competed in Sorenstam’s events, including the Volvo Car Scandinavian Mixed, which Sorenstam co-hosts with fellow Swede Henrik Stenson. Eight of the top 10 players in the world are there this week, including two-time defending champion Nelly Korda and the three players vying for Rolex Players of Year: Celine Boutier, Lilia Vu and Ruoning Yin.

On the PGA Tour, events hosted by Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and the late Arnold Palmer are the gold standard in the men’s game.

Sorenstam wants the same at Pelican, an exclusive Tampa-area club whose membership includes Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley. Sorenstam, of course, is Augusta National’s newest member.

“It starts everywhere from, I mean, parking lot, right, to locker room, to practice area, to lunch, everything that they somewhat touch,” said Sorenstam. “Sometimes it’s really small things you might not think about, like you said.

“So I like to listen and learn from them. At the end of the day, we want the players to go home and say, I’m coming back and I’m bringing so and so with them.”

Annika Sorenstam strolls the range at her new namesake event on the LPGA. (courtesy photo)

South Carolina junior Louise Rydqvist won the Annika Intercollegiate in Minnesota earlier this year to earn a spot in this week’s field. Rydqvist has grown up playing in Sorenstam’s events, starting with the Annika Cup in Sweden. Rydqvist went to high school with Solheim Cup players Linn Grant and Maja Stark – and Ryder Cupper Ludvig Aberg – and has the same swing coach as another member of Suzann Pettersen’s team, Madelene Sagstrom.

Rydqvist, who is also getting an advanced look at where the SEC Championship will be played next spring, learned that a victory at the Annika Intercollegiate came with an LPGA exemption when she read about it on the drive to the course before the final round.

Rydqvist’s prep work for this week’s event included a chat with the host herself on Sorenstam’s SiriusXM radio show, where they talked about strategy.

“I couldn’t be happier,” said Rydqvist of the opportunity that’s before her.

Sorenstam won the inaugural Betsy King Classic in 1996 and backed it up with a victory in 1997. She also won the Chick-fil-A Charity Championship twice, which was hosted by Nancy Lopez.

This week, she hopes to have a similar impact to what some of the game’s greatest had on her.

“I think the purpose of this event is to inspire the next generation, whether it’s Linn Grant in there or whoever it might be,” said Sorenstam.

“You hope they’re going to see an event like this, or event like Nancy’s, that hopefully one day they want to follow in the same footsteps, and pay forward or bring the game to the next level and just inspire some young girl or boy down the road. I think that’s really what to me these type of events mean. It’s elevating them to a level we haven’t seen before. Not just the quality of the course, the food, and the partnerships, but the memories, how it touches your heart. When you leave here, what do you feel.”

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Nelly Korda hires new putting coach, looks to three-peat at Pelican Golf Club

“Before I was kind of blind going to a putting green. I did it myself,” Korda said.

Nelly Korda comes to Annika Sorenstam’s namesake event on the LPGA hoping to do something the LPGA legend accomplished twice in her career: win an event three years in a row.

Korda’s last victory on the LPGA came last year at Pelican Golf Club, where she beat fellow Floridian Lexi Thompson by a stroke. Two years ago, Korda triumphed in a sudden-death playoff over Lydia Ko, 2020 champion Sei Young Kim and Thompson. Korda was not in the field in 2020 due to a back injury sustained at the KPMG Women’s PGA.

The penultimate event on the LPGA calendar was renamed The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican for 2023 and features a purse of $3,250,000. Sorenstam won the McDonald’s LPGA Championship from 2003 to 2005 and the Mizuno Classic from 2001 to 2005. Inbee Park was the last player to win three consecutive events at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship from 2013-15.

“To three-peat, obviously there is pressure that I want to perform,” said Korda, “but I try not to think about it.”

Korda was grinding on the practice green Tuesday with putting instructor Eric Dietrich. The pair first began working together around the Solheim Cup, and she has since switched her grip and her putter. Korda said she feels more organized after making the move to Dietrich.

“Felt like I just have a plan now, or I have tendencies that I know about that I can always go into a drill and kind of work on those tendencies,” said Korda.

“Where before I was kind of blind going to a putting green. I did it myself.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cx6egkBtY5h/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA%3D%3D&img_index=1

Korda has switched from a left-hand low grip back to a conventional grip. She also began using a mallet putter for the first time in her career at the LPGA stop in South Korea last month.

“Honestly, I haven’t been putting bad,” she said. “I’ve been in contention a bunch this year. It’s just I want to improve. I want to improve in every part of my game, and I just thought this was a necessary change to that.”

Photos: Nelly Korda through the years

Korda has a 65.571 scoring average at Pelican through seven rounds. The grass, the weather, the fact that her family can drive to watch her compete all factor into her success here. The eight-time LPGA winner has eight top-10 finishes this season. She took a month off midseason to nurse a lower back injury.

“I talked about it a couple times like where the beginning of the year golf felt in a sense like I don’t want to take it for granted,” she said, “but it felt easy, top 10-ing, playing well, and being in contention.

“Then I got injured and just felt hard to get back into that flow. I somehow like had a hard time finding it, so that’s kind of why I brought Eric in. And with Jamie (Mulligan), we’re all working really hard on my entire game. Hopefully, we can continue improving, but it’s more about the consistency.”

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LPGA exemption for inaugural The Annika on the line at 2023 Annika Intercollegiate in Minnesota

There’s going to be a lot on the line at the Annika Intercollegiate.

Come the beginning of the 2023-24 college golf season, there’s going to be a lot on the line at the Annika Intercollegiate.

Held at Royal Golf Club in Lake Elmo, Minnesota, the Annika Intercollegiate has quickly grown to be one of the premier women’s college golf events in the country. And this year, the stakes are even higher.

An LPGA tournament exemption to be awarded to a player from this year’s winning team. The exemption will allow one player to compete in the inaugural The Annika driven by Gainbridge at Pelican taking place Nov. 6-12 at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Florida.

The Annika, an official LPGA event, will offer a $3.25 million purse, one of the largest outside of the majors. Proceeds from the tournament will benefit the Annika Foundation.

The 2023 Annika Intercollegiate presented by 3M takes place Sept. 10-13. This year’s tournament will see 12 top NCAA Division I women’s golf programs compete in a 54-hole, stroke-play event, including defending champions Wake Forest. 

“This is one of the tournaments I look forward to most each year,” Annika Sorenstam said in a release. “It allows the Annika Foundation to advance its mission by providing an opportunity for talented golfers to compete and make connections. We are thrilled to raise the stakes this year by extending the winning team an LPGA tournament exemption, further cementing our event as a launch pad for the nation’s top programs and players.”

Other teams in the field include Duke, Florida State, Minnesota, Mississippi State, San Jose State, Oregon, Texas, South Carolina, Texas A&M and Virginia. The final team will be announced after the 2023 NCAA Championships.

Virginia sophomore Amanda Sambach won the individual title in the fall.

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The Match VII: Hole-by-hole recaps, best tweets and reactions from Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth’s win over Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy

The trash talk was great and the camaraderie was awesome.

The young guns got it done.

Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth took down the pairing of Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy 3 and 2 at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Florida, thanks to a hot putter from JT.

Woods opened the match with a birdie at the short par 4, but couldn’t get going throughout the night. Rory made some birdies, but it wasn’t enough to keep up.

The trash talk was great and the camaraderie was awesome.

Find hole-by-hole recaps, best tweets and reactions below.

The Match: Best photos from the made-for-TV event

Lynch: The Match proves golf can be a fun product, without trading virtues for vulgarity

Lynch: The Match proves golf can be a fun product, without trading virtues for vulgarity

The Match is a made-for-TV event distancing itself from its once-prominent frontman.

It was Avery Brundage, the former president of the International Olympic Committee, who insisted that sport must be amateur, that if played professionally it is instead mere entertainment. To be fair, it was one of the less loathsome viewpoints Brundage held, but over time support for his sentiment has dissolved, not least in the Olympic movement itself. The notion that a sport is sullied when played for pay won’t garner much support these days even in the tweediest corners of the USGA and R&A, yet there remains a debate within golf over that gray area dividing worthy competition from trivial entertainment.

This week—at least in the United States—golf tilts toward the latter. The QBE Shootout, for example, an event formerly associated with a man who could rival Brundage in his disregard for the human suffering happening under those who line his pockets. Nelly Korda and Lexi Thompson are in the field this year, continuing a sporadic tradition of women competing alongside men in the team event. The 2024 Shootout will feature more mixed teams, a nod to the old J.C. Penney Classic and not its own roots as a tool for marketing Greg Norman’s machismo.

On the same weekend as the Shootout we also have The Match, another made-for-TV event distancing itself from its once-prominent frontman. This spectacle—pitting Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy against Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas over 12 holes under lights—also lands firmly on the lighthearted side of the entertainment vs. competition question, though Phil Mickelson may be among the few watching at home who won’t be entertained.

What the Match and the Shootout offer is a laid-back respite from most every other week in professional golf, when things of consequence are at stake, while still providing sustenance to fans who care not a whit for the World Cup away nor the travails of the Texans at home. What we’ve seen this week—and will next at the PNC Championship —is partitioned from the norm in almost every respect, from format to setting to seriousness. It’s a downy dessert that won’t linger on the palate, but which makes for a pleasing conclusion to a more substantial menu. For such events has this time of year become known as the ‘silly season.’

The ability to distinguish silly from serious is relevant when it comes to LIV Golf, which as a tour aggressively markets itself as entertainment-forward. Audience figures suggest LIV is not to every golf fan’s taste, but there’s a small subset enthusiastic for gaudy theatrics, for teams of near-arthritic middle-aged nerds aping swaggering jocks, and for exhibitions so larded with Saudi largesse that only the cash ends up having lasting value. The performative vulgarities could be forgiven in the cause of entertainment, even the relentless focus on money. But not the source of that money nor its sportswashing intent. And not the masquerading as serious golfers engaged in serious competition.

The difference between athletes and entertainers lies in what they play for: legacy or laughs. It’s why you don’t see many kids walking around with basketball shirts bearing the names of ‘Hi-Rise’ Hinton, ‘Dragon’ Taylor or anyone else on the Harlem Globetrotters roster.

For too long, the PGA Tour greeted endeavors like The Match with territorial wariness, suspicious that its product might be diluted by proximity, which was akin to a Michelin-starred chef objecting to a Dunkin Donuts opening down the street. The Tour loosened its girdle over the years, and now there’s even evidence that it has embraced the idea of entertaining fans outside the strict perimeters of its tournaments.

Like the upcoming Netflix series about Tour life. Whatever content value the show ultimately has, insiders insist it represents a radical shift from Ponte Vedra’s established, heavy-handed image control. There’s also TGL, the stadium-based concept spearheaded by Woods and McIlroy that launches in 2024, and which promises to lift the gloom from Monday evenings in winter. Should it gain traction, TGL can hasten the end of golf being perceived as a sport that only exists—at least as a viewing product—Thursday through Sunday, and only in conventional tournament form.

The Tour can do more toward that end as well. Plenty of events would benefit from adding entertainment-oriented components early in the week before action gets underway, especially in the era of elevated stops that leave poorer relations looking for any marketing leverage they can muster. In the coming dispensation, Tuesdays on Tour ought to be experimental days and nights.

The Match and the various acronymic ventures (QBE, PNC, TGL) illustrate in different ways how golf can entertain beyond customary norms around formats and time slots, without diluting meaningful competition elsewhere. And more importantly, that golf as entertainment can be delivered independent of terrorist regimes and their lackeys.

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