Dow Championship team event ideal week for LPGA players to change the course of their season

For Sandra Gal and Maude-Aimee Leblanc, an opening 67 gives the old friends reason to smile.

There’s something about team golf that, for many, brings out the best. Over the course of the past four editions of the Dow Championship, several winning teams have enjoyed a serious springboard.

Cydney Clanton was ranked 269th in the world and playing on the Epson Tour when Jasmine Suwannapura invited her to play the Dow in 2019. By week’s end, Clanton was an LPGA winner and back on the big tour after the pair won by six.

Last year, Elizabeth Szokol teamed up with good friend Cheyenne Knight to earn her first LPGA title at age 29.

For Sandra Gal and Maude-Aimee Leblanc, an opening 67 in the alternate-shot format at Midland Country Club gives the old friends reason to smile. Gal, who is coming back from a years-long battle with Lyme disease and recent hip surgery, reached out to Leblanc after hearing she needed a partner.

A dozen years ago, Gal was Leblanc’s “big sister” on tour, a rookie program the LPGA puts together to help young players adjust. Their team name, “The Shorties,” is tongue-in-cheek given that both players are at least 6 feet tall.

“I think we really complement each other, obviously,” said Gal. “Maude hits it very, very far, and I think I hit some good wedge shots coming in and then we both made a few putts. It just felt like we just trusted each other and really enjoyed being out there.”

Maude-Aimee Leblanc of Canada and Sandra Gal of Germany walk the eighth fairway during the first round of the Dow Championship at Midland Country Club on June 27, 2024, in Midland, Michigan. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images)

Gal, 39, who has played a very limited schedule for the past four years, is currently No. 813 in the world while Leblanc is 386th. Gal made her first tour start since 2022 earlier this season at the Blue Bay LPGA, where she tied for 55th. She withdrew from the ShopRite and missed the cut at the Meijer two weeks ago. The German won her only LPGA title in 2011 at the Kia Classic. She played on two Solheim Cup teams in 2011 and 2015.

Leblanc, 35, hasn’t finished better than a share of 47th so far this season and has never won on tour.

LPGA members on the winning team will receive the standard two-year winner’s exemption. CME points and prize money will be official for the purposes of the current-year LPGA Official Money List and Race to the CME Globe Standings. Rolex Player of the Year, Louise Suggs Rolex Rookie of the Year and U.S. Solheim Cup points will not be allocated and statistics will not be calculated. Rolex Women’s World Rankings Points also will not be allocated.

Another duo looking for a boost from the week is Team FinAsia – Matilda Castren and Kelly Tan – two players whose friendship blossomed years ago on the Epson Tour. Tan even served as Castren’s maid of honor two years ago. The pair finished second at this event in 2022, which marked Tan’s career-best finish on the LPGA.

“We have such a close friendship,” said Tan, “and we just cherish that we get to team up and play together.”

Tan currently ranks 905th in the Rolex Rankings while Castren, who has missed eight of her last nine cuts, is 369th. Castren won on the LPGA and the Ladies European Tour in 2021 to play her way onto the European Solheim Cup team.

The pair opened with a 2-under 68.

Interestingly, the team with two players ranked in the top 10 – Celine Boutier (6) and Yuka Saso (10) – had an unusually rough finish, carding a bogey and triple-bogey on the last two holes to shoot 74.

The second and final rounds will be played in a four-ball (best ball) format while the third round returns to foursomes (alternate shot).

After 36 holes, the field will be cut to the low 33 teams and ties. The purse of $3 million will award a first-place team prize of $732,165 ($366,082 each).

Sandra Gal returns to LPGA after lengthy break at Blue Bay LPGA

Gal’s lone victory on the LPGA came at the 2011 Kia Classic.

Sandra Gal returns to the LPGA for the first time since 2022 at the Blue Bay LPGA event in China. The 38-year-old German has teed it up in only 11 LPGA events since the 2020 season.

Gal, who is playing on a sponsor exemption this week on Hainan Island, first took a medical leave from the tour in August of 2019 while dealing with the effects of Lyme disease. Most recently, she’s been healing from hip surgery.

Gal’s lone victory on the LPGA came at the 2011 Kia Classic. The two-time Solheim Cup player, Olympian, artist and philanthropist, first earned full LPGA status for the 2008 season.

Gal’s most recent start on the LPGA was the 2022 Lotte Championship, where she missed the cut. It was her only start in 2022.

“I am not set on my schedule, as I will have to track my progress as I compete and adjust accordingly,” Gal posted on her website. “It will be a combination of LPGA and LET tournaments.”

Giving back: As Sandra Gal heals, she helps others too

At the Sandra Gal Children’s Center, the golfer aims to provide a safe space for kids who are homeless.

There was a moment earlier this month in Miami when a young girl climbed into Sandra Gal’s lap and asked, “Can you just stay here forever?”

It was a moment that won’t leave Gal. A moment that points to the heart of what she’s trying to accomplish at the Sandra Gal Children’s Center: Provide a safe space for kids who are homeless.

It was during a pro-am party at the Volunteers of America Classic that Gal first approached VOA CEO Mike King about ways they could partner together. Gal, who already had an annual fundraiser geared toward helping the homeless, wanted to create a center for children that focused on mindfulness and provided a safe haven as their parents worked to get their lives back on track.

The center opened in August, and Gal visited in December to meet some of the staff and children and add artwork to the walls. When someone is homeless, the VOA helps to find a job and housing. Now, while parents are receiving this coaching, their kids can go next door to Gal’s new center. Once the families are settled, at-risk children can keep coming back to do their homework and take up new passions like music, yoga, even golf.

“I think that a lot of the families there, the kids there,” said Gal, “they just don’t have any other outlets and a way to deal with what they go through.”

It was at a café in San Francisco three years ago that Gal began brainstorming the idea of the center with JG Larochette, founder of the Mindful Life Project. Larochette came to Miami to train the staff in how to teach mindfulness to kids. Larochette’s website defines mindfulness as the “specific and strategic practice of paying attention on purpose to the present moment without judgement.”

Gal herself has been on this journey of mindfulness for nearly a decade, learning how to create more balance in her life and not be so results-driven.

“Just seeing her want to share the life and the light that she has,” said good friend Amy Olson, “it’s just fun to support that.”

Olson was one of several players who drove up from Naples, Florida, after the season-ending CME Group Tour Championship to help Gal raise money at her annual charity event at Concession Golf Club in Bradenton. So far the event has raised around $100,000 toward the center.

LPGA players routinely help one another raise funds for various causes. Since Olson returned from a trip to Africa four years ago with LPGA Hall of Famer Betsy King, she has raised money for five additional wells to provide clean water to families across the globe.

“I love golf, and I love playing great golf, and I love being competitive,” said Olson, “but at the end of the day if that’s all it is, it’s still empty.”

A refreshed Gal is curious to see what 2020 brings. In a way, the 34-year-old views it as a step into the unknown after taking a medical break from the tour to heal from the lingering effects of dormant Lyme Disease. She’d struggled with low energy levels since the summer of 2018.

Gal took the opportunity to attend several retreats and workshops in Italy that she says were immensely transformative.

“I think as an athlete, basically you’re just trying to put on your strongest self every day,” said Gal. “Of course, that’s been a huge strength of mine – at some point, it kind of creeps into your personal life. I don’t think I had a healthy outlet of showing who I really am, and maybe not being completely myself on the golf course and with other people. I think that this really maybe allows me now to be more vulnerable – share more of my sides that are not so pretty or don’t feel good or are afraid.”

Gal said her previous strategy was to isolate herself and not open up. Even now at her charity event, she finds herself relating to her peers in a different way. She has been open to her fans about the journey on social media as well – even dancing from time to time.

“I feel a lot more alive,” Gal said.

While the popular German has yet to decide what her schedule will look like in 2020, she already knows that she’ll be giving herself more space for what she needs beyond work. Things like dancing, singing, meditating, going on retreats, connecting with other people and nature.

And giving back.

“When people see us,” said Olson, “they see us as a number on a money list. They know if you’ve had a good or bad year based on how much money you’ve made. But having a good year is not defined by a number on a money list.”

As Gal can attest, there’s so much more to celebrate.

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