LPGA Drive On Championship shows that the tour ‘belongs in Phoenix’ after four-year absence

The LPGA is “going to be well-supported no matter what we do here.”

SUPERSTITION MOUNTAIN, Ariz. — The 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship – the first LPGA event in Arizona since 2019 and the first at Superstition Mountain since 2008 – is just about in the books.

Six of the top 10 ranked players in the world made the trek to compete in the first full-field event on the LPGA’s 2023 schedule and the second U.S. tournament in two months.

Temperatures gradually warmed as the week went and fans were treated to low scores, the first ace of the season and the tour’s first albatross in three years.

Scott Wood, the 2023 tournament director, sat down with Golfweek for a Sunday Q&A about week.

Golfweek: Initial thoughts on the week?

Scott Wood: It’s been a fantastic week, to be honest with you, it’s exceeded all of our expectations. Ticket sales have just been fantastic. The community involvement has been great. So, to us, this has been a plus it’s been a home run.

GW: Is there anything you’d have done differently?

SW: We tried some things. … and so I think there’s a lot for us to build upon. The only thing that I always ask for is more time to plan. I think now that we’ve got one under our belt here, and worked with everybody, to be honest with you, as long as we have time we can we can really take this to the next level.

GW: Have you gotten much feedback from players?

SW: Feedback has just been completely positive about their experience at the clubhouse. Obviously, dining is very important to our players and caddies and so that’s been that’s been well-received. The golf course has been truly phenomenal. I honestly anticipated scores probably a little bit lower, so I think it’s a really good fair test. And the players have been nothing but complimentary to the to the team here about just from tee to green.

GW: It seems like the course has been a good test.

SW: It is, you know, I was watching, like everybody else, the middle of the pack really shot up [on Saturday]. … with 30 players within four shots [after 54 holes], that’s the kind of competition that you want. So I think we got it dialed in.

2023 LPGA Drive On Championship
Nanna Koerstz Madsen tees off from the 17th during the second round of the 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship at Superstition Mountain Golf & Country Club in Arizona. (Photo: Patrick Breen/The Arizona Republic)

GW: Has the tour provided any feedback?

SW: Everything’s been well received. That’s why I think when we say this just exceeded our expectations. I think that’s it’s collectively, from our staff from players, from the few sponsors that did, you know, jump in last-minute with us. Everybody is just super excited about where this could go in the future. and there’s been a lot of conversations had on-site this week of, okay, this is really great. How can we make it better?

GW: We don’t know if it’s coming back [in 2024 and beyond] for sure, but do you feel like this was a big step towards that?

SW: I do. I do. I’ll be honest with you, as I’ve been telling some others this week, for us to move Founders Cup out of Phoenix [after 2019], it was a business decision and this [Drive On] gave us this opportunity to come and bring one of our marquee events that the Tour owns and operates, for us to be able to get it back into the market. To see after four years how well it was received by the fans and by our players and by really everybody in town. That’s gonna be the catapult that just sends us into like, you know, I think having really strong conversations with a lot of good people that can really help to facilitate a long-term deal.

2023 LPGA Drive On Championship
Danielle Kang tees off on the third hole as golf fans gather around the tee box during the first round of the 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship at Superstition Mountain Golf & Country Club in Arizona. (Photo: Parick Breen/The Arizona Republic)

GW: Can you share ticket sales?

SW: What I can say right now is is the way that we saw ticket sales, pre-tournament, and then ticket sales during tournament week online and then walk-up ticket sales, we’re in that 30- to 35- [thousand] range right now [for the week].

It just proves the point that the LPGA belongs in Phoenix and that it’s going to be well-supported no matter what we do here.

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LPGA’s return to Arizona features a stellar field, DJs on the driving range, flat-screens for March Madness, selfie stations

The LPGA is finally returning to one of golf’s hotbeds.

SUPERSTITION MOUNTAIN, Ariz. — The LPGA is finally returning to one of golf’s hotbeds.

The Drive On Championship, the first full-field event in 2023, will be held at Superstition Mountain Golf Club, March 23-26. If the name of the course sounds familiar, the LPGA’s Safeway International was played at Superstition Mountain for five years, last visiting there in 2008 before moving to Portland.

The LPGA staged other events around the greater Phoenix area for the next 12 years, only missing 2010. The Founders Cup got its start in Arizona, and golf ball maker Volvik was named the title sponsor for the 2020 event, but that never came off as the COVID pandemic knocked it and several other pro golf events off the calendar that year.

So it’s been since 2019 that the LPGA last competed in Arizona. Jin Young Ko made the Bank of Hope Founders Cup her third LPGA win and first in the U.S. at Wildfire Golf Club that year.

Now the LPGA is back at a popular location near the Superstition Mountains, which provide a stunning backdrop from all vantage points around the property.

2008 Safeway International
The 18th green during the final round of the 2008 Safeway International at Superstition Mountain Golf and Country Club in Superstition Mountain, Arizona. (Photo: Scott Halleran/Getty Images)

“I think it’s amazing. Really important. This is a warm-weather hub,” said owner by Susan Hladky.

She and Superstition Mountain general manager Mark Gurnow had been working for several years to bring a tournament to the venue. They first tried landing the KMPG Women’s PGA. There were also talks with the PGA Tour Champions.

“I figured either the ladies or the senior players are the ones this golf course is going to fit,” said Gurnow.

In the end, the best fit was the LPGA, although the announcement didn’t come till November 2022. It’s a been a mad dash to get the course ready ever since.

An ace in the hole for Superstition Mountain: director of agronomy Scott Krout has been there since the place opened in 1999.

“He was here when the first shovel went into the ground and was here when we [LPGA] played here last, so he’s got it dialed in,” said 2023 tournament director Scott Wood.

Fans coming out to watch the golf and enjoy the sunshine will also experience what tournament officials are calling a sports-bar atmosphere with the 19th Hole Beer Garden near the driving range, where Arizona-based DJ’s DJ Javin (Wednesday to Friday) and DJ Aja Cruz (Saturday and Sunday) will crank up the tunes.

In addition, there will be large flatscreens with Golf Channel’s coverage of the golf but also the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournament games.

There will be another hangout spot at the 17th hole featuring the theme “You Glow Girl” where specialty drinks served in souvenir cups. Concessions will be available there.

Fans can get up close and personal with the LPGA golfers, who plan to visit “Selfie Stations” around the course.

The bottom line: fun for fans.

“They can watch some golf, eat some good food, catch up on their brackets. We’re going to have a family fun zone for kids,” Wood said. “Just trying to bring some different energies to the golf course in certain places.

“We feel it’s important to do some different things, to try some different things, since we basically are our own title sponsor for this week. Why not try it, right? We can only yell at ourselves,” he continued. “Overall, we just want people to have a good time. We know the golf is going to be great.”

The Drive On is owned and operated by the LPGA. The event is scheduled at Superstition Mountain for just this season, but all parties involved are hoping to secure a long-term partnership.

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