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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Lydia Ko is close to making LPGA Hall of Fame. What do other stars need to qualify for one of the toughest Halls in sports?

Here’s a list of active stars and where they stand on the march toward 27.

Lydia Ko needs only two more points to qualify for the LPGA Hall of Fame. At 25 years old, she’s tracking to become the youngest player to achieve that milestone.

Seven-time major winner Inbee Park holds the current record. She was 27 when she fulfilled the requirements. Karrie Webb was the youngest to reach the 27-point mark at age 25, but because of the 10-year service requirement the LPGA had in place until last year, Webb became officially eligible at age 30. Se Ri Pak was 26 when she reached 27 points but was 29 when she was inducted.

To be eligible for the LPGA Hall of Fame, players must have won or been awarded at least one of the following: LPGA major, Vare Trophy for lowest scoring average or Rolex Player of the Year.

They must also amass 27 points with:

  • one point for each LPGA official tournament win
  • two points for each LPGA major tournament win
  • one point for each Vare Trophy or Rolex Player of the Year honor earned.
  • An Olympic gold medal is also worth one point as of last year

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Here’s a list of active stars and where they stand on the march toward 27:

Se Ri Pak named Bob Jones Award recipient for 2020

During a 20-year career, Se Ri Pak won 39 times, including five majors.

The United States Golf Association has announced that Se Ri Pak is the 2020 recipient of the Bob Jones Award.

Pak, a World Golf Hall of Famer who won the 1998 U.S. Women’s Open, is being recognized as “an individual who demonstrates the spirit, personal character and respect for the game exhibited by Jones, winner of nine USGA championships.”

Pak won 39 times in her 20-year career. She won four other majors in addition to the ’98 Open, which she claimed as the youngest winner of the event at the time.

The Bob Jones Award has been handed out since 1955. Pak will receive the award during the week at the 2020 U.S. Open in June at Winged Foot Golf Club in New York.

Other USGA honorees for 2020 are: Lon Haskew, recipient of the Joe Dey Award for meritorious service as a volunteer; Dr. William Meyer, the USGA Green Section Award recipient for his work in sustainability through agronomic advancements; Kevin Robbins, author of The Last Stand of Payne Stewart, who will receive the Herbert Warren Wind Book Award.

Those three will receive their awards at the USGA Annual Meeting on Feb. 29.

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