Lakareber Abe will keep focusing on the details as soon as Symetra season returns

Lakareber Abe finished third in her Symetra Tour debut before the season came to a crashing halt for coronavirus.

Sometimes, it’s as simple as just tieing your shoes. Even amid a global pandemic, the little things count.

When Symetra Tour player Lakareber Abe finds herself quickly shoving her feet in laced-up tennis shoes, she tries to remind herself to stop, untie and retie them. This follows a theory she recently read about making time for the little things. It’s a lesson she learned in a book by John Wooden, legendary UCLA basketball coach.

“It’s the same as the make-your-bed theory,” she said. “Being really diligent.”

Concentration on the little things can take a golfer a long way. It was the big goal this season for Abe, a 24-year-old who was eager to start her second full season on the Symetra Tour.

And oh, how well she did start. Abe fired rounds of 70-74-71 at the Country Club of Winter Haven in Winter Haven, Florida, to tie for third in the Florida’s Natural Charity Classic, the kick-off event for the 2020 season. That means that while the Symetra Tour is dormant because of the coronavirus, Abe sits third in the Volvik Race for the Card standings.

It would be easy to be bitter about the season stopping so quickly after that performance, Abe’s best Symetra Tour finish to date.

“Every day I just try to tell myself, it’s one thing when it’s a ‘you’ problem you’re dealing with, but when you step back and look at it, this is like a global thing happening,” she said. “Me not going to the LPGA is a drop in the bucket compared to what other people are experiencing.”

Abe remains at home in The Woodlands, Texas, with her family. At first, she had a net set up for hitting balls but as things creep back to normal, she’s getting back to the golf course and the driving range. Abe loves to cook, so she and her mom Fiora tend to alternate making dinner during the week. Lakareber just whipped up a mean enchilada recipe the other day.

In some ways, it mirrors what she’d be doing if she were on the road.

“I don’t eat at chain restaurants,” she said. “I’ll try to find an interesting restaurant.”

Abe has never fancied herself much of a baker, mostly because she never felt like she had time for it. Time is one thing she has an abundance of now. She cultivated a sourdough starter and has made some type of bread every week, from donuts to cinnamon rolls to hamburger buns.

In a normal Symetra Tour season, Abe would travel by car, particularly through the part of the schedule that’s in the Midwest. She might fly to events on the West Coast.

Over the past season and a half, Abe learned how to manage her time on the road better and that she needs to shut it down after four events. She played 22 of 24 events on the schedule in 2019, making the cut in 12.

“If you can do three, that makes it easier,” she said. “Obviously it’s a bit harder on Symetra because you have to play so much. Most people play every week. Finding those breaks has been more difficult.”

Sometimes she takes a caddie and sometimes she’s on the course herself with a push cart. Sometimes, a family member will make a cameo. She had her mom on the bag for a few events in 2019, and older sister Tezira, a former University of Texas player who recently graduated from law school at the University of Michigan, took over caddie duties at last year’s tour stop in Albany, New York.

Abe works with instructor Justin Poynter of Crown Golf in Arlington, Texas. There have been many short-game conversations lately. Everything is so much more magnified in professional golf, Abe says (who had a successful college career at Alabama), that when it comes time to start shaving strokes, it’s the little shots that have to tighten up.

Lakareber Abe hits a shot during the 2018 NCAA Championship, where she helped her team to a runner-up finish.

Overall, Abe thinks her self-awareness has gotten better on the golf course.

“It’s me having a better understanding of my body and my golf swing and how it moves and how I need to get to certain positions,” she said of the progress she’s made these past few years. “The best way for me to swing my swing and have it be repeatable.”

Last year ended with a trip to play the inaugural Magical Kenya Ladies Open on the Ladies European Tour as a sponsor exemption, where she finished T-16.

Abe’s family is from Uganda. An aunt and cousin in Kenya even helped set up a safari for after the event. It was a week she won’t forget.

“It’s really cool to see golf growing in that part of the world,” she said. “For me, playing as close to where my parents are from as I’ll probably get in my lifetime was pretty cool.”

They’re the kind of good memories that will carry her through until the season restarts.

LPGA’s Tiffany Joh brings the quarantine humor we all need right now

LPGA player Tiffany Joh is trying to keep things normal during quarantine with music, workouts, surfing and a wild sense of humor.

The “Stuck at Home With” series profiles players, caddies and staff in the women’s game who are making the most of an unprecedented break in tour life due to the coronavirus pandemic. New stories will be posted every Tuesday and Thursday.

#TreatJohself

Anyone who follows Tiffany Joh on Twitter is familiar with the hashtag. Have a doughnut. Catch a wave. Wear a dinosaur onesie. Make music videos. Make fun of yourself.

#TreatJohself

If there’s anyone we needed to hear from in this wild and scary time, it’s Joh, an LPGA player who spends a good portion of her life making other people laugh.

During the coronavirus pandemic, Joh started a music video battle with former tour player Jeehae Lee. They call it #Quarantunes. Sometimes they pair up together for a virtual duet. It all started when Lee got a new keyboard.

“Jeehae is actually a really good singer and has incredible range,” said Joh, “and I kind of, like, will manipulate a song to make sure it fits in my range. She was pitching me all these songs with Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus and I was like there’s no way I could hit all those notes. So we decided I would sing Bradley Cooper’s part.”

They settled on “Shallow” from “A Star is Born” and Lee got right to work, quickly sending over her part of the recording. Joh said she didn’t get back to her for about 10 days.

“I was waist-deep in watching ‘All-American’ on Netflix,” she explained. “I hadn’t gotten out of bed in four days, hadn’t taken a shower, was in my sweatpants.”

In fact, Joh said she hadn’t played her guitar in a year and a half when #Quarantunes started. She first picked up the hobby in college by learning a handful of chords and mostly relying on her background in music. Joh played the piano growing up as well as the saxophone and flute in the marching band.

“I was super cool in middle school,” she joked.

At the start of the coronavirus lockdown, Joh thought she’d come out of the break in tremendous shape, taking the time to meditate, journal and vision board each day.

“When I found myself grabbing the vacuum cleaner to vacuum the Pringle crumbs out of my bed and from my hoodie,” she said, “I thought, this is a new low point for me.”

Joh bought a Peloton bike in anticipation that it might be some time before California gyms open. She did a group ride with some buddies on the LPGA and then shifted into making a “carb cycle” video where she eats a full meal while peddling barefoot.

She’s back surfing now where the beaches are open. She went out at 3 a.m. one morning to see the blue neon waves crash during a bioluminescence phenomenon.

“My first paddle out I got a weird skin rash,” she said.

But hey, it looked really cool.

Golf courses are back open in San Diego too. Joh goes out about an hour before sunset and plays a five-hole loop at Vista Valley Country Club.

“A lot of the members live along the golf course,” she said, “and their new happy hour entertainment is to watch me dodge the sprinkler system.”

Joh said the extended break didn’t hit her as hard it might other pros who aren’t used to getting away from golf. Every offseason she goes on a month-long surfing trip.

“Staying at home is not hard,” she said, “and ordering your groceries on Amazon Fresh and going through all these Netflix shows. I don’t even like baking, and I’ve watched 10 seasons of ‘The Great British Bake Off.’”

Moments later, as Joh was talking about how she’d finally gotten around to learning how to use an air fryer, she stopped mid-sentence and exclaimed, “Oh my God, that reminds me! I have to check on my cornbread!”

Joh reported back that she thought it looked OK. Maybe a little well done.

Slap a little butter on there and #TreatJohself.

Click here to read more from the “Stuck at Home With” series.

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Dame Laura Davies hits reset at home in England watching wall of TVs, dog at her side

Former U.S. Women’s Open champion Laura Davies stays busy at home in England watching sports, tending her garden and looking after her dog.

The “Stuck at Home With” series profiles players, caddies and staff in the women’s game who are making the most of an unprecedented break in tour life due to the coronavirus pandemic. New stories will be posted every Tuesday and Thursday.

Laura Davies has converted her home garage into a pro shop/trophy room of sorts. There’s a bike in there. A radio. There’s even a Juli Inkster golf bag. The pair of World Golf Hall of Famers exchanged bags in Sweden after the Solheim Cup one year. If, heaven forbid, there was a fire, one of the first things Davies would grab out of that room is the Solheim Cup replica trophy that was given to all the participants at the inaugural event in 1990.

“That’s by far my most favorite,” she said.

It’s also where her golf clubs sat for months on end collecting dust during the coronavirus lockdown. That is, until Wednesday, when she took them out for a 12:30 p.m. tee time with her brother at the local club, Sutton Green. Davies, 56, happened to co-design the course with architect David Walker in the 1990s.

A look inside Davies’ memorabilia room (photos courtesy of Laura Davies).

England opened up golf courses for the first time on May 13. Prior to that, Davies’ only golf had consisted of hitting chip shots off a mat into an umbrella in her garden. She quickly found that exercise to be rather pointless, though.

“This is the longest I’ve gone without swinging a club at all,” said the winner of 87 professional events worldwide.

Davies last teed it up at the ISPS Handa Women’s Australian Open in mid-February. Since then she’s been at her home in Ripley, a small village in Surrey, England, where she lives with her 82-year-old step-father Mike. Davies’ mother, Rita, died in December from complications caused by a perforated bowel that was so well hidden it took too long for doctors to discover. Davies keeps pictures of her mother all over the house.

“Last year was such a horrible year seeing her suffer,” she said.

“I’m so glad she wasn’t still going through her troubles with all this going on. The thought of her being in hospital without us being able to visit her …”

Rita actually compiled a short and successful record caddying for her daughter, to the tune of two runner-up finishes in her three stints at the job. At a tournament in the Netherlands one year, Davies was in the penultimate group in the final round with her mum pushing the clubs on a trolley. After Davies finished up the hole and walked off the green, she turned around to see that her mother had placed the flagstick inside her golf bag by mistake. The final group stood waiting in the fairway for something to aim at.

“Mom had to bolt back and put the pin in,” she recalled.

Rita would’ve been 84 last March.

With Mike unable to leave the house at all, Laura has done all the grocery shopping for their house and for Betty, their neighbor.

She’s also been nursemaid to Murphy, their 12-year-old dog who snapped a ligament several weeks back. Because Murphy can’t make it up the stairs, Davies has been sleeping on a mattress on the living room floor the past month.

“He’s a lovely little chap,” she said, “but he’s hurting.”

Davies has given the kitchen a fresh coat of paint along with several outside walls. She planted vegetables in the green house and filled the flower baskets.

“I’ve just picked my first cup of radishes to go in the stir fry,” she said.

Davies’ backyard garden.

There are three large TV screens across the living room wall. She keeps them all going at once, with the volume cranked up on the middle one.

“To kill the boredom,” she said, though it’s been tough with no live sports on offer. Davies has relived plenty of Liverpool games, several Masters Tournaments, a couple of Solheim Cups. She particularly enjoyed watching her singles match against Inkster at the 2011 edition in Ireland. (Inkster and Davies halved).

“I don’t get too carried away watching myself do anything to be honest,” she said.

Davies served as a vice captain to Catriona Matthew at last year’s spectacularly dramatic European victory at Gleneagles in Scotland.

“We looked all the more dead and buried on the TV coverage than we did when I was there,” she noted.

Davies keeps her gold medals from the 1987 U.S. Women’s Open and 2018 U.S. Senior Women’s Open in a glass cabinet inside the house along with her U.S. Women’s Open replica trophy. It wasn’t until a decade after she won, when compatriot Alison Nicholas claimed the U.S. Women’s Open and had a replica trophy made, that Davies even knew such a thing was possible. She quickly had one made as well.

With both senior majors canceled for the season and most of the Legends Tour schedule done for the year, Davies hopes to get back on the LPGA this summer. The tour is scheduled to resume in mid-July at the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational July 15-18. Because Davies hasn’t qualified for the field, someone would need to choose her as a partner. She’s not banking on that happening.

If it’s possible to compete in the Marathon Classic and ShopRite and not have to go into isolation before getting back for the Evian, Scottish Open and AIG Women’s British, then Davies will play that entire stretch.

She’s guessing there’s a 50 percent right now that the Women’s British will be held at Royal Troon in late August.

“Premiere League football will be the first sport to get underway at the professional level,” said Davies. “If they start playing, then I think golf and tennis and sports like that will quickly follow.”

With hiring a private jet beyond her personal budget, Davies said she’ll be quite happy to drive 15 hours between events to avoid commercial airports and airplanes. This, of course, coming from a woman who was awarded the DBE, or Dame Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, by the Queen in 2014.

“You won’t take it for granted,” said Dame Laura Davies of getting back to her day job. “Playing golf tournaments will be more of a privilege than just what you do.”

Click here to read more from the “Stuck at Home With” series.

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Stuck at Home With: TPC Beer Run architects Karen Stupples and Jerry Foltz

Karen Stupples and Jerry Foltz have been road warriors for decades as touring pros and as Golf Channel talent. Now they’re stuck at home.

The “Stuck at Home With” series profiles players, caddies and staff in the women’s game who are making the most of an unprecedented break in tour life due to the coronavirus pandemic. New stories will be posted every Tuesday and Thursday.

TPC Beer Run is set to open any day now. That is, if Karen Stupples can tear herself away from her paint projects long enough to finish the last two holes.

The longest hole on the current design is 114 yards. The shortest is 34 yards with a green that’s about the size of a Volkswagen, according to co-owner Jerry Foltz. All five holes wrap around a pond that takes up about an acre of their property.

Stupples and Foltz bought this little slice of heaven, 4 acres in all, on West Lake Toho two and a half years ago in St. Cloud, Florida. They like to watch the bald eagle that takes a breather on the tree next to the house.

“I can’t live far enough out,” said Foltz of country life.

They’ve been road warriors for decades. First as touring pros and now as Golf Channel talent. The coronavirus lockdown has led to an unprecedented amount of time at home for most people, but especially for the likes of Stupples and Foltz, who spend much of the year in airplanes and hotels.

“We are living like normal people in the most abnormal times,” said Foltz.

To the delight of many, the couple has essentially invited us all into their home during this pandemic, documenting Foltz’s newfound love of baking and Stupples’ never-ending to-do list. It’s like an episode of HGTV breaks out every day on their property.

“The feeling of freedom that you have when you’re living out here is fantastic,” said Stupples, chief designer and superintendent at TPC Beer Run.

To cut the greens, Stupples puts the riding mower on its lowest setting and drives in circles. To get a closer cut, she might get out the push mower. Foltz estimates they’re rolling at about a 2 on the Stimp.

The holes are cut to 6 inches, about the size of a large coffee can. They cut down bamboo on the property to use as flagsticks. Foam balls were purchased off Amazon. They’re considering painting faces on all the balls like Wilson in the Tom Hanks film “Cast Away.”

Stupples was so far ahead of the masses on what coronavirus might look like in the U.S. that she had masks and gloves delivered to the house in January. Several weeks before the Players Championship, Foltz went to the grocery store to stock up on supplies, trying not to look like a hoarder before hoarding was a thing.

He picked up several loaves of bread to freeze and then spotted flour in one of the aisles. Even though he didn’t so much as know how to turn on the oven, Foltz decided to put the bread back and stock up on flour and yeast, thinking he could bake his own and save the freezer space.

What started out as a loaf of bread quickly morphed into croissants, Australian meat pies and his first batch of chocolate chip cookies. Stupples raves about his biscuits. He even tried homemade pasta without a pasta maker.

“Now I’m absolutely addicted to it,” he said. “I bake something just about every day now.”

Stupples got in the mix too, baking her first birthday cake for son Logan, who turned 13 in late April. It’s the first time she’s been home in several years to celebrate Logan’s birthday, one of the unexpected joys of this most unusual spring.

On May 17, the couple will be back to work for the charity match at Seminole Golf Club. Foltz will be an on-course reporter for the TaylorMade Driving Relief skins game, which features Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff.

Stupples will be the advance person gathering yardages for the broadcast. (The former Women’s British Open champ is usually in the booth at LPGA events or working as an on-course reporter.)

There won’t be any caddies for the event, Foltz said. Each player will be in his own cart. A clinician is coming by their house to administer a COVID-19 test and they’ve been asked not to leave home after that’s done. They’ll be tested again onside at Seminole.

Neither are too keen on flying anytime soon. They’ve mapped out the rest of the LPGA’s domestic schedule for 2020 and plan to drive everywhere.

“There are going to be a lot of 20- to 25-hour trips,” said Foltz.

Both happen to love a good road trip. Stupples traveled in an RV while competing on the LPGA.

This time they’ll likely pack up Foltz’s four-door pickup, put a Yeti cooler on the back floor board and just go.

But for now, there’s yardwork to be done and folks to respond to on Twitter. Opening up their lives on social media was never about self-promotion. Just a fun distraction that has become part of their quarantine routine.

“We have so much time that we actually respond to almost every comment,” said Foltz. “Seems like we’ve made lifelong friends through the process.”

Click here to read more from the “Stuck at Home With” series.

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Stuck at Home With: Budding gardener Paula Creamer

During the LPGA break due to the coronavirus pandemic, Paula Creamer has planted a garden and she’s determined to make it successful.

The “Stuck at Home With” series profiles players, caddies and staff in the women’s game who are making the most of an unprecedented break in tour life due to the coronavirus pandemic. New stories will be posted every Tuesday and Thursday.

Paula Creamer went over to help her fiance’s father put down mulch one day, thinking it would be a nice workout, and something surprising happened: She actually enjoyed it.

The exercise reminded Creamer of the garden she and her father maintained growing up in Pleasanton, California. It wasn’t long before she and Shane Kennedy, a retired baseball player, were taking measurements to build their own raised garden bed from scratch.

“I got to do the staple gun,” she said proudly.

Rosemary. Basil. Red peppers. Jalapeños. Banana peppers. Cucumber. Eggplant. Tomato. Snap peas. Parsley.

The man who sold them the plants was giving replacement advice before they’d put the first shovel in the ground. He obviously didn’t know that professional athletes have high expectations ­– about everything.

“Failure is not in my vocabulary,” said Creamer. “We are not letting this die.”

Paula Creamer poses in front of her garden table. (courtesy of Paula Creamer)

What happens to the table garden when the LPGA starts back up in July, as it’s currently scheduled?

Well, they haven’t gotten that far in the plans yet. But for now, the 33-year-old has embraced the extended break. Creamer’s original plans had her returning to the LPGA around late April, early May after rehabbing her wrist. She hasn’t competed on tour since October of last year and remains conservative in her practice.

But because she’s had extra time at home without being in a cast, she’s been able to focus on the weak areas in her body more than ever. She’s hoping that comes in handy during what should be a packed second half of the year. The first event on the LPGA’s revised schedule is the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational, a team event in Midland, Michigan, held July 15-18.

“The most (weeks) I’ve ever done in a row is 11,” she said. “I was a young pup then, so that’s not happening. I think four or five is my max.”

These next couple of months will be different for Creamer mentally too because it’s a forced break that has nothing to do with injury. There’s something refreshing and peaceful about that.

Most evenings Creamer and her fiancé load up the dogs in their boat and head out for a sunset cruise around Lake Butler. Creamer has lived in Windermere’s tony Isleworth community since 2007, and said that for the first decade, she went on the lake a total of three to four times.

“I know what I like now,” she said. “I know I want to be on the water. I know I want to see sunsets. I didn’t really realize how special they were.”

Creamer out on the water with dogs Penny and Riley (photo courtesy of Creamer)

After renovating her stunning 11,100-square foot Isleworth mansion, Creamer put it on the market earlier this spring. She took it down for a bit after the pandemic hit, but recently put it back up for $6,350,000. Her favorite spot is the kitchen, though the couple spend most of their time on the bottom floor, where they’ve just finished work on the simulator hitting room. There’s a pool table, ping pong table and gym on that floor, too.

In the kitchen, Creamer has been making tons of fish tacos, frittatas and whatever she can whip up in her new air fryer. Her current obsession is eggplant dip, and she now dreams of adding avocado and lemon trees to her next piece of property. Creamer isn’t sure where they’ll move to next but said it won’t be far.

Any vices while on lockdown?

“The other day I made apple fritters and they didn’t turn out,” she said, “and I wanted to make them again.”

A double batch of baked goods seems to be the worst of it. To counter, they eat a lot of salad, she said, and order takeout from Bonsai Sushi.

She’s listening to podcasts for the first time, mostly focusing on the subjects of history and self-growth. She’s about to dig into Sue Monk Kidd’s book “The Secret Life of Bees.”

Creamer looks at the ever-changing LPGA schedule as one big rain delay, where officials say they’ll give another update in an hour.

While she doesn’t go into her closet to pack these days, there are daily reminders of her triumphs. Creamer has the Sunday shirts from each of her 10 LPGA victories and her Solheim singles matches hanging in her closet. She recently pulled out the pink one she wore on Sunday at Oakmont when she won the 2010 U.S. Women’s Open.

Last month she taped a look-back interview with the USGA about the 10-year anniversary of her biggest victory. She could hear the crowd cheering in the background when they played several clips.

“It was like it just happened,” she said. “I had goosebumps again.”

She then went back to tending her garden, a different kind of challenge that yields a new kind of joy.

Click here to read more from the “Stuck at Home With” series.

Stuck at Home With: Symetra Tour’s lone winner, Janie Jackson

Janie Jackson, the Symetra Tour’s only winner before COVID-19 put the season on pause, tells Golfweek what she’s doing while Stuck at Home.

The “Stuck at Home With” series profiles players, caddies and staff in the women’s game who are making the most of an unprecedented break in tour life due to the coronavirus pandemic. New stories will be posted every Tuesday and Thursday.

Janie Jackson got the keys to her new apartment in Phoenix, Arizona, the day before she left for the Symetra Tour’s season-opening event in Florida. The Huntsville, Alabama, native first moved to Arizona over the offseason hoping that better weather would lead to added motivation.

What was supposed to be a temporary move turned into a one-year apartment lease.

Uprooting her life to move West quickly proved to be one of the best decisions of her young life. Jackson, 26, won the Florida’s Natural Charity Classic on March 8, lapping the field by eight strokes. It marked her first win in 60 starts on the developmental tour.

“I feel like if I hadn’t moved,” said Jackson, “that wouldn’t have happened.”

On the range at Silverleaf Country Club in Scottsdale last winter, Jackson remade her golf swing into something she could be proud of.

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Growing up, Jackson worried anytime someone of importance stood behind her while she was over the golf ball.

“My whole life I could feel uncomfortable or insecure if they saw my swing from behind the line,” said Jackson. “What is she doing? How does she even make contact?”

Jackson was referring to the inside move that led her to pull over the top and swing left through the ball. The 5-foot-10 Jackson was athletic enough to manipulate the club to her favor on most days. But when it was off, it was wildly off. And after a poor showing at Q-Series last fall, Jackson sat down with her longtime swing coach, Mark Blackburn, and addressed what needed to change.

“My whole life I’ve been a sub-optimal swinger of the golf club,” said Jackson matter-of-factly.

Of course, it was a good enough swing to earn her a record three state championship titles in high school and a scholarship to Arizona, where she played freshman year before transferring to Alabama. It also helps that Jackson is one of the longest hitters in the game, averaging 285 to 290 off tee. She currently leads the Symetra Tour in driving distance at 298 yards.

Making this swing change has been in the back of Jackson’s mind for years. If someone whose opinion she cared about watched her from behind, she tried to change it on the spot. But her body wouldn’t do what her head wanted.

It took every bit of three months on the range in Arizona to get comfortable enough to bring what Blackburn had taught her into competition. Blackburn works with a number of PGA Tour players, including Charley Hoffman, Kevin Chappell and Chez Reavie, and is based at Greystone Country Club in Birmingham, Alabama.

Blackburn, however, splits his time in Arizona during the winter months working with clients and helped connect Jackson to Silverleaf.

The club has been open throughout the coronavirus pandemic, so Jackson has been able to continue the work that led to her first title. The Symetra Tour hasn’t held an event since the opening one in Winter Haven, Florida.

There are days when Jackson focuses on the glass that’s half full. She won $18,750 that week and tops the money list, collecting her first title since high school.

And there are days when she’s bummed that she couldn’t carry over that momentum. When the newly announced July restart seems like a lifetime away.

“If I’m being honest, right at the moment it’s hard to get motivated,” she said.

Pickleball has become a new passion. She likes to get out and throw the softball with friends.

“I’ve never watched so much TV in my life,” she said. “Outer Banks,” “Money Heist,” “Little Fires Everywhere,” “SEAL Team” to name a few.

Janie Jackson on a side-by-side ride through the desert. (Janie Jackson)

When Jackson first turned professional, she couldn’t stand going on the road for five weeks at a time. Even though she traveled throughout junior and college golf, the lifestyle still came as a shock. It took her two years to even feel comfortable on the road. Nothing could’ve prepared her for it, she said. It’s something you simply have to live through.

Only 68 players on the Symetra Tour have cashed a check this season. Jackson knows her timing was fortuitous. She’s hoping that the next time she gets to a competition, wherever and whenever that might be, those winning feelings come flooding back. In a way, that’s when that first victory will really sink in.

For now, she’s enjoying her new life in the desert.

“Moving out here made all the difference in the world,” she said.

She has the trophy to prove it.

Click here to read more from the “Stuck at Home With” series.

Stuck at Home With: LPGA homebody Angela Stanford

Quarantine life has given Angela Stanford a small window into retirement, and the homebody has enjoyed the view.

The “Stuck at Home With” series profiles players, caddies and staff in the women’s game who are making the most of an unprecedented break in tour life due to the coronavirus pandemic. New stories will be posted every Tuesday and Thursday.

Angela Stanford was working out on her treadmill when she saw the news flash across the bottom of her TV screen: “Augusta National closing its doors.”

If the most famous golf course in the world is closing, she thought, mine are probably right behind it. She immediately put in a call to Mike Wright, director of golf at her home club, Shady Oaks Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, and asked if he could put her in touch with someone who could help build an at-home hitting bay.

When Stanford built the extension off her driveway in 2009, she thought she might one day use it for a practice area but never really wanted to go through with it.

Why?

“A home should be a place where you get away from your job,” she said.

The turf was in and the net was up by the end of March. One month later, she’s already looking forward to using the space during the offseason to keep sharp. Simply having an area to hit balls no matter what transpires has brought much-needed peace of mind during the coronavirus crisis.

“Those first couple of weeks I was losing my mind,” she said.

Stanford’s new at-home hitting bay. (Photo courtesy Angela Stanford)

With no paychecks coming in anytime soon, Stanford thought she might cut down on the landscaping bill by getting to work in the flower beds. She weeded, sprayed and put down mulch over the weekend. The woman who ran her first marathon in Los Angeles in early March couldn’t believe how sore she felt in the aftermath.

“People do this all the time and I’m dying,” she said while on her way to Mira Vista Golf Club for a round of golf.

Quarantine life has given Stanford a small window into retirement, and the homebody has enjoyed the view. She had to learn how to grocery shop for weeks at a time, though gourmet cooking didn’t happen overnight.

“I’ve always believed that high-end cooking is like a hobby,” she said. “For now, there’s a lot of chicken on the grill. There’s a lot of pasta and my rice cooker.”

And while the toilet tissue has been hard to come by, she’s grateful that the shelves are still fully stocked with Diet Dr. Pepper.

Stanford’s newly mulched landscape.

Prior to the pandemic, Stanford wasn’t a binge-watcher. She mostly watched live sports and “Friends” reruns and felt like there was too much to do to spend time taking in entire seasons on the couch.

But that was then.

She burned through “Schitt’s Creek” on Netflix and has moved on to “Mad Men.” She’s mostly into lighter shows, noting that “Ozark” is as dark as she gets.

But the real must-see TV in Stanford-land is “The Last Dance,” ESPN’s Michael Jordan documentary.

“I’m in heaven,” she said of reliving her childhood.

A six-time winner on the LPGA, Stanford is grateful that the golf world came to a halt this late in her career. Like many veteran players, she thinks often of those on tour who are just getting started. She has played professional golf for 20 years, won a major and represented the U.S. in six Solheim Cups.

So much history brings added perspective.

Stanford thinks often of LPGA commissioner Mike Whan and his staff. She got mad when an ESPN writer left Whan’s name off a list of sports commissioners who were scheduled to meet with President Donald Trump.  So mad that she quit watching ESPN during her morning workout, switching to “Friends” instead.

“It bothers me that Mike Whan doesn’t get the attention he deserves,” she said, noting that no commissioner has it tougher now.

LPGA player Angela Stanford with her L.A. Marathon medal. (Photo submitted)

She used to think that golf might be the easiest sport to get back, given the size of the playing field, the fact that they’re outdoors and naturally far apart.

But once she peeled back the layers and started thinking about 144 players and caddies traveling separately to an event, it didn’t seem as tidy as entire teams flying together on a corporate jet and then hunkering down in the same hotel.

If the LPGA starts back up in Arkansas in mid-June, Stanford’s opinion is that there won’t be spectators. She’s thought about driving to Arkansas from Texas and basically avoiding airplanes until the tour goes to Europe. Not because she’s scared to fly, but because it’s easier to control her schedule by car.

She worries about the size of the locker rooms and player dining. A neat freak in general, Stanford signs autographs with her own purple Sharpie in part because she’s a TCU grad, but mostly because she doesn’t want to touch someone else’s stuff.

That’s heightened even more now.

“Even getting bottled water on the course out of cooler,” she said. “People are touching them all day.”

EVIAN-LES-BAINS, FRANCE - SEPTEMBER 16: Angela Stanford of the United States poses as if she was taking a selfie photograh with the Evian Championship Trophy after victory in the compeition during Day Four of The Evian Championship 2018 at Evian Resort Golf Club on September 16, 2018 in Evian-les-Bains, France. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)
Angela Stanford takes a selfie with the Evian Championship Trophy in 2018 at Evian Resort Golf Club. Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images

Stanford thinks a lot about tour sponsors while she’s at home. She’s been around long enough to be profoundly grateful of the kind of partner that will stick it out during tough times. The same goes for the donors who back her scholarship program for students who have been impacted by cancer.

“I have tremendous respect for anyone that’s in a decision-making position right now,” she said.

The unexpected time alone at home has opened the door to new things, as much as it has deepened an appreciation for the old.

Click here to read more from the “Stuck at Home With” series.

Stuck at Home With: LPGA rookie Bianca Pagdanganan

When she envisioned her rookie year on the LPGA, Bianca Pagdanganan imagined playing in everything she could get into, not sitting at home.

The “Stuck at Home With” series profiles players, caddies and staff in the women’s game who are making the most of an unprecedented break in tour life due to the coronavirus pandemic. New stories will be posted every Tuesday and Thursday.

When she envisioned her rookie year on the LPGA, Bianca Pagdanganan imagined playing in everything she could get into. It was supposed to be a year of learning the whole process, from Monday qualifiers on up.

And it started out that way. Pagdanganan and her dad hopped a plane to Florida in January (she had to attend rookie orientation anyway) then to Australia the next month to try to Monday qualify for the first events on the LPGA calendar. She came up short each time. With back-to-back events Down Under, Pagdanganan ended up staying two weeks.

“When I flew to Australia, my mindset was just play golf,” she said of a last-minute decision. “I spent most of the time just practicing over there. Golf in Australia is pretty different. The course layouts I wanted to get to know and get a good feel what these courses are like.”

Pagdanganan remains stuck on the proverbial Monday. The season stalled out weeks before the tour ever returned stateside. Pagdanganan slipped a few spots down the LPGA Q-Series leaderboard in November with a final-round 78, which affected her priority status to start the season. She figured the first event she might have been able to get in would be April’s Lotte Championship in Hawaii.

The 22-year-old gushes about her 2018 Marathon Classic experience as an amateur, to date her only LPGA start. She played the final round alongside Stacy Lewis and spent the day pinching herself. Pagdanganan finished T-67.

“I love looking back at that experience,” she said of the whole week. “I learned so much about myself as a player and the things I can further improve on with regard to my game.”

Bianca Pagdanganan hits into a net while stuck at home.

She’s still addressing those things in the practice she’s able to do at home, but like the rest of us, Pagdanganan finds herself running out of things to do as this break stretches on. In the time off, Pagdanganan has also committed to a workout program so she’ll be prepared when golf returns. She’s currently holed up in San Diego with a family friend and had been playing out of Maderas Golf Club.

“I think it’s been over a month since I last saw the golf course,” she said. “I’m still able to practice here. In our backyard, I have a makeshift driving range. I have a mat, I hit to a net obviously. I have a swing caddie so that’s nice when I practice. I’m lucky enough to have space in my backyard to swing so at least I don’t really lose my rhythm and all that.”

Pagdanganan is a big movie buff but has burned through much of Netflix. Calligraphy has always activated her creative side, so armed with a set of brush pens, she’s has been working on her penmanship. It’s a stress reliever.

This strange break aside, Pagdanganan admits to missing her University of Arizona team – she would have missed them regardless of how her rookie year played out. Pagdanganan brought an infusion of energy (and talent) when she transferred to Arizona from Gonzaga in the fall of 2017. She won her first tournament out of the gate and sunk an all-time eagle putt to send her team to NCAA match play, which the Wildcats ultimately won.

Pagdanganan holds the camera for a post-NCAA title selfie.

She thrived as much in the mundane practice days as she did in those moments, though.

“I miss having people around when I practice. I enjoy practicing by myself but I still miss having those fun times when we’re on the golf course,” she said. “You get to do fun drills with them or you get to play games on the course.”

Pagdanganan realizes she now has a little more time to make a run at the Olympics. She didn’t think much about representing her native Philippines in the 2016 Games, but the idea really began to take hold in her final season at Arizona.

Pagdanganan remained amateur through December just to play in the Southeast Asian Games, where she won gold. She knew she needed to come out of the gate hot in 2020 for a shot at Tokyo. She figured LPGA membership would go a long way in that.

“It sucks that it got pushed back, I know a lot of people were looking forward to it,” she said. “But at the same time, I guess I have more time to actually prepare for it and give myself a better chance of getting in.”

The Olympic dream, at least, can dance another year.

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Stuck at Home With: LPGA Hall of Famer Juli Inkster

Juli Inkster is using downtime forced by the coronavirus pandemic to heal an injury sustained during a workout. Being still hasn’t been easy.

The “Stuck at Home With” series profiles players, caddies and staff in the women’s game who are making the most of an unprecedented break in tour life due to the coronavirus pandemic. New stories will be posted every Tuesday and Thursday.

Juli Inkster likes to jump rope at the end of her workouts. She was running with the rope when she heard the pop. The 59-year-old immediately knew that something had gone terribly wrong.

The diagnosis: meniscus root tear.

The LPGA Hall of Famer had surgery nearly seven weeks ago and can testify that crutches are “not for the weak of heart.”

“You don’t put the crutches under your armpits,” she said of the proper technique. “Six inches below your armpits and you use your shoulders to push you. I’ll be teaching a class on that this summer if anybody wants to get in.”

There’s never a good time to be sidelined with an injury, but at least this unprecedented stretch of being grounded in California puts Inkster in line with everyone else during this national lockdown. On a tough day of stir crazy, neighbors might spot her walking around the block on her crutches just to get out.

“I have to say, the first weeks were tough really between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.,” she said. “I figure at 5 p.m., you can at least have a glass of wine or a cocktail.”

Juli Inkster on her crutches.

The seven-time major winner bought a putting mat with lines on it (no holes) and hopes to start chipping soon. The original goal was to get back for the U.S. Senior Women’s Open, but that event, scheduled for July 9-12 at Brooklawn Country Club in Fairfield, Connecticut, has been canceled.

Inkster wasn’t really a reader before she had kids but found that after she put them to bed, she was always pretty wired. She started reading as a young mom to help her wind down at night. In recovery, she has read four books on her Kindle to date and relies on the recommendations of friends to avoid clunkers. She’s mostly into fiction.

Her spring lineup: “The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo,” “The Giver of Stars,” “The Fountains of Silence” and “Red Sparrow.”

On the subject of seven husbands, Inkster has had only one, Brian, and he’s been fantastic as “Mr. Nurse” during this time. Even more than most couples, the coronavirus quarantine has given the Inksters a record amount of time together.

“Let me just say you find out quickly why you married them,” she said.

At her home in Los Altos, Inkster likes to read outside by the fire pit in her comfy chair looking back toward the woods. At her second home in Palm Springs, she gazes toward the mountains in between pages.

Juli Inkster at home, enjoying a forest view.

Inkster knows that compared to many, including youngest daughter Cori, she has it good. Cori and her boyfriend have spent the past year in Ireland. Both of Inkster’s daughters work for SurveyMonkey. Cori is in a one-bedroom apartment on the seventh floor in Dublin working from home. She mostly keeps to a two-kilometer circle.

When golf returns without spectators, at least for now on the PGA Tour, Inkster thinks about all the other people it takes beyond players and caddies to run a tournament. She thinks about how important pro-ams are to the bottom line of an LPGA event.

How many executives will want to fly in for a round of golf?

“They’ve got a lot of question marks,” she said.

Inkster tries not to watch the news too much. Her husband does it for her. She talks on the phone with Solheim players like Paula Creamer, Morgan Pressel, Gerina Piller and Angel Yin. Might swap a few texts with the Kordas. Rookie Andrea Lee has reached out a few times.

Inkster trusts LPGA commissioner Mike Whan’s leadership in this uncertain time and feels for players who are struggling with no money coming in.

“I think getting the U.S. Women’s Open in December is awesome,” she said. Thanks to open qualifying, it’s an event that can change anyone’s year.

Sometimes, the Inksters get in the car and drive over to Half Moon Bay, pick up some soup and eat in the parking lot.

In these times, Captain America couldn’t be more relatable.

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Stuck at Home With: Symetra Tour player Samantha Wagner

Like the rest of the golf world, Samantha Wagner is grounded for the time being, waiting to get back into form on the Symetra Tour.

The “Stuck at Home With” series profiles players, caddies and staff in the women’s game who are making the most of an unprecedented break in tour life due to the coronavirus pandemic. New stories will be posted every Tuesday and Thursday.

Samantha Wagner had put a brand new set of clubs – Callaways – in her bag for this 2020 season. She had spent the last few months overhauling her swing with a new instructor on the other side of the country. After two years learning the ropes on the Symetra Tour, this figured to be a big year on her climb to the LPGA.

It’s what makes the waiting these past few weeks so much harder.

Like the rest of the professional golf world, Wagner is grounded at least until mid-June, which is the anticipated restart date for the Symetra Tour. It’s one thing for an established player to take a forced break in her career, but it’s something entirely different to be on the kind of launch path that Wagner felt herself on, only to have it come to an abrupt stop.

“It feels like the off-season,” said Wagner, an Orlando-based player slated to make a solo trip to California right before the coronavirus brought the country to a screeching halt.

It’s a steep learning curve going from college to professional golf. Wagner, 23, played two seasons at the University of Florida before making her pro debut at the 2017 U.S. Women’s Open. After two more professional starts, Wagner advanced all the way to final stage of Q-School that fall but came up short of any LPGA status.

In her first Symetra Tour season in 2018, Wagner made the cut in more than half of her 20 starts. She had back-to-back top 10s in June. It was important to learn how to mentally deal with knowing exactly how much money she needed to land an LPGA card (only the top 10 money earners do that).

“You’re thinking, ‘If I have three top-20 finishes or better, obviously I’m not sure what everyone else is going to do, but it’s going to be close,’” she said. “You’ve got it in your head and you’re playing with that. It’s hard to stop yourself from doing it.”

Wagner was inside a tightly packed top 30 with three tournaments left that season, but ultimately landed in 50th on the year-end money list. Life goes on.

The Wagner family is a tight-knit one. Milestones are shared. So after Wagner’s older brother C.J. proposed to his girlfriend Madison at the end of 2018, their Oct. 25 wedding date went down on the calendar with a big circle. The only problem was, as Wagner later confirmed, it was going to fall right on top of the LPGA Q-Series.

Family discussions ensued, and C.J. assured his sister he’d understand if she couldn’t be there. It became hard to focus on the golf.

“In my heart, I knew where I wanted to be,” she said. “All year, it was like, ‘If I don’t play well here, it’s just making my chances of being at his wedding worse.’”

Samantha Wagner and her brother C.J.

Ultimately, Wagner missed the last eight cuts of the 2019 season, decided not to enter Q-School and doesn’t regret her decision for a second. The weekend marked two new beginnings: a new marriage for C.J., and a game overhaul for Samantha.

If there’s a silver lining in this shutdown, it’s that the extended break has given Wagner time to groove a brand-new swing, built with help from California-based instructor Chris Mayson. Her decision to change coaches “was my first adult thing,” Wagner says, considering Mayson is her first instructor who didn’t know her as a teenager.

He took one look at her swing – which involved an over-the-top, drop-it-inside move – and told her he wasn’t sure how she was making contact.

“I know I struggled mentally with all the stuff about the wedding last year, but my swing was really off as well,” she said.

Wagner made such monumental changes that she spent an initial six weeks on the range adjusting, “which I have not done ever in my life,” she said. She has tested it only once in competition, at an Eggland’s Best Tour event in Daytona Beach in January. She finished fourth.

Samantha Wagner practicing in her down time.

As this break from competitive golf drags on, Wagner’s mom Amy has had much-needed words of wisdom.

“Pick something to work on,” she told the whole family.

For Samantha, that means blogging. She made her first post on a new blog site on March 29.

“It’s exciting,” Wagner said of her writing. “I feel like it’s something I’ve been going back and forth on wanting to do. I never knew where to start.”

She has a stack of books to read, too, and is considering taking a class to earn her real estate license. The family brought home a new Golden Retriever puppy, Yoddha, last month, too. Despite all the distractions, a feeling of suspense persists.

“The first two years, I had two things that were in my control with school and my brother’s wedding. And it’s not just me. I have friends all over the country and all over the world, some aren’t even playing.

“We’re all just waiting.”

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