LPGA

(Redirected from Ladies Professional Golf Association)


The 'LPGA', in full the 'Ladies Professional Golf Association', is an American organization for female professional golfers. The organization, with headquarters in Daytona Beach, Florida, is best known for running the 'LPGA Tour', a series of weekly golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world which runs from February to December each year. In 2007 prize money on the LPGA Tour is USD $54.285 million. [1]
Other "LPGA"s exist in other countries, each with a geographical designation in its name, but the U.S. organization is the largest and best known. The LPGA is also an organization for female club and teaching golf professionals. This is different from the PGA Tour which runs the main professional tours in the U.S. and, since 1968, has been independent of the club and teaching professionals' organization, the PGA of America.
The LPGA was founded in 1950 by a group of 13 women, including Babe Didrikson Zaharias. It is now the oldest ongoing women's professional sports organization in the United States.[2][3] Carolyn Bivens is the current LPGA Commissioner.

Contents
LPGA Tour tournaments
International presence
Other tours organized by the LPGA
LPGA Playoffs
2007 LPGA Tour
Historical tour schedules and results
LPGA Tour awards
Leading money winners by year
Leading career money winners
Total prize money awarded in past decades
See also
References and notes
External links

LPGA Tour tournaments


Most of the LPGA Tour's events are held in the United States. In 2007 there are two tournaments in Mexico and one in Canada. Two events are co-sanctioned with the Ladies European Tour: the Women's British Open and the Evian Masters in France, held the preceding week. An autumn Asian swing includes tournaments in Korea, Thailand, and Japan.
The LPGA's annual major championships are:

Kraft Nabisco Championship

McDonald's U.S. LPGA Championship Presented by Coca-Cola

U.S. Women's Open

Ricoh Women's British Open (held in cooperation with Ladies European Tour)

International presence


In its early decades the LPGA Tour was dominated by American players. Vivien Saunders of the United Kingdom became the first player living outside the United States to gain an LPGA tour card in 1969. The non-U.S. contingent is now very large. The last time an American player topped the money list was in 1993, the last time an American led the tour in tournaments won was in 1996, and from 2000 through 2006 non-Americans won 22 of 28 major championships. In 2007 there are 117 non-Americans from 26 countries, including 45 from South Korea, 15 from Sweden, 9 from Australia, 9 from Great Britain (4 from England, 4 from Scotland, 1 from Wales) and 7 from Canada, 1 from Mexico. [2]
Of the 33 events in 2006, only seven were won by Americans, with Cristie Kerr the only American to win more than once (three times). By contrast, Mexican Lorena Ochoa won six events, Australian Karrie Webb five, Swede Annika Sörenstam three, and nine different South Koreans combined won 11 events. The season-ending LPGA Playoffs at The ADT was won by Paraguayan Julieta Granada. The other seven finalists in that event featured only two Americans (Paula Creamer and Natalie Gulbis); the others were Ochoa, Webb, Koreans Il Mi Chung and Mi Hyun Kim, and Japanese Ai Miyazato.
In 2007 so far, Americans have seen a relative resurgence. Nine of the 22 official events so far have been won by Americans, and for the first time since 2000, two Americans have won majors. However, the two multiple tournament winners so far are non-Americans—Ochoa and Norway's Suzann Pettersen.

Other tours organized by the LPGA


Besides the main LPGA Tour, the LPGA operates a second-level developmental tour, the Futures Tour. Top finishers at the end of each season on that tour receive playing privileges on the main LPGA Tour for the following year.
The LPGA also administers an annual Qualifying School similar to that conducted by the PGA Tour. Depending on a golfer's finish in the Qualifying School tournament, she may receive full or partial playing privileges on the LPGA Tour.
In 2001, the LPGA established the Women's Senior Golf Tour, now called The Legends Tour, for women professionals aged 45 and above.

LPGA Playoffs


Since 2006, all LPGA tournaments have been part of a playoff system, leading up to the November LPGA Playoffs at The ADT. The LPGA schedule is divided into two halves, with 15 players from each half qualifying for the ADT Championship based on their performance. Two wild-card selections are also included in the Playoffs. The 2007 winner of the ADT Championship, which features three days of “playoffs” plus the final championship round, will earn $1 million.

2007 LPGA Tour


ADT Playoff Categories:

★ 'winner': Official LPGA Tour events with a purse of at least $2,000,000. Winners of these events automatically qualify for the ADT Championship.

★ 'standard': Winners do not automatically qualify for the ADT Championship; the ADT points system is used.

★ 'unofficial' These events are not official LPGA Tour events and participation is not part of the ADT Playoff system.
The number in parentheses after winners' names show the player's total number of official money, individual event wins on the LPGA Tour including that event.
Dates Tournament Location ADT Playoff
Category
Winner
Jan 19-21 Women's World Cup of Golf South Africa unofficial (Julieta Granada / Celeste Troche)
Feb 15-17 SBS Open at Turtle Bay Hawaii standard Paula Creamer (3)
Feb 22-24 Fields Open in Hawaii Hawaii standard Stacy Prammanasudh (2)
Mar 9-11 MasterCard Classic Mexico standard Meaghan Francella (1)
Mar 22-25 Safeway International Arizona standard Lorena Ochoa (10)
Mar 29-Apr 1 'Nabisco Championship' California winner Morgan Pressel (1)
Apr 12-15 Ginn Open Florida winner Brittany Lincicome (2)
Apr 26-29Corona Championship Mexico standard Silvia Cavalleri (1)
May 4-6SemGroup Championship Oklahoma standard Mi Hyun Kim (8)
May 10-13Michelob ULTRA Open at Kingsmill Virginia winner Suzann Pettersen (1)
May 17-20Sybase Classic New Jersey standard Lorena Ochoa (11)
May 24-27LPGA Corning Classic New York standard Young Kim (1)
May 31-Jun 3Ginn Tribute Hosted by Annika South Carolina winner Nicole Castrale (1)
Jun 7-10'McDonald's LPGA Championship' Maryland winner Suzann Pettersen (2)
Jun 21-24Wegmans LPGA New York standard Lorena Ochoa (12)
End of first half of the season
Jun 28-Jul 1'U.S. Women's Open' North Carolina winner Cristie Kerr (10)
Jul 12-15Jamie Farr Owens Corning Classic Ohio standard Se Ri Pak (24)
Jul 19-22HSBC Women's World Match Play Championship New York winner Seon Hwa Lee (2)
Jul 26-29Evian Masters France winner Natalie Gulbis (1)
Aug 2-5'Ricoh Women's British Open' Scotland winner Lorena Ochoa (13)
Aug 16-19CN Canadian Women's Open Alberta, Canada winner Lorena Ochoa (14)
Aug 24-26Safeway Classic Oregon standard Lorena Ochoa (15)
Aug 30-Sep 2State Farm Classic Illinois standard Sherri Steinhauer (8)
Sep 7-9LPGA NW Arkansas Championship Arkansas standard
Sep 14-16The Solheim Cup Sweden unofficial
Sep 27-30Navistar LPGA Classic Alabama standard
Oct 4-7Longs Drugs Challenge California standard
Oct 11-14Samsung World Championship California standard
Oct 19-21Hana Bank-KOLON Championship South Korea standard
Oct 26-28Honda LPGA Thailand Thailand standard
Nov 2-4Mizuno Classic Japan standard
Nov 8-11The Mitchell Company Tournament of Champions Alabama standard
Nov 15-18LPGA Playoffs at The ADT Florida n/a
TBALexus Cup Australia unofficial
Dec 22-23Wendy's 3-Tour Challenge Nevada unofficial

Tournaments in 'bold' are majors.

Historical tour schedules and results


Year Number of
tournaments
Countries hosting
tournaments
Total prize money
2006 Tour 36 10 $50,275,000
2005 Tour 35 9 $45,100,000
2004 Tour 33 6 $42,875,000

LPGA Tour awards


The LPGA Tour presents several annual awards. Three are awarded in competitive contests, based on scoring over the course of the year.

★ The Rolex Player of the Year is awarded based on a formula in which points are awarded for top-10 finishes and are doubled at the LPGA's four major championships and at the season-ending ADT Championship. The points system is: 30 points for first; 12 points for second; nine points for third; seven points for fourth; six points for fifth; five points for sixth; four points for seventh; three points for eighth; two points for ninth and one point for 10th.

★ The Vare Trophy, named for Glenna Collett-Vare, is given to the player with the lowest scoring average for the season.

★ The Louise Suggs Rolex Rooke of the Year Award is awarded to the first-year player on the LPGA Tour who scores the highest in a points competition in which points are awarded at all full-field domestic events and doubled at the LPGA's four major championships. The points system is: 150 points for first; 80 points for second; 75 points for third; 70 points for fourth; and 65 points for fifth. After fifth place, points are awarded in increments of three, beginning at sixth place with 62 points. Rookies who make the cut in an event and finish below 41st each receive five points. The award is named after Louise Suggs, one of the founders of the LPGA.
YearPlayer of the YearVare TrophyRookie of the Year
2006 Lorena Ochoa Lorena Ochoa Seon Hwa Lee
2005 Annika Sorenstam Annika Sorenstam Paula Creamer
2004 Annika Sorenstam Grace Park Shi Hyun Ahn
2003 Annika Sorenstam Se Ri Pak Lorena Ochoa
2002 Annika Sorenstam Annika Sorenstam Beth Bauer
2001 Annika Sorenstam Annika Sorenstam Hee-Won Han
2000 Karrie Webb Karrie Webb Dorothy Delasin
1999 Karrie Webb Karrie Webb Mi Hyun Kim
1998 Annika Sorenstam Annika Sorenstam Se Ri Pak
1997 Annika Sorenstam Karrie Webb Lisa Hackney
1996 Laura Davies Annika Sorenstam Karrie Webb
1995 Annika Sorenstam Annika Sorenstam Pat Hurst
1994 Beth Daniel Beth Daniel Annika Sorenstam
1993 Betsy King Betsy King Suzanne Strudwick
1992 Dottie Mochrie Dottie Mochrie Helen Alfredsson
1991 Pat Bradley Pat Bradley Brandie Burton
1990 Beth Daniel Beth Daniel Hiromi Kobayashi
1989 Betsy King Beth Daniel Pamela Wright
1988 Nancy Lopez Colleen Walker Liselotte Neumann
1987 Ayako Okamoto Betsy King Tammie Green
1986 Pat Bradley Pat Bradley Jody Rosenthal
1985 Nancy Lopez Nancy Lopez Penny Hammel
1984 Betsy King Patty Sheehan Juli Inkster
1983 Patty Sheehan JoAnne Carner Stephanie Farwig
1982 JoAnne Carner JoAnne Carner Patti Rizzo
1981 JoAnne Carner JoAnne Carner Patty Sheehan
1980 Beth Daniel Amy Alcott Myra Blackwelder
1979 Nancy Lopez Nancy Lopez Beth Daniel
1978 Nancy Lopez Nancy Lopez Nancy Lopez
1977 Judy Rankin Judy Rankin Debbie Massey
1976 Judy Rankin Judy Rankin Bonnie Lauer
1975 Sandra Palmer JoAnne Carner Amy Alcott
1974 JoAnne Carner JoAnne Carner Jan Stephenson
1973 Kathy Whitworth Amy Alcott Laura Baugh
1972 Kathy Whitworth Kathy Whitworth Jocelyne Bourassa
1971 Kathy Whitworth Kathy Whitworth Sally Little
1970 Sandra Haynie Amy Alcott JoAnne Carner
1969 Kathy Whitworth Kathy Whitworth Jane Blalock
1968 Kathy Whitworth Carol Mann Sandra Post
1967 Kathy Whitworth Kathy Whitworth Sharron Moran
1966 Kathy Whitworth Kathy Whitworth Jan Ferraris
1965 Kathy Whitworth Margie Masters
1964 Mickey Wright Susie Berning
1963 Mickey Wright Clifford Ann Creed
1962 Mickey Wright Mary Mills
1961 Mickey Wright
1960 Mickey Wright
1959 Betsy Rawls
1958 Beverly Hanson
1957 Louise Suggs
1956 Patty Berg
1955 Patty Berg
1954 Babe Zaharias
1953 Patty Berg

Leading money winners by year



YearPlayerCountryEarnings ($)Most wins
2006Lorena OchoaMexico2,592,8726 - Lorena Ochoa
2005Annika SörenstamSweden2,588,24010 - Annika Sörenstam
2004Annika SörenstamSweden2,544,7078 - Annika Sörenstam
2003Annika SörenstamSweden2,029,506 6 - Annika Sörenstam
2002Annika SörenstamSweden2,863,904 11 - Annika Sörenstam
2001Annika SörenstamSweden2,105,868 8 - Annika Sörenstam
2000Karrie WebbAustralia1,876,853 7 - Karrie Webb
1999Karrie WebbAustralia1,591,959 6 - Karrie Webb
1998Annika SörenstamSweden1,092,748 4 - Annika Sörenstam, Se Ri Pak
1997Annika SörenstamSweden1,236,789 6 - Annika Sörenstam
1996Karrie WebbAustralia1,002,0004 - Laura Davies, Dottie Pepper, Karrie Webb
1995Annika SörenstamSweden666,5333 - Annika Sörenstam
1994Laura DaviesEngland687,2014 - Beth Daniel
1993Betsy KingUnited States595,9923 - Brandie Burton
1992Dottie MochrieUnited States693,3354 - Dottie Mochrie
1991Pat BradleyUnited States763,1184 - Pat Bradley, Meg Mallon
1990Beth DanielUnited States863,5787 - Beth Daniel
1989Betsy KingUnited States654,1326 - Betsy King
1988Sherri TurnerUnited States350,8513 - 5 players (see 1)
1987Ayako OkamotoJapan466,0345 - Jane Geddes
1986Pat BradleyUnited States492,0215 - Pat Bradley
1985Nancy LopezUnited States416,4725 - Nancy Lopez
1984Betsy KingUnited States266,7714 - Patty Sheehan, Amy Alcott
1983JoAnne CarnerUnited States291,4044 - Pat Bradley, Patty Sheehan
1982JoAnne CarnerUnited States310,4005 - JoAnne Carner, Beth Daniel,
1981Beth DanielUnited States206,9985 - Donna Caponi
1980Beth DanielUnited States231,0005 - Donna Caponi, JoAnne Carner
1979Nancy LopezUnited States197,4898 - Nancy Lopez
1978Nancy LopezUnited States189,8149 - Nancy Lopez
1977Judy RankinUnited States122,8905 - Judy Rankin, Debbie Austin
1976Judy RankinUnited States150,7346 - Judy Rankin
1975Sandra PalmerUnited States76,3744 - Carol Mann, Sandra Haynie
1974JoAnne CarnerUnited States87,0946 - JoAnne Carner, Sandra Haynie
1973Kathy WhitworthUnited States82,8647 - Kathy Whitworth
1972Kathy WhitworthUnited States65,0635 - Kathy Whitworth, Jane Blalock
1971Kathy WhitworthUnited States41,1815 - Kathy Whitworth
1970Kathy WhitworthUnited States30,2354 - Shirley Englehorn
1969Carol MannUnited States49,1528 - Carol Mann
1968Kathy WhitworthUnited States48,37910 - Carol Mann, Kathy Whitworth
1967Kathy WhitworthUnited States32,9378 - Kathy Whitworth
1966Kathy WhitworthUnited States33,5179 - Kathy Whitworth
1965Kathy WhitworthUnited States28,6588 - Kathy Whitworth
1964Mickey WrightUnited States29,80011 - Mickey Wright
1963Mickey WrightUnited States31,26913 - Mickey Wright
1962Mickey WrightUnited States21,64110 - Mickey Wright
1961Mickey WrightUnited States22,23610 - Mickey Wright
1960Louise SuggsUnited States16,8926 - Mickey Wright
1959Betsy RawlsUnited States26,77410 - Betsy Rawls
1958Beverly HansonUnited States12,6395 - Mickey Wright
1957Patty BergUnited States16,2725 - Betsy Rawls, Patty Berg
1956Marlene HaggeUnited States20,2358 - Marlene Hagge
1955Patty BergUnited States16,4926 - Patty Berg
1954Patty BergUnited States16,0115 - Louise Suggs, Babe Zaharias
1953Louise SuggsUnited States19,8168 - Louise Suggs
1952Betsy RawlsUnited States14,5056 - Betsy Rawls, Louise Suggs
1951Babe ZahariasUnited States15,0877 - Babe Zaharias
1950Babe ZahariasUnited States14,8006 - Babe Zaharias

1 The five players with who won three titles in 1988 were Juli Inkster, Rosie Jones, Betsy King, Nancy Lopez, and Ayako Okamoto.

Leading career money winners


The table below shows the top 20 career money leaders on the LPGA Tour at the end of the 2006 season. There is a more complete list, updated weekly during the Tour season, on the LPGA's official site here.
Position Player Country Prize money ($)
1. Annika Sörenstam 20,304,562
2. Karrie Webb 12,826,995
3. Juli Inkster 11,255,669
4. Se Ri Pak 8,966,948
5. Meg Mallon 8,818,462
6. Beth Daniel 8,755,733
7. Rosie Jones 8,355,068
8. Laura Davies 7,716,726
9. Betsy King 7,637,621
10. Dottie Pepper 6,827,284
11. Cristie Kerr 6,731,130
12. Mi Hyun Kim 6,581,844
13. Lorie Kane 6,501,734
14. Lorena Ochoa 6,069,222
15. Pat Bradley 5,755,951
16. Liselotte Neumann 5,676,328
17. Kelly Robbins 5,621,742
18. Pat Hurst 5,519,509
19. Patty Sheehan 5,513,409
20. Nancy Lopez 5,320,877

Total prize money awarded in past decades



★ 2000 $38,500,000

★ 1990 $17,100,000

★ 1980 $5,150,000

★ 1970 $435,040

★ 1960 $186,700

★ 1950 $50,000

See also



Golfers with most LPGA Tour wins

Golfers with most LPGA major championship wins

Women's World Golf Rankings

Professional golf tours

2007 in golf

References and notes


1. [1], ''lpga.com'', Bivens announces 2007 Schedule.
2.
LPGA Tour: History

3.
About the LPGA


External links



Official site

Seoul Sisters - fansite about the many South Koreans on the LPGA Tour

LPGA Tour Fan discussion forum

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