The 2010 LPGA Tour was a series of weekly golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world that began in Thailand on February 13, 2010, and ended in Florida on December 5, 2010. The tournaments were sanctioned by the United States–based Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA).
The tour included 24 tournaments, including events in Malaysia, southern California, and two in New Jersey that were new to the schedule in 2010. Of the 24 tournaments on the schedule, 14 were hosted in the United States. The 2010 season was the tour's smallest schedule in nearly 40 years.
Na Yeon Choi, a third-year player from Korea, topped the official money list with earnings of $1,871,166. She had two wins and 15 top-10 finishes in 23 starts and won the Vare Trophy, given to the player with the lowest scoring average. Yani Tseng from Taiwan captured Player of the Year honors; she won three tournaments in 2010 including two of the four major championships. Spaniard Azahara Muñoz won the Rookie of the Year Award.
The four majors were won by: Yani Tseng (Kraft Nabisco Championship), Cristie Kerr (LPGA Championship), Paula Creamer (U.S. Women's Open), and Yani Tseng (Women's British Open). Tseng's win in the Women's British Open at age 21 made her the youngest player in LPGA history to win three major championships.
Changes in the 2010 season
The 2010 season was the 60th anniversary of the LPGA Tour. As with most years, changes were made to the schedule from the previous year, which included:
- The LPGA Championship sponsorship changed from McDonald's to Wegmans, and the major was moved from Havre de Grace, Maryland, to Rochester, New York. The championship's new home is the Locust Hill Country Club, the host course for the Wegmans LPGA, a regular tour event which was discontinued.
- The first tournament of the season in the U.S. was the Kia Classic, held in late March at La Costa in Carlsbad, California.
- Missing from the schedule was the longtime stop in Phoenix.
- The Sybase Match Play Championship made its debut, replacing the Sybase Classic; both held in northern New Jersey.
- The Bell Micro LPGA Classic returned after a one-year hiatus, held the week of May 10–16.
- After a three-year absence from Atlantic City, the tour returned with long-time supporter ShopRite as the title sponsor.[1]
Schedule and results
The season included 24 official money events, compared with 34 just two years earlier, as the LPGA struggled to cope with the economic downturn. There were three unofficial money events, with 17 off-weeks between the first and last events in 2010.[2]
Date |
Tournament |
Location |
Winner |
First prize ($)
|
Feb 21 |
Honda PTT LPGA Thailand |
Thailand |
Ai Miyazato (2) |
195,000
|
Feb 28 |
HSBC Women's Champions |
Singapore |
Ai Miyazato (3) |
195,000
|
Mar 28 |
Kia Classic Presented by J Golf |
California |
Hee Kyung Seo (1)1 |
255,000
|
Apr 4 |
Kraft Nabisco Championship |
California |
Yani Tseng (3) |
300,000
|
Apr 16 |
The Mojo 62 |
Jamaica |
Anna Nordqvist (n/a)2 |
350,000
|
May 2 |
Tres Marias Championship |
Mexico |
Ai Miyazato (4) |
195,000
|
May 16 |
Bell Micro LPGA Classic |
Alabama |
Se Ri Pak (25) |
195,000
|
May 23 |
Sybase Match Play Championship |
New Jersey |
Sun-Young Yoo (1) |
375,000
|
May 30 |
HSBC LPGA Brasil Cup2 |
Brazil |
Meaghan Francella (n/a)2 |
105,000
|
Jun 14 |
LPGA State Farm Classic |
Illinois |
Cristie Kerr (13) |
255,000
|
Jun 20 |
ShopRite LPGA Classic |
New Jersey |
Ai Miyazato (5) |
225,000
|
Jun 27 |
LPGA Championship |
New York |
Cristie Kerr (14) |
337,500
|
Jul 4 |
Jamie Farr Owens Corning Classic |
Ohio |
Na Yeon Choi (3) |
150,000
|
Jul 11 |
U.S. Women's Open |
Pennsylvania |
Paula Creamer (9) |
585,000
|
Jul 25 |
Evian Masters |
France |
Jiyai Shin (7) |
487,500
|
Aug 1 |
Women's British Open |
England |
Yani Tseng (4) |
408,714
|
Aug 22 |
Safeway Classic |
Oregon |
Ai Miyazato (6) |
225,000
|
Aug 29 |
CN Canadian Women's Open |
Manitoba |
Michelle Wie (2) |
337,500
|
Sep 12 |
P&G NW Arkansas Championship |
Arkansas |
Yani Tseng (5) |
300,000
|
Oct 10 |
Navistar LPGA Classic |
Alabama |
Katherine Hull (2) |
195,000
|
Oct 17 |
CVS/pharmacy LPGA Challenge |
California |
Beatriz Recari (1) |
165,000
|
Oct 24 |
Sime Darby LPGA Malaysia |
Malayasia |
Jimin Kang (2) |
270,000
|
Oct 31 |
LPGA Hana Bank Championship |
South Korea |
Na Yeon Choi (4) |
270,000
|
Nov 7 |
Mizuno Classic |
Japan |
Jiyai Shin (8) |
180,000
|
Nov 9 |
Wendy's 3-Tour Challenge2 |
Nevada |
PGA Tour
|
Nov 14 |
Lorena Ochoa Invitational |
Mexico |
In-Kyung Kim (3) |
220,000
|
Dec 5 |
LPGA Tour Championship |
Florida |
Maria Hjorth (4) |
225,000
|
Tournaments in bold are majors.
1 Hee Kyung Seo was not a member of the LPGA at the time of her win in the Kia Classic.
2 Exhibition tournament, unofficial earnings.
Leaders
Money List leaders
Rank |
Player |
Country |
Earnings ($) |
Events
|
1 |
Na Yeon Choi |
South Korea |
1,871,166 |
23
|
2 |
Jiyai Shin |
South Korea |
1,783,127 |
19
|
3 |
Cristie Kerr |
United States |
1,601,552 |
21
|
4 |
Yani Tseng |
Taiwan |
1,573,529 |
19
|
5 |
Suzann Pettersen |
Norway |
1,557,175 |
19
|
6 |
Ai Miyazato |
Japan |
1,457,384 |
21
|
7 |
In-Kyung Kim |
South Korea |
1,210,068 |
21
|
8 |
Song-Hee Kim |
South Korea |
1,208,698 |
22
|
9 |
Michelle Wie |
United States |
888,017 |
19
|
10 |
Paula Creamer |
United States |
883,870 |
14
|
Full 2010 Official Money List- navigate to "2010"
Scoring Average leaders
Full 2010 Scoring Average List - navigate to "2010", then "Scoring Average"
Awards and honors
The three competitive awards given out by the LPGA each year are:
- 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.
- 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 Rookie 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 award is named after Louise Suggs, one of the founders of the LPGA.
See also
References
External links