Daily Dispatch

All set for invasion of tee-girls

- By LARRY FINE

GOLF is getting younger, more global and more female, all to the delight of LPGA Commission­er Mike Whan.

Rather than cringe at the Asian dominance of the largely US tour a decade ago, Whan embraced the global appeal of the game and now revels in the growth during his eight-year reign.

“My first day on this job, I was introduced at Madison Square Garden in 2009 as the new commission­er and when we went to the Q&A session, the first question I got was: ‘Commission­er Whan, what are you going to do about all the internatio­nal influences on the tour?’

“I said, ‘embrace it’,” Whan said in an interview this week ahead of the ANA Inspiratio­n, the first women’s major of 2017 season.

Whan said he told the reporters he would be the commission­er of a new kind of tour.

“Where players come from all over the world, and sponsors are calling us from all over the world and fans want to watch us in seven different website languages,” he said, adding that the global approach was challengin­g but with an upside 10 times higher.

There are 34 official events on the 2017 LPGA Tour schedule with four new events this year including one in Scotland and one in New Zealand. More than $67-million (R863-million) in total prize-money is there for the taking. Six years ago, there were just 23 events.

“It’s a borderless game and as a result people from all over the world are finding it interestin­g whether they’re fans or sponsors or players,” said Whan.

Whan said Lydia Ko, a South Korean-born New Zealander, who took the LPGA Tour by storm after winning as a 15-year-old, was “a game-changer”.

Ko became the youngest winner on the LPGA Tour, the youngest player to win a major, and the youngest world number one.

“I think when somebody breaks a barrier, all of a sudden everybody realises that wasn’t a barrier anymore. And a bunch of 14year-olds are standing on tees all around the world.” The youth movement is in full swing in women’s golf.

The average age of winners last year was 22.3, and more than 70% of winners last year were under the age of 24.

Whan said the trend is fuelled from the introducto­ry levels, and that the growth of interest among young girls was the thing he is proudest of.

“When I joined back in 2008 we, together with the USGA, were running a programme called Girls Golf, where we introduced young girls to the game in an allgirls environmen­t. We were introducin­g about 4 500 girls a year.

“So we set a goal of trying to get to 50 000 girls a year by the time we got to Rio (Olympics). When we got to Rio, we were introducin­g 6 000 girls a year.”

Whan predicted that “by the time we get to Japan (Tokyo 2020 Olympics) we’ll be introducin­g 100 000 girls a year and right now girls under the age of 18 is the fastest growing segment of golf in America”. — Reuters

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? THE PACE-SETTER: Lydia Ko of New Zealand plays a tee shot on the third hole during a pro-am at Mission Hills Country Club on Wednesday in Rancho Mirage, California
Picture: AFP THE PACE-SETTER: Lydia Ko of New Zealand plays a tee shot on the third hole during a pro-am at Mission Hills Country Club on Wednesday in Rancho Mirage, California

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