USA TODAY US Edition

LPGA legend laments that Solheim Cup has been almost ignored

- Beth Ann Nichols

Golf’s beloved TV pioneer Judy Rankin returns to the booth this week for the 18th edition of the Solheim Cup. A 26-time winner on the LPGA, Rankin’s work schedule slowed down considerab­ly in recent years, opening the door for Morgan Pressel to take over as lead analyst on LPGA coverage.

But with Pressel serving as an assistant captain for Stacy Lewis in Spain, Rankin happily agreed to fill in and will sit alongside good friends Terry Gannon and Juli Inkster for the Golf Channel broadcast.

This year’s Solheim Cup will be contested in Spain for the first time, Friday to Sunday, at the picturesqu­e Finca Cortesin resort. Rankin twice captained Team USA to victory in 1996 and 1998. Golfweek caught up with the 78year-old World Golf Hall of Fame member before she headed overseas.

Golfweek: How exciting is it for you to be back in the booth for the Solheim?

Judy Rankin: It’s great. What a good friend of mine Terry (Gannon) is … a bit like Mike Tirico. He can carry the person next to him if he has to. Juli (Inkster) and I are going to share this fun. We have become, over time, quite good friends. I’m just really looking forward to it.

I feel like the Solheim Cup and the matches and the way that all works, both Juli and I are so familiar with so much of it, or maybe all of it. It’s a different animal than a tournament with 144 players.

How is it more challengin­g?

JR: I think it’s a different kind of pressure for players. I think you have to be able to relate that and what it might be. You know, there’s a general pressure of match play anyway.

There is the pressure of playing for your country. And I’m speaking on both sides of the aisle here. There is oftentimes the pressure of having a partner and wanting to carry your part of the load. And then there is just the general pressure of it being so important to so many people – not just to you and your caddie or you and your parents, but to everybody in your circle and on your team and all those things.

Every day you’re trying to win a match and the matches overall. It’s a pressure that daily is like trying to win a tournament in some ways.

For Europe, when you factor in that they’re on home soil, and it seems to be an even stronger team than we saw in 2021 – which was their strongest team ever – how do you think the vibe will be different, because it does feel like Europe’s not an underdog.

JR: I don’t think they are at all. I would expect it to be very close. If I were completely neutral and just trying to make odds, ... I think they have the slight edge, I do.

That’s another part of the pressure. Part of the pressure is if you’re supposed to win. And part of the pressure is, as an underdog, trying to win. Players have a really good time, and they enjoy this so much, but make no mistake, this is a little bit personally important to each one of them.

Who are you most curious about in terms of how they perform?

JR: I’ve never met her, I’ve never seen her play in person, but I’m pretty impressed with Linn Grant. And Charley Hull has just been lighting it up. I know she doesn’t have the win, but she has just been playing unbelievab­ly well.

Do you think it matters that none of these American players have seen the golf course?

JR: Not really. I don’t know what day they will arrive, but I know they will play it a number of times. They’ll have ninehole days so they won’t get exhausted. I’d rather see it and then go play than have seen it two months ago. I don’t think that’s going to be big factor.

Having been a captain, how much pressure do you think Stacy is going to feel with the U.S. coming off losses?

JR: She knows that going in and she’s known it ever since she became the captain. I think that’s another thing that will just cloud your mind. She’s trying to have her approach, a fresh approach.

In the end, you do the best you can do to try to know your players and know how to pair them and when to play them. But in the end, it’s the golf that matters. And that is, to a great degree, out of your hands. And you’re trying to tell players to play like a team member but play your own game.

Maybe there’s a little contradict­ion in team golf. I don’t think she’s under so much pressure.

What would you tell a rookie when trying to explain what this event means to women’s golf ?

JR: If you look at the growth of the matches from when they started in 1990, it’s a tremendous ascent.

The fact that it is sought-after in all these places in America and in Europe, and that it draws so many people almost more than anything we know in women’s golf, it’s a story of its own.

I will tell you and I don’t mind saying it – me personally, maybe I’m a little too close to all of it. I have been very frustrated at television, at PGA Tour Radio, at every single outlet everywhere, that they didn’t not take this opportunit­y to really push the fact that we have two of the greatest events in golf back-to-back in Europe in Spain and Rome.

All I have heard about basically is the Ryder Cup, and nobody is a bigger fan of the Ryder Cup than me. I watch it every shot, and I’ve worked it.

But the fact that all of these outlets have not taken great advantage of these two spectacula­r weeks of golf in Europe and have so infrequent­ly even mentioned that the Solheim Cup was happening and happening first, I would say has not been for the good of the game . ...

Think what a big deal these two weeks are and the first week I won’t say has been ignored, but almost. Somebody missed the proverbial boat and whoever somebody is, I hope I never hear again “for the good of the game.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States