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The best of the LPGA Tour, from those with a front-row seat

Nelly Korda has been one of the most exciting golfers on the LPGA Tour in recent years. (Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

As the LPGA Tour heads into the Chevron Championship this weekend, the first major tournament of the 2022 season, it’s as good a time as any to start following the action.

The first few months alone have produced a host of intriguing storylines. World No. 1 Jin Young Ko has scored 16 rounds in the 60s and 34 consecutive rounds under par after setting a record of 66 straight greens hit in regulation. Leona Maguire of Ireland and Nanna Koerstz Madsen of Denmark became the first players from their countries to win on the LPGA Tour.

If you’re looking for a primer on the LPGA as the season heats up, we have you covered.

Just Women’s Sports spoke with six Golf Channel commentators who have covered the LPGA for nearly 100 years combined, giving them a platform to serve as guides for the tour. They shared their favorite moments on air and what to watch for in the LPGA this year.

(Editor’s note: The following interviews have been lightly condensed for length and clarity.)

When watching the LPGA for the first time, what should a new fan be looking out for?

Paige Mackenzie: LPGA player (2007-15), analyst (2012-present)

One of the things I think is to watch the yardages, watch what clubs they’re hitting. I think that’s one of the things that would surprise most people who have never watched the LPGA, is to see the precision with which they execute shots at the yardages they’re doing it. And it’s a relatable game. A seven iron goes 155 yards, and that means something to them. I think for somebody that’s had a little bit of golf exposure, that’s something to pay attention to.

I think the other thing is just watching players when they get into the zone. Anybody who appreciates sports can appreciate that, whether it’s watching Jin Young Ko hit 63 consecutive greens in regulation or a player get hot with a putter and start draining putts from everywhere. You can start to ride that excitement, too. At times, (golf is) slow-paced, but if you watch one particular player and you’re watching them hit a hot streak, you can feel that momentum.

Jerry Foltz: On-course reporter (1999-present), professional golfer (1985-99)

The precision with which every player out there plays the game is so much different than the men’s game. LPGA players, although they are getting longer and longer in general, they still play a very precise game tee to green, and you can learn a lot more from them than you can from the big guys playing the PGA Tour. The average person who’s tuning in to watch golf for the first time probably isn’t going to be able to, at any time in their life, pick up a six iron and hit it 220 yards. Some guys can, but for the most part, they’re not. But they can learn how to chip and putt and control their wedges and learn how to hit an eight iron 145 yards, as is commonplace on the LPGA Tour.

Secondly, I think the people, the character of the players themselves. The type of human beings that each lady on the LPGA Tour represents themselves to be, not only for themselves and for their parents as a product of their parents, but also for their sponsors, for their fans. It’s a role that they seem to take a lot more seriously. You see the grace with which they carry themselves, the way they interact with their fellow players, the way they don’t cuss a whole lot, don’t slam clubs a whole lot, and when the cameras catch them signing autographs between holes and giving little kids golf balls. Just the little things that you catch a glimpse of from time to time, they’re doing all the time.

Amy Rogers: LPGA Tour content producer (2015-20), Golf Channel on-air and writing contributor (2020-present)

I think there are two things. First, if they are into golf, it’s such a great opportunity to be able to learn from what they’re watching on the screen from the best female golfers in the world. So many times we hear that the men’s game is just on a whole different level, that people really can’t aspire to it when you see people bombing it over 350 yards. But by watching the women, you can really try to emulate and take away more of what they’re doing. They really put a premium on hitting greens and hitting fairways, and that’s something that a lot of us amateurs out here can watch and try to emulate.

I think the other thing for people who aren’t as familiar with the LPGA would be to look at those key storylines at the top of the women’s game, particularly the budding rivalry — that the media, I think, has manufactured more than perhaps really exists — between Jin Young Ko and Nelly Korda. These two have traded spots at the top of the women’s rankings over the last few years and are just dominating the women’s game. That’s definitely a storyline to keep an eye on.

What separates LPGA players as the best golfers in the world?

Grant Boone: Play-by-play broadcaster (2000-07 & 2016-present), lead LPGA host (2018-present)

There are so many great players on the men’s and women’s side who can’t even get to the highest level because the competition keeps going up each year. I think you need look no further than someone like Sophia Popov, who had dropped down to the Epson Tour in 2020 and was just happy to have some place to play after fighting through Lyme disease in recent years before finally getting a diagnosis that would help her regain her strength. And when given the opportunity to play an LPGA event, she finished in the top 10. That got her into the Women’s British Open a couple of weeks later, and then she won that event at historic Royal Troon.

You start to realize … if she’s not even in the top 300 and she’s playing at that level, there are so many great players who, if given the opportunity, can perform at exceedingly high levels. She’s gone on to back that up by making the Solheim Cup team, and we see it not just in her, but in numerous other players.

Kay Cockerill: LPGA player (1988-97), analyst/on-course reporter (1995-present)

First and foremost, impeccable mechanics and a meticulously consistent setup over every shot. Beyond physical capabilities is what’s between the ears – their mental strength, their true belief in what they’re doing. And believe me, that gets rocked several times a week, a day, because golf is hard. That ability to move on from mistakes and minimize mistakes and stay optimistic and positive throughout the entire round, throughout the entire week, throughout the entire year, the players that do that the best usually end up at the top of the list at the end of the week.

They all have very good mechanics at that level, so it’s really the mental game, combined with the best players all hitting the ball exceedingly well and hitting a high percentage of greens. They have better wedge play and they are rock solid. On short putts, three to four footers because if you’re really good on those short putts, that frees you up on longer putts to be a little more aggressive, knowing that you’ll make those come-back putts if you miss.

Tom Abbott: Play-by-Play broadcaster (2007-Present)

Golf is a really complicated sport. There are so many things that can happen in a round of golf and in a player’s career. I think the best are separated mentally. At the end of the day, there is obviously a physical level and there’s a talent level. But the best players in the world have such a strong mental game, and they’re able to get into the right frame of mind and execute when it really matters. Certain players get into a groove, and they find that groove for a long period of time.

What has been your favorite broadcast moment on the LPGA Tour?

Cockerill: A lot of my favorite moments and consistent high points come from the Solheim Cup. And a lot of the time, it seems to involve Suzanne Pettersen. She’s always one of the main ingredients of a great Solheim Cup. I was there watching her the last two or three holes she played as I moved back to her group in Gleneagles during her singles match against Marina Alex. I don’t think anything will ever surpass her making that 6-foot putt to win the Solheim Cup, her reaction and then the mic drop, basically retiring from the game, saying it doesn’t get any better than this.

Abbott: Being at St. Andrews (at the 2007 Ricoh Women’s British Open) when … the women first went there to play a professional tournament and Lorena Ochoa won in 2007 (as the first Mexican player to win a major). That was pretty special. It was important to be there, and you could say the same for Muirfield this year, but I think St. Andrews is in a different league. If the women play there, it’s very special to be part of that.

Rogers: I do a lot of post-round interviews. You typically have two to three questions with a player after a round to just try to pinpoint the biggest storylines of their day. Sometimes that can be kind of narrow. There are not a lot of times we get into the depths of what’s going on, but you never know when you might stumble into something that’s really interesting. For example, this past summer at the Meijer LPGA Classic, Nelly Korda was in contention and she had just missed the cut in her first event of the year at the U.S. Women’s Open, pretty shockingly because she’d been playing some pretty great golf. And in her post-round interview, I had asked her what changed … and she ended up opening up about some of the mental challenges that she was having and how she had looked to what she heard from Bubba Watson and Matthew Wolf on the PGA Tour as a learning opportunity – not taking it so seriously, to have more fun.

Sometimes, even in those limited two to three questions, you can hit on something like that. I always compare it to sort of this lightbulb moment when I’m doing an interview. You can kind of hear that lightbulb switch on or the bells ring in your head, because you know you’ve hit on something special that perhaps you weren’t expecting to get.

The story I was able to tell last year working with Madelene Sagstrom about the abuse that she had endured as a young child. For me to have the trust from a player to open up and to share something that’s probably one of the most — if not the most — painful experiences of her life … and to share her story with the rest of the world in a way that was delicate and appropriate. I’ve had some amazing opportunities to be able to connect with these players, and it’s been a real privilege to be able to share their stories.

Foltz: I know it’s kind of timely now because her mother just passed, but I think my favorite moment, believe it or not, was watching Angela Stanford pose for her win and for the one major (in her 76th career major start) she’s won thus far at Evian. Draped on the 18th hole in an American flag, looking at the stars and the skydivers who dropped from the sky there as part of their celebration at the end of the tournament. Looking to the stars, looking to the gods, because she had just achieved something that she probably thought she never would at that point in her career.

McKenzie: I think it’d be easy to say the Olympics in Japan. That, to me, was very surreal, as a person that grew up idolizing the Olympics, to be able to be there and call it.

But I think even on an individual level, watching when Sei Young Kim won KPMG was one of my favorite calls. She was just so extraordinary when she was playing. It was really fun for me to just watch and be in awe. It’s funny because my career is not nearly as established as these winners that I’m talking about each and every week. So it’s taken me time to kind of figure out, how do I speak from a place of expertise, but not in a way that’s like I know more? These are the best players in the world, and they’re doing extraordinary things. It was that week that I realized that my credibility can come from the fact that I’ve tried it and haven’t been able to do it. It makes me appreciate what I’m witnessing in a way that’s different from a 12 handicap. … I was hoping I could convey that to the audience in a way that makes them understand the level of talent that I’m watching.

Boone: Solheim Cup in 2019 at Gleneagles will always be tough to top, just because you had a magnificent venue which had hosted Ryder Cups and other big events throughout the years. You have the spectacle of match play, which always adds an element of intensity and excitement to it. And then you had a great competition itself.

Going down to the wire the last day, there were about six different moments where it looked like the Americans had it wrapped up and they were going to win for the third consecutive time. And then the Europeans just wouldn’t quite ever go away, and they would scratch out a half point here, a point there. It comes all the way down to the final green, and just seconds after Bronte Law gets a huge point for Europe on the 17th green to close out her match, you have Suzann Pettersen, the stalwart who had been in the middle of so many great moments (but also some controversial moments in Solheim Cup history), a major champion, here she is, with everyone knowing that there’s been speculation she’s going to retire at the end of the Solheim Cup, or sometime very soon. And she hadn’t even been playing very much. Here she comes back, and she rolls in the winning putt from seven or eight feet to close out her match and give Europe the clinching point it needed to come from behind and beat the U.S. And the European fans and team flooded the 18th green at Gleneagles.

It seems like almost every week there’s another great story that unfolds, and some of us have this front row seat to be able to see it and then a privilege and burden, in the best possible description of the term, of trying to tell the story as well as we can.

Kent Paisley is a contributing writer at Just Women’s Sports covering golf and the LPGA. He also contributes to Golf Digest. Follow him on Twitter @KentPaisley.

USC enters superteam era with transfer portal gains 

Oregon State transfer and USC recruit Talia von Oelhoffen at 2024 NCAA women's tournament
Oregon State transfer Talia von Oelhoffen adds fuel to USC's 2025 NCAA title dreams. (Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

With recent transfers Talia von Oelhoffen and Kiki Iriafen joining first-team All-American JuJu Watkins and the nation’s No. 1 recruiting class at USC next season, the Trojans look to transition from an up-and-coming squad to a legitimate title contender. 

Former Oregon State graduate student von Oelhoffen is the latest collegiate talent to commit to the program, announcing her transfer Monday via ESPN. She follows ex-Stanford leading-scorer Iriafen in the jump to the pair’s one-time Pac-12 rival.

The 5-foot-11 Washington native was a two-time All-Pac-12 guard during her time at Oregon State. But after the recent dissolution of the Pac-12, the Corvallis side found themselves without a permanent home conference going forward. Many big name players opted to take their skill elsewhere as a result, with von Oelhoffen’s fellow ex-Beaver Raegan Beers announcing her own departure to Oklahoma on Monday.

According to DraftKings, USC is now tied with UConn for the second-best betting odds to win the 2025 NCAA women’s tournament. Dawn Staley’s tested South Carolina side, poised for a repeat performance, holds down the number one spot.

Last year, LSU loaded up in the transfer portal after beating Iowa to win the 2023 national championship. The Tigers were clear favorites coming into the 2023-24 season, but were bounced in the Elite Eight by Caitlin Clark’s Hawkeyes. Shortly thereafter, star transfer Hailey Van Lith opted to transfer a second time, this time signing with TCU. 

Yet while history proves that an excess of star power doesn’t always translate to on-court chemistry, on paper, USC sure looks ready to hold their own — in 2025 and beyond.

U.S., Mexico drop bid to host 2027 Women’s World Cup 

uswnt fans cheer at 2023 fifa women's world cup in australia
USWNT fans will have to settle for cheering on their home team from abroad in 2027. (Brad Smith/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

The United States and Mexico have withdrawn their joint bid to host the 2027 Women’s World Cup, per a Monday afternoon release from U.S. Soccer and the Mexican Football Federation.

According to the statement, they will instead focus on developing a "more equitable" bid for the 2031 tournament, with the ultimate goal of "eliminating investment disparities" between the men’s and women’s tournaments.

The federations went on to cite the upcoming 2026 Men’s World Cup in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico as an opportunity to build support for local infrastructure, improve audience engagement, and scale up media and partnership deals in preparation to "host a record-breaking tournament in 2031."

"Hosting a World Cup tournament is a huge undertaking — and having additional time to prepare allows us to maximize its impact across the globe," said U.S. Soccer President Cindy Parlow Cone. "Shifting our bid will enable us to host a record-breaking Women’s World Cup in 2031 that will help to grow and raise the level of the women’s game both here at home as well as across the globe."

The decision leaves just Brazil and a joint bid from Belgium, Germany, and the Netherlands in the running for the 2027 host spot. Brazil — the rumored frontrunner — has never hosted a Women’s World Cup, while Germany hosted the 2011 tournament as a solo venture. 

Furthermore, this postponement doesn’t mean the U.S. is a shoo-in for 2031, as it's been previously reported that 2022 UEFA Women's EURO host England is considering their own Women's World Cup bid. FIFA is scheduled to confirm the winning bid after the FIFA Congress votes on May 17th.

NCAA breakout star Kiki Iriafen confirms transfer to USC

Kiki Iriafen #44 of the Stanford Cardinal shoots n the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Women's Basketball tournament
Kiki Iriafen led Stanford to the Sweet 16 in last year's NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament. (Soobum Im/Getty Images)

Former Stanford leading-scorer Kiki Iriafen is set to join star rising sophomore JuJu Watkins at USC next year, reported ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski on Saturday. 

The 6-foot-3 forward is coming off a breakout season with the Cardinal, where the then-junior led Stanford to the Sweet 16 with an average of 19.4 points, 11 rebounds, and 2.3 assists per game. Walking away with the Pac-12’s Most Improved Player award and a spot on the All-Pac-12 team, Iriafen entered the portal at the close of last season and was subsequently ranked second on ESPN’s 2024-2025 transfer ranking list.

At USC, Iriafen will play out her senior year alongside the Women's Basketball Coaches Association’s 2024 National Freshman of the Year JuJu Watkins, forming what could be an explosive partnership for the Trojans as they look to build momentum going into next season. The Southern California side advanced to the Elite Eight for the first time since 1994 this year, ultimately falling to UConn in a heated 80-73 battle.

Iriafen wasn’t the only one making choices this past week. LSU guard Hailey Van Lith officially announced her own transfer to TCU on Friday, while Princeton standout Kaitlyn Chen committed to UConn for her final year of college eligibility. Other big names still weighing their options are Oregon State's Talia Von Oelhoffen and Raegan Beers, as well as UNC's Deja Kelly.

With conference realignment on the horizon and team fit a contending factor, the NCAA women's basketball transfer portal has been busier than ever. And while transfers can bolster many types of college programs, this particular offseason has seen talent-rich programs growing even richer.

WNBA icon Candace Parker retires

Candace Parker #3 of the Las Vegas Aces looks on during a WNBA game with the Indiana Fever
The WNBA great retires a two-time league MVP, seven-time WNBA All-Star, two-time Olympic gold medalist, and two-time NCAA champion. (David Becker/NBAE via Getty Images)

Legendary WNBA superstar Candace Parker announced her retirement from professional basketball on Sunday, effective immediately.

"I promised I'd never cheat the game & that I'd leave it in a better place than I came into it," she wrote in an Instagram post. "The competitor in me always wants 1 more, but it's time. My HEART & body knew, but I needed to give my mind time to accept it."

The Las Vegas Aces forward was in the midst of rehabbing a right ankle injury and a left foot fracture after missing part of the 2023 season.

One of women's basketball's most prominent trailblazers, Parker popularized the play of a "big guard." A back-to-back NCAA National Championship winner with Tennessee, she was drafted No. 1 overall by the Los Angeles Sparks in 2008. She was named both WNBA MVP and Rookie of the Year in her debut season with the league. 

Parker exits the pros a three-time WNBA champion, a two-time league MVP, seven-time WNBA All-Star, two-time Olympic gold medalist, and two-time NCAA champion, in addition to many more individual accolades. Throughout her 16-year career, she averaged 16 points, 8.5 rebounds, and four assists per game. She remains the only player in WNBA history to earn three WNBA titles with three different teams: LA in 2016, Chicago in 2021, and Las Vegas in 2023. 

In her announcement, the 38-year-old implied the physical toll of league play was a driving factor in her ultimate decision to walk away from the game, despite recently signing a one-year deal with Las Vegas.

"This offseason hasn’t been fun on a foot that isn’t cooperating," she wrote. "It’s no fun playing in pain (10 surgeries in my career) it’s no fun knowing what you could do, if only…it’s no fun hearing 'she isn’t the same' when I know why, it’s no fun accepting the fact you need surgery AGAIN.

"I’m grateful that for 16 years I PLAYED A GAME for a living & DESPITE all the injuries, I hooped," she continued. "I’m grateful for family, friends, teammates, coaches, doctors, trainers & fans who made this journey so special."

Fans weren’t the only ones shocked by Parker’s surprise retirement. In a reaction captured on video, Liberty forward Breanna Stewart responded to the news with a jaw-dropped, eyebrow-raised "What? Wow." 

Yet while the Naperville, Illinois native’s time on the court might be over, Parker says she isn't leaving the world of basketball anytime soon.

"This is the beginning," she wrote. "I’m attacking business, private equity, ownership (I will own both a NBA & WNBA team), broadcasting, production, boardrooms, beach volleyball, dominoes (sorry babe it’s going to get more real) with the same intensity & focus I did basketball."

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