ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — Stacy Lewis is again sitting on the high desk of the media room, answering a belated query from somebody too shy to shout over the gusts of wind in the course of the press convention.
Her five-year-old daughter Chesnee desires to know if she will be able to get a swimming pool — “a giant one” — if her mum wins right here, as she did in 2013.
“I feel I’d be capable to type you out, girlie,” says Lewis.
Eleven years have handed because the Texan shot birdie-birdie on the ultimate two holes to clinch the Girls’s Open by two photographs. The second shot into 17 stays the very best of her profession, a lot in order that the 5-iron is the one membership she has saved for her workplace.
However in that point, as motherhood has usurped golf in her checklist of priorities and made her much less tunnel-visioned, the calls for of the LPGA Tour have develop into much more all-consuming.
This 12 months’s tour began with two Florida occasions and ends with one other three within the Sunshine State. The intervening 10 months? A map of tangled zig-zags throughout the US, Canada, Europe and Asia that will not look misplaced in Chesnee’s faculty jotter.
This week’s Open is the fifth main in as many months, not together with the Olympic Video games at France’s Le Golf Nationwide earlier this month. St. Andrews closes the majors season, however with the Solheim Cup in September and one other Pacific leg this fall visiting China, South Korea, Malaysia, Japan and Hawaii within the house of simply 35 days, the schedule is rammed and never ending anytime quickly.
We solely ask crucial questions on this press convention!!!
Chesnee requested mother @Stacy_Lewis if she may get a swimming pool 🥰😂 pic.twitter.com/bhqgapR1Yz
— LPGA (@LPGA) August 21, 2024
Throughout the 33 mixed LPGA Tour stops and majors this 12 months, there are greater than 215 hours of pure flying time. The general mileage provides as much as greater than three journeys world wide.
This isn’t a brand new downside — final 12 months’s schedule included a record-breaking 18 events with greater than 2,000 miles between tour stops. This season there was the journey to China and intra-continental visits to Thailand and Malaysia; criss-crossing from west coast Los Angeles to east coast New Jersey in Could; June’s see-sawing from Michigan to the PGA Championship in Washington state and again once more to Michigan, two six-hour flights with simply 4 days relaxation in between every.
Eight-and-a-half months into the season, with winds of 40-45 mph forecast for Thursday and plenty of gamers having not been in a position to play the Scottish Open to reacquaint themselves with hyperlinks golf, can or not it’s anticipated that any participant is on the high of their recreation? “In all probability not, no,” mentioned Lewis, who’s Workforce USA’s captain for the Solheim Cup in Virginia subsequent month. “Those that performed the Olympics, you discuss to most of them and it’s simply emotionally so taxing that week. So no, our schedule, particularly Olympic years, is actually, actually robust.
“There’s been lots of discuss of schedule recently but in addition on the identical time, I’ve been doing this for 15 or 16 years. You discover ways to take care of it, and also you discover ways to be prepared in these moments and actually simply do the very best you may.”
GO DEEPER
The Girls’s Open is at St. Andrews. The Previous Course is able to problem the sphere
Since 2009, the purse on the Girls’s Open has elevated from $2.2 million to $9 million, a 409 per cent enhance — tripling since AIG began sponsoring the match in 2020.
Lewis described the development in infrastructure and services on the Girls’s Open as “night time and day” in comparison with 2013 however believes their fingers are tied on the subject of discovering methods to ease the gruelling schedule.
“I feel that’s the best however lots of it’s when do sponsors wish to play and when will we get the golf programs?” she mentioned.
“We don’t have the luxurious of the PGA Tour that claims, ‘We’re providing you with X quantity of {dollars} and we’re enjoying this week.’ We don’t have the cash to simply throw round.
“We’re type of on the mercy of sponsors. We’re on the mercy of golf programs and it’s the character of the place we’re. Would we prefer to be higher? Yeah, completely. I feel our crew behind the scenes works like loopy on it however we’re a world tour, and I wish to compete in opposition to the very best gamers each week.
“So to do this, we’ve acquired to go play in Thailand as a result of we have now gamers from Thailand. We’re going to go play in Korea as a result of we have now gamers from Korea. I feel that’s simply the character of it. It’s extra entering into your head, to me, that it is a international tour. You say you’re going to go play on the LPGA Tour, that is additionally what you signed up for.”
World primary Nelly Korda, having gained six tournaments in seven begins between January and Could, together with the Chevron Championship, has earned greater than $3 million this 12 months in prize cash.
That permits her the luxurious of skipping the total Asia swing, a seven-week lay-off early within the 12 months that was sandwiched between her successful streak. However even the two-time main winner needed to withdraw from the JM Eagle LA Championship in April, citing exhaustion.
Lexi Thompson opened up the dialog across the psychological and bodily calls for of the LPGA Tour in Could when she introduced she was retiring on the finish of the season, aged simply 29.
She spoke about how “lonely” and all-consuming life on tour has been since she certified for her first U.S. Open at 12 however believes there are methods the load could possibly be lessened.
“The schedule for certain,” mentioned Thompson. “I feel all of the journey will get loads. I feel the circulation of schedule could possibly be higher. Sure occasions could possibly be back-to-back which are shut to one another. We journey loads in a foreign country however it’s a international tour in order that comes with it, and we’re very fortunate for the sponsors that we have now exterior the nation.
“There’s a little much less weight on my shoulders after the announcement as a result of it has been on my thoughts for just a few years, so it’s one thing that’s been inside that no person actually knew about or what was going to occur.”
Catriona Matthew claimed her solely main on the Open in 2009, successful at Royal Lytham & St Annes simply 11 weeks after giving beginning. Now 54 years outdated and making her final look at her house match, Matthew doesn’t know the way she managed to tour together with her two kids within the following years.
To maintain chasing one other main in a discipline so deep Lewis counts 60 per cent as having the potential to win requires supreme resilience.
Lydia Ko is seeking to finish an eight-and-a-half-year main drought this week however the Australian is available in scorching after successful gold in Paris, turning into the thirty fifth lady to be inducted into the LPGA Corridor of Fame.
She stays the youngest feminine to ever win on the LPGA Tour after her triumph at 15 years outdated, however 12 years later there was a direct dose of realism about how lengthy she is keen to beat the sore backs she experiences within the morning — and whether or not she could carry ahead her deliberate retirement at 30.
“In methods, it may be scary as a result of I’ve performed golf since I used to be 5,” mentioned Ko.
“That is my life whether or not I prefer it or not and golf has given me a lot for me to be glad about on and off the golf course.
“As a lot as we’re very grateful to have the ability to do what we love and compete at a excessive stage, I feel there may be the opposite facet of issues that you need to think about. As somebody that’s possibly nearer to that time in my profession than once I was a rookie, you come to grasp all of these items, and also you respect the participant for the choice that she got here up with.”
There are gamers nonetheless decided to hitch the majors membership, most notably England’s Charley Hull whose angle in direction of a current shoulder harm captures the mindset wanted to deal with this relentless schedule.
“My shoulder simply acquired slightly bit tight so I’ve acupuncture in it each different day as a result of when it’s chilly, it will probably play up a bit,” she mentioned.
“I’ve acquired degenerate arthritis in it, as nicely. So when it does get chilly, it will get a bit stiff. I simply attempt to hold it heat.
“Aside from that, I’m wholesome and able to go.”
(High photograph: Luke Walker / Getty Photographs)