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Lady Blue Hen Invitational returns to Cape Region

October 26, 2018

High winds in the Sunday final round challenged golfers from 12 universities competing in the sixth annual Lady Blue Hen Invitational, held Oct. 20-21 at Rehoboth Beach Country Club.

The Seton Hall University Pirates took first place over the hosts from Delaware, 890-893. Elizabeth Win of Seton Hall also won medalist honors with a 3-over total for the three rounds. Araine Klotz’s tie for fifth place was the best score posted for Delaware.

Following Seton Hall and Delaware in the standings were Georgetown, Pennsylvania, High Point, Rutgers, Bucknell, James Madison, Quinnipiac, Towson, Columbia, Western Michigan and Delaware B.

The commissioner speaks

The LPGA is in the middle of its fall Asian Swing, with five tournaments in Korea, China, Taiwan and Japan before the season-ending CME championship in Naples, Fla. If there were any doubts that the LPGA is a true world tour, these events should have dispelled them completely.

That global impact is not lost on potential sponsors or on Mike Whan, the current LPGA commissioner.

In early June, I went to New York City as an LPGA invitee for a Sips and Tips gathering at the upscale Golf & Body NYC facility on 6th Avenue.

Most of the others in attendance were a variety of investors and businesses the LPGA had identified as potential partners or sponsors.

I was happy to have the chance to talk directly to Whan.

The man is a full-time marketer. I introduced myself and opened with “Mr. Whan.” He immediately smiled and said, “That’s my dad’s name. Call me Mike.”

Mike it was, then.

We first discussed how he viewed his tour’s current television ratings. “We’re up 1 percent so far. I was a little bit concerned, but then my people told me our ratings have never dropped for many years, and most of them have gone up 6 to 9 percent. That just doesn’t happen for most sports. So I should be happy, and am. Of course, I’m still looking to improve.”

Whan said the LPGA’s contract with NBC’s Golf Channel calls for 200 hours per year, but they have consistently gone more than 400 hours for the roughly three dozen LPGA tournaments held each year. He’s especially proud of the fact that the tour now reaches TV sets in more than 170 countries.

I mentioned that this year it seemed as if several LPGA players stayed in the running each week, but a sizeable number also had trouble making the cuts on a consistent basis. Whan felt this was actually pretty normal and reflected the fact that playing consistently good golf at this level is simply very difficult.

Whan later addressed the group for a short presentation. He recalled his own business experience before assuming the commissioner’s role in 2010, when the companies he worked for would simply write a check for a sponsorship. He stressed his goal is to engage in “partnerships over sponsorships,” emphasizing the benefits of working together for common goals.

Whan noted that the LPGA is set up for maximum flexibility in developing these partnerships, in contrast to more structured arrangements insisted upon by other professional sports organizations.

Two parts of his presentation stood out to me.

He suggested that sponsor CEOs highlight their new arrangements with the LPGA to their female managers and the male managers who have daughters. “This matters to your employees as well as your customers,” he said, and promised they would be especially surprised at the reaction from within their companies.

Whan also told the group that the players are provided with a fact sheet before each tournament. They see data regarding the sponsors, photos of particularly important sponsors or guests to pay attention to, and other information that the players can use in the pro-am or on their own social media platforms.

I think this is a great idea, enlisting the players themselves into their tour’s marketing efforts. If LPGA players didn’t already understand their dual role as sports entertainers and business operators, this tactic should be enough.

Whan closed his remarks by noting that the current roster of LPGA players come from 46 countries, with at least 34 playing week in/week out, with international tournament broadcast coverage. He told the group that if worldwide influence was important to them, the LPGA was ready to “build something that will work with you.”

Based on the fact sheets presented at the gathering, the potential is certainly there. The LPGA currently has corporate partners from 18 countries, holds tournaments in 14 countries, and claims to have more than 21 million fans. Television coverage now reaches 485 million viewers, a more than 250 percent increase since 2011.

That is a great record, and one that Whan and his LPGA staff are working to improve.

Local club competition results

The Rehoboth Beach CC Ladies 18-Hole group played a team net/gross competition Oct. 17.

Karen Storms, JoJo Barrows, Bee Ekdahl and Beth Carpenter (blind draw) won first-place net. Daisey Hudson, Carole Medd, Britny Whitby and Carpenter won first-place gross.

  • Fritz Schranck has been writing about the Cape Region's golf community since 1999. Snippets, stories and anecdotes from his columns are included in his new book, "Hole By Hole: Golf Stories from Delaware's Cape Region and Beyond," which is available at the Cape Gazette offices, Browseabout Books in Rehoboth Beach, Biblion Books in Lewes, and local golf courses. His columns and book reviews are available at HoleByHole.com.

    Contact Fritz by emailing fschranck@holebyhole.com.

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