2004 LPGA Tour

The 2004 LPGA Tour was a series of weekly golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world which took place from March through December 2004. The tournaments were sanctioned by the United States-based Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA). This was the 55th season since the LPGA Tour officially began in 1950. The season consisted of 32 official money events. Total prize money for all tournaments was $42,875,000.

Annika Sörenstam continued to dominate women's golf in 2004, winning eight tournaments and $2,544,707 in prize money. Four other players earned over $1 million. There were six first-time winners in 2004: Moira Dunn, Christina Kim, Lorena Ochoa, the first Mexican winner, Jennifer Rosales, Kim Saiki, and Karen Stupples.

For details of what happened in the main tournaments of the year see 2004 in golf.

Tournament schedule and results

The number in parentheses after winners' names show the player's total number of official money, individual event wins on the LPGA Tour including that event.

DatesTournamentLocationWinnerPurse ($)Winner's

Share ($)

Mar 11–14Welch's/Fry's ChampionshipUnited States ArizonaEngland Karen Stupples (1)800,000120,000
Mar 18–21Safeway InternationalUnited States ArizonaSweden Annika Sörenstam (49)1,200,000180,000
Mar 25–28Kraft Nabisco ChampionshipUnited States CaliforniaSouth Korea Grace Park (5)1,600,000240,000
Apr 2–4The Office Depot ChampionshipUnited States CaliforniaSweden Annika Sörenstam (50)1,750,000262,500
Apr 15–17LPGA Takefuji ClassicUnited States NevadaUnited States Cristie Kerr (2)1,100,000165,000
Apr 29 – May 2Chick-fil-A Charity ChampionshipUnited States GeorgiaPhilippines Jennifer Rosales (1)1,600,000240,000
May 6–9Michelob ULTRA Open at KingsmillUnited States VirginiaSouth Korea Se Ri Pak (22)2,200,000330,000
May 13–16Franklin American Mortgage ChampionshipUnited States TennesseeMexico Lorena Ochoa (1)900,000135,000
May 20–23Sybase ClassicUnited States New YorkUnited States Sherri Steinhauer (6)1,250,000187,500
May 27–30LPGA Corning ClassicUnited States New YorkSweden Annika Sörenstam (51)1,000,000150,000
Jun 4–6Kellogg-Keebler ClassicUnited States IllinoisAustralia Karrie Webb (30)1,200,000180,000
Jun 10–13McDonald's LPGA ChampionshipUnited States DelawareSweden Annika Sörenstam (52)1,600,000240,000
Jun 18–20ShopRite LPGA ClassicUnited States New JerseyUnited States Cristie Kerr (3)1,300,000195,000
Jun 24–27Wegmans LPGAUnited States New YorkUnited States Kim Saiki (1)1,500,000225,000
Jul 1–4U.S. Women's OpenUnited States MassachusettsUnited States Meg Mallon (16)3,100,000560,000
Jul 8–11BMO Financial Group Canadian Women's OpenCanada Ontario, CanadaUnited States Meg Mallon (17)1,300,000195,000
Jul 16–18Giant Eagle LPGA ClassicUnited States OhioUnited States Moira Dunn (1)1,000,000150,000
Jul 21–24Evian MastersFrance FranceAustralia Wendy Doolan (3)2,500,000375,000
Jul 28 – Aug 1Weetabix Women's British OpenEngland EnglandEngland Karen Stupples (2)1,600,000290,880
Aug 5–8Jamie Farr Owens Corning ClassicUnited States OhioUnited States Meg Mallon (18)1,100,000165,000
Aug 19–22Wendy's Championship for ChildrenUnited States OhioScotland Catriona Matthew (2)1,100,000165,000
Aug 26–29Wachovia LPGA ClassicUnited States PennsylvaniaMexico Lorena Ochoa (2)1,000,000150,000
Sep 2–5State Farm ClassicUnited States IllinoisUnited States Cristie Kerr (4)1,200,000180,000
Sep 10–12John Q. Hammons Hotel ClassicUnited States OklahomaSweden Annika Sörenstam (53)1,000,000150,000
Sep 17–19Safeway ClassicUnited States OregonSouth Korea Hee-Won Han (3)1,200,000180,000
Sep 23–26Longs Drugs ChallengeUnited States CaliforniaUnited States Christina Kim (1)1,000,000150,000
Oct 7–10Asahi Ryokuken International ChampionshipUnited States South CarolinaSweden Liselotte Neumann (13)1,000,000150,000
Oct 14–17Samsung World ChampionshipUnited States CaliforniaSweden Annika Sörenstam (54)825,000206,250
Oct 29–31CJ Nine Bridges ClassicSouth Korea South KoreaSouth Korea Grace Park (6)1,350,000202,500
Nov 5–7Mizuno ClassicJapan JapanSweden Annika Sörenstam (55)1,000,000150,000
Nov 11–14The Mitchell Company Tournament of ChampionsUnited States AlabamaUnited States Heather Daly-Donofrio (2)800,000130,000
Nov 18–21ADT ChampionshipUnited States FloridaSweden Annika Sörenstam (56)1,000,000215,000
Dec 18–19Wendy's 3-Tour ChallengeUnited States NevadaLPGA Tourn/a

Tournaments in bold are majors.

Leaders

Money List leaders

RankPlayerCountryEarnings ($)Events
1Annika Sörenstam Sweden2,544,70718
2Grace Park South Korea1,525,47125
3Lorena Ochoa Mexico1,450,82427
4Meg Mallon United States1,358,62321
5Cristie Kerr United States1,189,99024
6Karen Stupples England968,85223
7Mi Hyun Kim South Korea931,69328
8Hee-Won Han South Korea840,60528
9Karrie Webb Australia748,31622
10Jennifer Rosales Philippines693,62525

Full 2004 Official Money List

Scoring Average leaders

RankPlayerCountryAverage
1Annika Sörenstam Sweden68.70
2Grace Park South Korea69.99
3Lorena Ochoa Mexico70.02
4Cristie Kerr United States70.33
5Mi Hyun Kim South Korea70.48

Full 2004 Scoring Average List - navigate to "2004", then "Scoring Average"

Award winners

The three competitive awards given out by the LPGA each year are:

  • The Rolex Player of the Year is awarded based on a formula in which points are awarded for top-10 finishes and are doubled at the LPGA's four major championships. The points system is: 30 points for first; 12 points for second; nine points for third; seven points for fourth; six points for fifth; five points for sixth; four points for seventh; three points for eighth; two points for ninth and one point for 10th.
  • The Vare Trophy, named for Glenna Collett-Vare, is given to the player with the lowest scoring average for the season.
  • The Louis Suggs Rolex Rooke of the Year Award is awarded to the first-year player on the LPGA Tour who scores the highest in a points competition in which points are awarded at all full-field domestic events and doubled at the LPGA's four major championships. The points system is: 150 points for first; 80 points for second; 75 points for third; 70 points for fourth; and 65 points for fifth. After fifth place, points are awarded in increments of three, beginning at sixth place with 62 points. Rookies who make the cut in an event and finish below 41st each receive five points. The award is named after Louise Suggs, one of the founders of the LPGA.

See also

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