Ladies European Tour

Ladies European Tour
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2018 Ladies European Tour
Sport Golf
Founded 1978
Countries Based in Europe.
Schedule includes events outside Europe, in Oceania, Asia, Africa, and the United States.
Most recent
champion(s)
England Georgia Hall
(2017 Order of Merit winner)
Most titles England Laura Davies (45)
Related
competitions
European Tour
Official website LadiesEuropeanTour.com

The Ladies European Tour is a professional golf tour for women which was founded in 1978. It is based at Buckinghamshire Golf Club near London in England. Like many UK-based sports organisations it is a company limited by guarantee, a legal structure which enables it to focus on maximising returns to its members through prize money, rather than on making profits for investors. The tour is run by a Board of Directors and a Players' Council. Most of the players on the tour are European, with members from more than 40 different countries internationally. The tour operates tournaments across five continents globally.

History

The U.S.-based LPGA was founded in 1950, but women's professional golf was slower to get established in Europe. In 1978 the Women's Professional Golf Association (WPGA) was formed as part of Professional Golfers' Association of Great Britain and Ireland and a tour was established the following year.

In 1988 the tour members decided to form an independent company, the Women Professional Golfers' European Tour Limited. This new company moved away from the PGA's headquarters at The Belfry and set up its own headquarters at the Tytherington Club in Cheshire. In 1998 the Tour changed its name to European Ladies' Professional Golf Association Limited and again in July 2000 to its current name, Ladies European Tour Limited. In 2008 the tour relocated to offices at the Buckinghamshire Golf Club, which is just outside London.[1]

Getting a women's tour established in Europe was not easy. Whereas men's tour golf in Europe developed in parallel with that in the United States, the women's tour had to compete against a well established rival in the U.S. LPGA Tour from its foundation.

A record 26 official money events were scheduled for the 2008 season, which also saw the introduction of a new team competition called the European Ladies Golf Cup. Also, for the first time in several years, the LET scheduled an event opposite one of the LPGA's majors, with the ABN AMRO Open held opposite the LPGA Championship. The schedule dropped to 23 official money events in 2009, but increased to 25 for 2010. In both years, the Ladies Open of Portugal was scheduled opposite the LPGA Championship. In 2010, the LET Access Series (LETAS) was launched as the official development tour.

The Ladies European Tour organises The Solheim Cup when in Europe and in 2011, the Tour received a boost when the European side won for The Cup for the fourth time on home soil at Killeen Castle in Ireland. The success continued when Europe earned an historic first away victory at Colorado Golf Club, winning The Cup for the fifth time in 2013.

In 2016, the LET took on extra significance for players looking to qualify for the Olympic Games and 30 LET players from 20 different countries participated in the Olympic golf competition at Rio 2016.

In 2018, the Tour will celebrate four decades of women's professional golf as part of its 40th anniversary.

Tournaments

The 2016 schedule featured 21 events including the Olympic Golf Competition in Rio de Janeiro (the biennial Solheim Cup, held in odd-numbered years, is also an official LET event but will next be played in 2017 in Iowa).[2] The total of events has been roughly stable since 2010; the peak was 28 in 2008. The two richest events by far are the two European Majors: The Evian Championship (historically the Evian Masters) and the Women's British Open. In 2016, 10 other events (in Australia, China, Morocco, England, Scotland, Germany, Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Japan and Dubai) had prize funds in excess of €450,000, with the remainder having prize funds of between €200,000 and €400,000. Total prize money from the 2016 events passed €14 million.

Unlike in men's golf, the European and American tours do not share a common set of majors, although the Women's British Open and The Evian Championship are currently recognised as majors by both organisations.

2018 schedule and results

Past tour schedules

Individual LET tournaments have purses fixed in a mixture of Australian dollars, British pounds, euro, New Zealand dollars and U.S. dollars, so year on year changes in the total prize fund reflect exchange rate fluctuations as well as prize fund movements in constant currencies.

YearRanking
tournaments
Countries[lower-alpha 1]Total purse (€)[lower-alpha 2]
2018 14 9
2017 16 11
2016 21 15 14,063,149
2015 20 14 12,638,013
2014231811,502,840
2013221710,870,618
2012241911,806,680
2011252011,182,500
2010252111,055,525
200921169,940,358
2008282111,647,814
2007241810,563,950
200620169,674,536
200518147,875,255
200415107,298,245
200314107,442,162
200214107,626,724

Order of Merit and seasonal award winners

The Order of Merit is awarded to the leading money winner on the tour, though for some years in the past a points system was used. The Player's Player of the Year award is voted by the members of the Tour for the member they believe has contributed the most to the season on the Tour. The Rookie of the Year (known as the Bill Johnson Trophy from 1999 to 2003 and now the Ryder Cup Wales Rookie of the Year) is awarded to the leading first-year player on the Order of Merit rankings.

YearOrder of MeritPlayer of the YearRookie of the YearLowest stroke average
2017England Georgia Hall€368,935England Georgia HallFrance Camille ChevalierSweden Anna Nordqvist68.18
2016United States Beth Allen€313,079United States Beth AllenIndia Aditi AshokChina Shanshan Feng68.80
2015China Shanshan Feng€399,213Denmark Nicole Broch LarsenDenmark Emily Kristine PedersenChina Shanshan Feng69.78
2014England Charley Hull€263,097England Charley HullWales Amy BouldenNorway Suzann Pettersen70.25
2013Norway Suzann Pettersen[3]€518,448South Africa Lee-Anne PaceEngland Charley HullNorway Suzann Pettersen68.20
2012Spain Carlota Ciganda[4]€251,290Spain Carlota Ciganda[4]Spain Carlota Ciganda[4]China Shanshan Feng69.00
2011Japan Ai Miyazato€363,080Sweden Caroline HedwallSweden Caroline HedwallNorway Suzann Pettersen69.36
2010South Africa Lee-Anne Pace€339,518South Africa Lee-Anne PaceSouth Korea I.K. KimNorway Suzann Pettersen69.75
2009Sweden Sophie Gustafson€281,315Scotland Catriona MatthewSweden Anna NordqvistScotland Catriona Matthew70.83
2008France Gwladys Nocera€391,840France Gwladys NoceraEngland Melissa ReidNorway Suzann Pettersen68.60
2007Sweden Sophie Gustafson€222,081Germany Bettina HauertSweden Louise StahleSweden Sophie Gustafson70.96
2006England Laura Davies€471,727France Gwladys NoceraAustralia Nikki GarrettSweden Annika Sörenstam68.33
2005Denmark Iben Tinning€204,672Denmark Iben TinningSpain Elisa SerramiàEngland Laura Davies70.35
2004England Laura Davies777.26 ptsFrance Stéphanie ArricauFinland Minea BlomqvistEngland Laura Davies70.31
2003Sweden Sophie Gustafson917.95 ptsSweden Sophie GustafsonAustralia Rebecca StevensonSweden Sophie Gustafson69.93
2002Spain Paula Martí6,589 ptsSweden Annika SörenstamEngland Kirsty S. TaylorSweden Sophie Gustafson70.59
2001Spain Raquel Carriedo10,661 ptsSpain Raquel CarriedoNorway Suzann PettersenScotland Catriona Matthew70.08
2000Sweden Sophie Gustafson8,777 ptsSweden Sophie GustafsonItaly Giulia SergasSweden Sophie Gustafson71.21
1999England Laura Davies£204,522England Laura DaviesEngland Elaine RatcliffeEngland Laura Davies70.50
1998Sweden Helen Alfredsson£125,975Sweden Sophie GustafsonUnited States Laura PhiloEngland Laura Davies71.96
1997England Alison Nicholas£94,590England Alison NicholasSweden Anna BergFrance Marie-Laure de Lorenzi72.20
1996England Laura Davies£110,880England Laura DaviesAustralia Anne-Marie KnightFrance Marie-Laure de Lorenzi71.39
1995Sweden Annika Sörenstam£130,324Sweden Annika SörenstamAustralia Karrie WebbSweden Annika Sörenstam69.75
1994Sweden Liselotte Neumann£102,750n/aUnited States Tracy HansonSweden Liselotte Neumann69.56
1993Australia Karen Lunn£81,266n/aSweden Annika SörenstamEngland Laura Davies71.63
1992England Laura Davies£66,333n/aFrance Sandrine MendiburuEngland Laura Davies70.35
1991Australia Corinne Dibnah£89,058n/aWales Helen WadsworthEngland Alison Nicholas71.71
1990England Trish Johnson£83,043n/aUnited States Pearl SinnEngland Trish Johnson70.64
1989France Marie-Laure de Lorenzi£77,534n/aSweden Helen AlfredssonFrance Marie-Laure de Lorenzi70.84
1988France Marie-Laure de Lorenzi£109,360n/aSouth Africa Laurette MaritzFrance Marie-Laure de Lorenzi72.30
1987Scotland Dale Reid£53,815n/aEngland Trish JohnsonScotland Dale Reid72.70
1986England Laura Davies£37,500n/aSpain Patricia GonzálezEngland Laura Davies72.09
1985England Laura Davies£21,735n/aEngland Laura Davies
1984Scotland Dale Reid£28,239n/aEngland Kitrina DouglasScotland Dale Reid73.01
1983Scotland Muriel Thomson£9,225n/an/aEngland Beverly Huke74.98
1982England Jenny Lee Smith£12,551n/an/an/a
1981England Jenny Lee Smith£13,518n/an/an/a
1980Scotland Muriel Thomson£8,008n/an/an/a
1979Scotland Catherine Panton£4,965n/an/an/a

Notes

  1. Individual events counting towards the Order of Merit only. England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland counted separately.
  2. Individual events counting towards the Order of Merit only. Excludes team events and qualifying school.

References

  1. "About the Ladies European Tour". Ladies European Tour. Retrieved 17 December 2011.
  2. "The 2014 Ladies European Tour Schedule Announced" (Press release). Ladies European Tour. 7 December 2013. Archived from the original on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  3. "Pettersen wins ISPS HANDA Order of Merit". Ladies European Tour. 7 December 2013. Archived from the original on 12 December 2013. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 "Carlota Ciganda wins the LET's 2012 Rolex Rookie of the Year Award". Ladies European Tour. 20 December 2012. Archived from the original on 8 January 2013. Retrieved 7 February 2013.

See also

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