The Legends of the LPGA , formerly known as the Women's Senior Golf Tour (2000–2005) and the Legends Tour (2006–2021), is a professional golf tour for women aged 45 and older. It is based in the United States and is the official senior tour of the LPGA Tour . The tour was founded in 2000, and is intended to allow women to prolong their competitive golf careers on the model of the PGA Tour Champions for men.
36-572: From 1996 to 2000, retired LPGA golfer Jane Blalock worked to organize a new senior golf tour for older and often retired LPGA golfers. After receiving support from 24 other founding members and a 3-year sponsorship program from the Green Bay Chamber of Commerce, The Women's Senior Golf Tour debuted in August 2000 in Green Bay, Wisconsin with a minimum age of 43 and a $ 500,000 purse, with $ 75,000 going to
72-533: A 3-year sponsorship program from the Green Bay Chamber of Commerce , The Women's Senior Golf Tour debuted in August 2000 in Green Bay, Wisconsin with a minimum age of 43 and a $ 500,000 purse, with $ 75,000 going to the winner. Around 30,000 people attended over three days. The senior tour paid a fee to the LPGA for permission to involve active LPGA players, but otherwise remained independent. Blalock worked to make sure
108-536: A committee of LPGA veterans, she remains founder and CEO of both the Legends Tour for veteran female LPGA golfers and the LPGA Golf Clinics for Women. Her company, JBC Golf, Inc., manages both programs. Associated with various boards and non-profit organizations, she has authored two books: The Guts To Win ( Simon & Schuster , 1977) and Gimmies, Bogies and Business (Mastermedia, 1999). Jane Blalock
144-459: A financial consultant. Since retiring, Blalock continues to hold the world record for "most consecutive cuts made on a professional [golf] tour," with her 299 cuts considered the longest streak for any LPGA Tour or PGA Tour player in history, beating the second-best record held by Tiger Woods by over 150 cuts. Total, Blalock's website states she has won 27 LPGA titles, two World Championships, and two Triple Crown titles from her days touring with
180-400: A suspension from the LPGA for allegedly signing an incorrect scorecard a month after Dinah Shore, by 1977 she was the sixth-highest paid female golfer of all time. The Evening Independent described her as "one of the foremost women golfers of her time" the following year. Nursing a herniated disc , Blalock failed to win a tournament from 1981 until 1984, though after two wins in 1985 she
216-575: A team event, the annual Handa Cup pitting LPGA Legends players from the United States against LPGA Legends players from the rest of the world, was introduced in 2006. It is The Legends Tour's version of the Solheim Cup . From 2007 to 2013, 45 tournaments were held. In 2017 , the Senior LPGA Championship was inaugurated, intended to take place every year. Despite the 2015 announcement by
252-411: Is commonly the link between the publisher or proprietor and the editorial staff. The term is also applied to academic journals , where the editor-in-chief gives the ultimate decision whether a submitted manuscript will be published. This decision is made by the editor-in-chief after seeking input from reviewers selected on the basis of relevant expertise. For larger journals, the decision is often upon
288-545: The LPGA Tour Newspaper editor An editor-in-chief ( EIC ), also known as lead editor or chief editor , is a publication's editorial leader who has final responsibility for its operations and policies. The editor-in-chief heads all departments of the organization and is held accountable for delegating tasks to staff members and managing them. The term is often used at newspapers , magazines , yearbooks , and television news programs. The editor-in-chief
324-609: The LPGA Tour , the PGA Tour , and the Senior PGA Tour , as well as with various sponsors and non-profit organizations . Blalock was appointed to the President's Council for Sports and Physical Fitness in 1990, receiving the appointment from George H. W. Bush . Also in 1990, Blalock founded the LPGA Golf Clinics for Women program, helping teach the clinics herself. The inaugural clinic
360-531: The Mazda Japan Classic that year, as one of her two final victories on the LPGA tour. In 1985, Golf Digest named her Comeback Player of the Year. Leaving the LPGA tour in 1985 but not the sport, she retired from full-time competition in 1987. By April 1987, she had won 27 events and accumulated $ 1,300,000 in prize money, with 11 holes-in-one. In early 1988, she retired from women's professional golf to become
396-657: The Suzuki Golf International Tournament in Pasadena, California , besting Kathy Whitworth . Shortly afterwards Blalock was disqualified from the Bluegrass Invitational for allegedly placing a ball incorrectly, and then failing to mark a two stroke penalty on her scorecard. Within a month, the LPGA Tour would move to suspend Blalock. In response, she filed an anti-trust lawsuit against the LPGA, obtaining an order to allow her to continue playing until
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#1732848590394432-560: The United States Golf Association that a U.S. Senior Women's Open would be added from 2018, for competitors aged 50 or over, the eligibility for the tour remained to be for female golfers age 45 and older. The Senior LPGA Championship and the U.S. Senior Women's Open are considered to constitute the senior women's major golf championships . On August 5, 2021, the Legends Tour announced its new name, The Legends of
468-710: The University of New Hampshire through the UNH Jane Blalock Athletic Scholarship Fund. The athletics department at the University of New Hampshire also gives out the Jane Blalock Rookie of the Year Award. The athletics department at the University of New Hampshire also gives out the Jane Blalock Rookie of the Year Award. Blalock began working for Merrill Lynch in 1986, and as of April 1987, she
504-423: The $ 20,000 first place award. The Dinah Shore event would later be upgraded to a women's major golf championship . That moment for [female golfers] was 40 years ago [at Dinah Shore]. We began getting corporate-type sponsors. We had celebrities wanting to meet us and play with us. We were asked to do television commercials." Blalock in particular recollects doing a commercial with Jan Miner . In May 1972, she won
540-542: The $ 50,000 Dallas Civitan Open." The article detailed that "Blalock's one-under 71 Sunday produced a tournament record 11-under 205 for the 54-hole distance, breaking the previous best - set last year by Carol Mann - by three shots. It was the widest victory margin on the ladies tour this year." In 1977 she published her autobiography, The Guts to Win, through Simon & Schuster . That year she won $ 102,012 total, becoming "the fourth women ever to reach that level of excellence." At that point she had won 18 tournaments and
576-556: The Blalock family restaurant, which she helped open on June 10, 1975 as Old Ferry Landing in Portsmouth, New Hampshire . Blalock's likeness on the golf course has been painted by American artist LeRoy Neiman . The 1974 Southgate Ladies Open was shortened to 36 holes due to inclement weather. Since a playoff was not possible, Blalock and Sue Roberts were declared co-champions. LPGA Tour playoff record (5–3) Co-sanctioned by
612-599: The Gillette LPGA Golf Clinic Series. Blalock has been a periodic television commentator for ESPN Golf , and she has also been a golf commentator for NBC . She published her second book Gimmies, Bogeys and Business , a "guide to using golf for success in business," in 1999. In December 1994, publications such as the Los Angeles Times and the Seattle Times reported that Blalock was organizing
648-513: The LPGA's behavior. By 1980, Blalock held the record for "going through 299 consecutive tournaments without missing a cut (1969 through 1980)," which was a record for both the LPGA and PGA. She broke her streak on October 10, 1980, after the LPGA requested she play at Inamori Golf Classic outside San Diego, California . Afterwards she went winless for four years. Writing a column for the Miami Herald in 1981, Blalock expressed frustration with
684-615: The LPGA's use of sex appeal in promoting the women's tour, noting particularly controversial photos of Jan Stephenson in the tour publication Fairways Magazine. In July 1983, Blalock became the LPGA's seventh "millionaire" in terms of winnings. From 1981 until 1984, Blalock failed to win a tournament as she nursed a herniated disc . However, in March 1985 she won the Women's Kemper Open in Hawaii , her 26th LPGA victory in sixteen years. She also won
720-545: The LPGA. Jane Blalock Barbara Jane Blalock (born September 19, 1945) is an American business executive and retired professional golfer . After winning several New England golf tournaments in her youth, Blalock joined the LPGA Tour as a professional in 1969, being named LPGA Tour Rookie of the Year in 1969 and Most Improved Golfer in 1970 and 1971. She won the historically notable Dinah Shore Colgate Winner's Circle in 1972, earning "the richest prize in women's golf history." After successfully fighting
756-642: The LPGA. Twice she finished second at the LPGA Championship . When she earned her two final victories in the 1980s, she had achieved the most wins of any LPGA player without a major championship . In 1972, however, Blalock won an event that in 1983 was upgraded to major status – the Dinah Shore Colgate Winner's Circle . In 2022, the LPGA changed the name of the tournament to the Chevron Championship . Blalock has been inducted into both
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#1732848590394792-649: The New England Amateur tournament in 1967 and 1968. The following winter, Blalock returned to work at a country club in Florida, laboring on the driving range and doing odd jobs while listening to Toski advise students. Though she had yet to win a tournament outside of New England , at age 23 Blalock left her job as a history teacher to become a professional golfer. Her first purse was in Louisville, Kentucky in 1969 for $ 264. She earned 1969 LPGA Tour Rookie of
828-758: The New England Sports Hall of Fame and the Vince Lombardi Hall of Fame . Her 27 LPGA tournament wins meant that for years she matched the point total required for inclusion in the LPGA Hall of Fame, though she lacked the major win necessary for consideration. Blalock was voted into the Legends Hall of Fame in July 2014. Blalock founded the annual University of New Hampshire Pro-Am Classic tournament in 1981, which raises funds for women's athletic scholarships at
864-574: The New Hampshire Amateur in 1965, 1966, and 1968, and also winning the Florida Intercollegiate Championship in 1966. She graduated from Rollins College in 1967 with a degree in history . Blalock began working as a high school history teacher upon graduation, and a year later she borrowed money to return from New Hampshire to Florida, where she spent five weeks taking lessons from golfer and instructor Bob Toski . She won
900-576: The Volvo Legends Series for women aged 45 and older. 24 players had accepted invitations to participate at that point, including JoAnne Carner , Kathy Whitworth , Sandra Haynie , Sandra Palmer , Judy Rankin , Carol Mann and Donna Caponi . Two Volvo tournaments, one in Phoenix, Arizona and one in Atlanta, took place in 1995 for $ 150,000 each. Prime Network broadcast delayed television coverage of
936-644: The Year . Blalock won her first professional tour victory at the Lady Carling Event in Atlanta, Georgia in 1970, beating Betsy Rawls by one stroke. Blalock won Most Improved Golfer at the LGPA Golf Awards in both 1970 and 1971, and those same years Golf Digest named her their "most improved professional." On April 16, 1972, won the inaugural version of the Dinah Shore Colgate Winner's Circle , earning "the richest prize in women's gold history" with
972-464: The events. While Blalock clarified that the Volvo Legends Series was not officially affiliated with the LPGA, she did state that "neither [is the LPGA] opposed." The Volvo series put on two successful events before dissolving after one year. From 1996 to 2000, Blalock worked to organize a new senior golf tour for older and often retired LPGA athletes. After receiving support from 24 other founding members and
1008-714: The lawsuit had run its course. The rules violation conflict would continue until 1975, when after losing several appeals and being ordered to pay damages to Blalock, the LPGA agreed to settle. Despite the ongoing lawsuit, in 1972 Blalock went on to win the Dallas Civitan Open and the Lady Errol Classic . Blalock came in second at the 1972 LPGA Championship . In 1975, Blalock won the World Ladies Championship in Japan , an achievement which she would repeat
1044-712: The tour was the official senior tour of the LPGA in 2001, and the Women's Senior Golf Tour is now called the Legends Tour . Initially it grew from two annual events to 11 events by 2013, to 14 events in 2016. The tour has donated significant amounts to charity. Blalock was on the WSGT Board of Directors for years, later only serving as CEO of The Legends Tour (The WDGA). In 1986, Blalock moved from Florida to Boston, Massachusetts to work in finance. As of 2016, Blalock continues to maintain an office in Boston. She also remains involved with
1080-576: The very next year. Golf Magazine named her to its All-American Team twice, also naming her to its LPGA All-American Team for three consecutive years total. In 1976, Blalock testified for the LPGA Tour in support of a sponsor trying to host a Women's Masters . Blalock continued to win tournaments into 1976, and in September the Times Daily reported that she had "coasted to a whopping nineshot victory" in
1116-460: The winner. Around 30,000 people attended over three days. The senior tour paid a fee to the LPGA for permission to involve active LPGA players, but otherwise remained independent. The Women's Senior Golf Tour was the official senior tour of the LPGA in 2001 and was later called the Legends Tour. Initially it grew from two annual events to 11 events by 2013. Sixteen events were held in the first six years of operation between 2001 and 2006. In addition
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1152-570: Was born in Portsmouth, New Hampshire on September 19, 1945. Raised in Portsmouth, her father, Richard Blalock, worked as a newspaper editor in town. She began golfing at age 13, and credits her family with being supportive of her different endeavors, including athletics. After years of practicing golf at the nearby country club, Blalock attended Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida . She continued to play amateur golf as she studied, winning
1188-572: Was held over three days in Washington, D.C. , selling out its 100 spots. She later held a clinic in May 1991 as a day-long program sponsored by Mazda , with the intent of building skill and confidence among businesswomen players. The LPGA Golf Clinics for Women are taught by LPGA Teaching and Club Professionals. In 1995, JBC Golf received the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation 's Volunteerism Award for work on
1224-414: Was living near Boston and working for Merrill Lynch as a vice president . Shortly before she retired from professional golf in 1988, in 1987 Blalock founded The Jane Blalock Company (JBC) in Boston, initially focusing on creating a "consulting and event implementation business." In 1990 she became CEO of JBC Golf, Inc., a new incarnation of her company. JBC would go on to develop relationships with
1260-430: Was named Comeback Player of the Year by Golf Digest . Since retiring in 1987, Blalock continues to hold the world record for "most consecutive cuts made on a professional [golf] tour," with her 299 unbroken cuts considered the longest streak for any LPGA Tour or PGA Tour player in history. She also has the most wins of any LPGA player without a major championship . Voted into the Legends Hall of Fame in 2014 by
1296-540: Was the sixth-highest paid female golfer of all time. She won the Colgate Triple Crown in 1975 and 1977, also winning the International Mixed Championship at Waterville , Ireland in 1978 while teamed up with Ray Floyd . In 1978, Greg Hanson of The Evening Independent described her as "one of the foremost women golfers of her time," calling her experience with the suspension a "dark age" in
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