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LPGA Tour gets its turn at tech-infused indoor golf with WTGL to start next season

Sport

LPGA Tour gets its turn at tech-infused indoor golf with WTGL to start next season
Sport

Sport

LPGA Tour gets its turn at tech-infused indoor golf with WTGL to start next season

2026-01-07 06:24 Last Updated At:06:30

TMRW Sports’ indoor golf league is going to feature teams from the LPGA Tour starting next season.

The entertainment group and the LPGA announced the addition Tuesday of the WTGL, which will be run separately from the TGL while looking every bit like the tech-infused indoor league. Matches will be played at the SoFi Center in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

Key details still to be worked out include how many four-player teams will be part of the inaugural WTGL season.

TGL has six teams, with a seventh team (Detroit) to be added for its third season in 2026-27. The WTGL also is still forming ownership groups, making it too soon to announce the size of the inaugural season or which cities they will represent.

Commissioner Craig Kessler has leaned into four pillars — trust, visibility, growing fans and securing financial stability — since taking over the LPGA in July.

“We view our partnership with TGL exciting on two of those — growing fans and visibility,” Kessler said in a telephone interview. “Any chance we get to put our women on center stage, competing and showing their personalities, will only attract more people to follow.”

Kessler said there had been discussions to add women to the indoor league before he was appointed commissioner, and those talks accelerated over the last couple of months.

The WTGL would be played primarily during the LPGA’s offseason, and there’s a chance it could overlap with TGL. The LPGA season ends a week before Thanksgiving in November and starts at the end of January. For 2026, the first Asian swing is in the middle of February.

The TGL ends ahead of the first major at the Masters in April.

TMRW Sports said TGL in its inaugural season drew the second-youngest audience in sports behind the NBA in median age (52) and percentage of audience in the 18-49 age group (41%). TGL began its second season in late December and has its third match on Tuesday night.

“WTGL is another step in creating a modern, media-focused version of a centuries-old game that appeals to today’s sports fan,” TMRW Sports founder and CEO Mike McCarley said in a statement.

McCarley said a women’s league has been in the works since the TGL launch last year and “now, along with the LPGA and its athletes, we look forward to creating a stage to help showcase the stars of the LPGA.”

Kessler believes the format will helps create a stronger connection with fans while putting his players in a new light. The matches are two hours, the audience can hear conversations and there is more attention on six players — three per teams — instead of getting only glimpses of them during a full-field event over four days.

“What makes this unique is we talk about building stars, and this is a chance to go deeper than ever on those personalities,” Kessler said.

Rory McIlroy, once a publicly fierce critic of LIV, has been preaching since last February his opinion that LIV players should be able to return.

That goes for Brooks Koepka, and not just on the PGA Tour.

McIlroy was asked if he’d like to see Koepka as part of the TGL indoor league now that the five-time major champion has left LIV.

“I would say that’s up to people that are more powerful and more important than me,” McIlroy said after his Boston team won a TGL match on Friday. “But I am one of the founders. I would love him to play. If there’s space on a team for Brooks to come and play, it only makes what we’re trying to do stronger.

“If he decides it’s something that he wants to do, I’m sure we’ll find a way to include him.”

He also was in favor of Koepka returning to the PGA Tour while speaking on the “Stick to Football” podcast last week. But unlike his comment at Torrey Pines last February, the Masters champion acknowledged he’s in a different stage in his career than other PGA Tour members.

“They’ve made the money, but they’ve paid their consequence in terms of the reputation and some of the things they’ve lost by going over there,” McIlroy said of LIV defectors. “If it made the overall tour stronger to have Bryson DeChambeau back and whoever else, I would be OK with it.

“But again, it’s not just me, and I recognize that not everyone is in my position,” he said. “It would be up to the collective group of PGA Tour members to make that decision.”

Matt Kuchar spent more than a month researching his best option and concluded he would not be using a one-time exemption for being in the top 25 on the PGA Tour career money list.

Kuchar, 47, finished at No. 118 in the FedEx Cup in the first year the tour reduced full cards to the top 100 (instead of 125). Even with rising purses, he was in no danger of falling out of the top 25 in career money this year.

Kuchar is at No. 13 with $61,538,738, which is just over $18 million more than Tommy Fleetwood at No. 26 in career money. He has conditional status at No. 118, though he will be subject to being reshuffled in his category of Nos. 111 through 125.

He figures he can get into somewhere around 18 to 20 tournaments, that using his one-time exemption would only be the difference of four or more events. If necessary, he could use one of his career money exemption the year he turns 49 and the other when he turns 50.

The tour said one player signed up for a career-money exemption — Vijay Singh, who turns 63 in February. As a testament to his career, Singh still is No. 6 on the career money list even though he has not played a full schedule since 2020.

How much he plays remains to be seen. Except for the Masters, the big Fijian has not played a PGA Tour events since the 2021 Honda Classic. He is an early commitment for the Sony Open, a week before the PGA Tour Champions starts on the Big Island.

Former Masters champion Trevor Immelman felt as though he had already played Augusta National before he ever got there for the first time.

Immelman, now the lead CBS Sports analyst, was 6 when he watched Jack Nicklaus win the 1986 Masters, and that got him hooked. The time change in South Africa allowed him to stay up at night and watch PGA Tour events. His family would record them and Immelman said he would watch them over and over.

And then the World Cup of Golf came to his home club of Somerset West near Cape Town in 1996, and the Immelman family hosted a former Masters champion.

“Ian Woosnam stayed at our house,” he said. “I’ve been able to watch Woosie win a dozen times. Now he’s sitting in my living room, watching together. He was taking me through everything going on in his mind, how difficult the shots were and that last putt on 18, when he had to make that 4- or 5-footer, telling me how nervous he was.”

Immelman made his Masters debut three years later as the U.S. Public Links Amateur champion.

“To get those experiences, by the time I got there in ’99 I was able to somewhat understand the golf course and how to play it,” he said. “I made the cut as an amateur, which was my dream.”

Dustin Johnson goes into 2026 exempt only for the Masters and the U.S. Open. This is the last year of his 10-year U.S. Open exemption from winning at Oakmont in 2016. ... With the cancellation of The Sentry at Kapalua, the only tournament in golf recognized by the Official World Golf Ranking this week is the Webex Players Series Perth in Australia, with siblings Minjee and Min Woo Lee as tournament hosts. They are not competing. ... Xander Schauffele’s cut streak of 72 tournaments, the longest active streak on the PGA Tour, include 25 tournaments without a cut.

South America and South Africa are the only continents that do not have any players among the top 50 in the world ranking going into the new year.

“It's not like we sit back and say, ‘Well, never saw that coming.’ Who said 82 (PGA Tour wins)? But we saw it coming.” — Davis Love III on the career of Tiger Woods.

AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

FILE - Brooks Koepka, of the United States, acknowledges the crowd on the 5th green during the first round of the British Open golf championship at the Royal Portrush Golf Club in Northern Ireland, July 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison, File)

FILE - Brooks Koepka, of the United States, acknowledges the crowd on the 5th green during the first round of the British Open golf championship at the Royal Portrush Golf Club in Northern Ireland, July 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison, File)

FILE - The SoFi Center is seen ahead of the inaugural match of the TMRW Golf League, between New York Golf Club and The Bay Golf Club, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025, in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)

FILE - The SoFi Center is seen ahead of the inaugural match of the TMRW Golf League, between New York Golf Club and The Bay Golf Club, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025, in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)

Reaction to the death of College Football Hall of Fame coach Lou Holtz, who led Notre Dame to a national championship in 1988.

“Lou and I shared a very special relationship. He welcomed me to the Notre Dame family immediately, offering me great support throughout our time together. Our relationship meant a lot to me as I admired the values he used to build the foundation of his coaching career: love, trust and commitment. ... Lou’s impact at Notre Dame has gone well beyond the football team. He and his wife, Beth, are respected across campus for their generous hearts and commitment to carrying out Notre Dame’s mission of being a force for good.” — Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman.

“He was successful. But more important, he was significant.” — Skip Holtz, son of Lou Holtz and a fellow football coach.

“Lou Holtz was more than a football figure. He was a true leader. One of one. He consistently encouraged others in life. The message never changed. Trust, Love, Commitment.” — Rick Mirer, Notre Dame quarterback from 1989-1992.

“Obviously one of the greatest coaches certainly to ever coach this game. I would think a lot of people who played for him and know him would probably say one of the greatest people and one of the greatest influences in a lot of people’s lives.” — Clemson coach Dabo Swinney.

“I still remember the day he came to my house to recruit me. He didn’t just sit down and talk to me about football or what I could do on the field. He talked to me as a young man. And he spoke to my mom the way a man should speak to a mother who was trusting someone with her son. He looked her in the eye and promised that I would be taken care of at Notre Dame. That moment meant everything to us, and it’s something I’ve carried with me my entire life.” — Hall of Fame NFL running back Jerome Bettis, who played at Notre Dame from 1990-92.

“Notre Dame mourns the loss of Lou Holtz, a legendary football coach, a beloved member of the Notre Dame family and devoted husband, father and grandfather. Among his many accomplishments, we will remember him above all as a teacher, leader and mentor who brought out the very best in his players, on and off the field, earning their respect and admiration for a lifetime. ... Whenever Notre Dame called to ask for his help, Lou answered with his characteristic generosity, and he will be sorely missed." — The Rev. Robert A. Dowd, University of Notre Dame president.

“Lou Holtz was a giant of college football whose influence on the game is matched only by the impact he had on people. Coach Holtz built championship programs, transformed young men into leaders, and brought passion and discipline to every sideline he paced. His on-field success is etched in the history of the sport, but it was his unmistakable voice and quick wit that connected him so deeply with football fans everywhere." — Southeastern Conference commissioner Greg Sankey.

"He not only was a great coach, he was a great person. We need more people like Lou Holtz. ... He was a jokester and a character. People liked to be around him. It’s hard to put a tag on Lou Holtz. He did everything so well. He was a great speaker. He attracted crowds wherever he went.” — former West Virginia coach Don Nehlen.

“Coach Lou Holtz was a legend on and off the field, who cared deeply for the state of Indiana and lived a remarkable life grounded in faith, family, and giving back. He will be greatly missed.” — Indiana Gov. Mike Braun.

“I learned that it was a bad idea to speak after him at an event because he was such an inspirational and motivational speaker. He was truly one of a kind.” — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

FILE - Notre Dame's head coach Lou Holtz and the Fighting Irish walk onto the field of the Los Angeles Coliseum to warm up for an NCAA college football game against Southern California Saturday, Nov. 30, 1996 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian, File)

FILE - Notre Dame's head coach Lou Holtz and the Fighting Irish walk onto the field of the Los Angeles Coliseum to warm up for an NCAA college football game against Southern California Saturday, Nov. 30, 1996 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian, File)

FILE - Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz watches his team workout before the start of their game against Japan's national American football team at the Notre Dame Japan Bowl in Tokyo Saturday, July 25, 2009. (AP Photo/Junji Kurokawa, File)

FILE - Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz watches his team workout before the start of their game against Japan's national American football team at the Notre Dame Japan Bowl in Tokyo Saturday, July 25, 2009. (AP Photo/Junji Kurokawa, File)

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