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LPGA Tour gets All Nippon Airways as title sponsor for year's first major

By Associated Press
Published on
LPGA Tour gets All Nippon Airways as title sponsor for year's first major

NAPLES, Fla. – The LPGA Tour has added one new tournament and one big sponsor for next year. 
 
Along with releasing another strong schedule for 2015, the LPGA Tour announced Tuesday that All Nippon Airways has signed a five-year deal to be the title sponsor of the first major championship of the year in the California desert. 
 
The ANA Inspiration replaces the Kraft Nabisco Championship in name only. Still intact are the traditions at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, from Dinah Shore's name on the trophy to the winner jumping in Poppy's Pond and wearing a white robe. 
 
"I think most fans of not just the LPGA but of golf and sport in general know when they watch that event that this is the event where the winner jumps in the lake," said Karrie Webb, a two-time winner of that major. "I think it's very important that we stay at Mission Hills, and another reason why we're glad ANA was happy to come to Rancho Mirage." 
 
The purse will increase to $2.5 million next year, and is expected to go to at least $3 million by the end of the contract. 
 
It was the second major in which the LPGA Tour was able to replace a title sponsor. Wegmans ended its sponsorship with the LPGA Championship, and the tour joined with the PGA of America to create the KPMG Women's PGA Championship. 
 
Only a few years ago, the LPGA Tour had a 23-tournament schedule. 
 
Now it is up to 33 tournaments, which doesn't include the Solheim Cup that will be played in Germany next September. 
 
The LPGA Tour also has added one tournament to its 2015 schedule – the Coates Golf Championship, which will be played in Ocala, Florida the last week in January. That gives the LPGA Tour a Florida tournament in January for the first time since 2001. 
 
That will be followed by the Pure Silk-Bahamas LPGA Classic, meaning players have two tournaments before its three-week Asia and Australia swing. 
 
"We wanted to make sure that our U.S. fan base and media connected with us before we went to Australia, Thailand and Singapore, which we didn't do a few years back," Commissioner Mike Whan said. 
 
The women's majors still are up against the men. The ANA Inspiration is a week before the Masters. The KPMG Women's PGA Championship is the week before the U.S. Open. And the U.S. Women's Open is a week before the men play the British Open at St. Andrews. 
 
The LPGA Tour has a six-week swing through Asia at the end of the year, as usual, before winding up with the Lorena Ochoa Invitational in Mexico and the season-ending CME Group Tour Championship.