THE FIRST EVER ALL-FEMALE SCOTTISH LADIES OPEN GOLF TOUR
PAUL LAWRIE GC SLOT SCHEDULE 2013
18 Marriott Dalmahoy East Course, Edinburgh (£2,500).
19 Ratho Park, Edinburgh (£2,500)
MAY
6 Trump International Links, 12 miles north of Aberdeen (£3,500). Hole in one prize at 16th - £10,000 or £100 for nearest the hole.
7 Deeside GC, Aberdeen (£3,500). Hole in one prize at 1st - £10,000 or £100 for nearest the hole.
19 Ratho Park, Edinburgh (£2,500)
MAY
6 Trump International Links, 12 miles north of Aberdeen (£3,500). Hole in one prize at 16th - £10,000 or £100 for nearest the hole.
7 Deeside GC, Aberdeen (£3,500). Hole in one prize at 1st - £10,000 or £100 for nearest the hole.
6-7
Saltire Energy 36-hole championship
(Prizes based on the best two-round aggregates from Trump International and
Deeside) (£1,250).
JUNE
No events because of British women’s open amateur championship and Vagliano Trophy which will involve all the elite amateurs.
JULY
2 Downfield GC, Dundee (£2,500)
3 Carnoustie Burnside (£2,500)
11 Blairgowrie Rosemount, Perthshire (£2,500).
12 Alyth GC, Perthshire (£2,500)
AUGUST
26 Fairmont St Andrews Torrance Course (£2,500).
27 The Duke’s, St Andrews (£2,500)
SEPTEMBER
23 Haggs Castle GC, Glasgow (£2,500)
24 Drumpellier GC, Glasgow (£2,500)
OCTOBER
7 Craigielaw, East Lothian (£2,500)
9-10 Marriott Dalmahoy Tour Championship (36 holes, 2 days) (£5,000)
No events because of British women’s open amateur championship and Vagliano Trophy which will involve all the elite amateurs.
JULY
2 Downfield GC, Dundee (£2,500)
3 Carnoustie Burnside (£2,500)
11 Blairgowrie Rosemount, Perthshire (£2,500).
12 Alyth GC, Perthshire (£2,500)
AUGUST
26 Fairmont St Andrews Torrance Course (£2,500).
27 The Duke’s, St Andrews (£2,500)
SEPTEMBER
23 Haggs Castle GC, Glasgow (£2,500)
24 Drumpellier GC, Glasgow (£2,500)
OCTOBER
7 Craigielaw, East Lothian (£2,500)
9-10 Marriott Dalmahoy Tour Championship (36 holes, 2 days) (£5,000)
+Entry fee for the Tour Championship is £100. All other entry fees during the season
are £50 per player which do not need to be paid until the draw has been made for the relevant tournament.
+Sponsorship is being pursued to raise the £2,500
prizefunds. Sponsorship opportunties are still available to individuals, companies or even golf clubs who wish to host an event.
The inaugural Paul Lawrie Golf Centre Scottish Ladies Open Tour will call in at some of Scotland's best links and inland courses in its 14-event schedule which tees off in April and runs through to mid-October.
The experimental tour is designed to provide a testing ground for lady professionals so that they can raise their game to the standard required to qualify for the Ladies European Tour.
The tour, which is also being backed by the R&A, is modelled on the no-frills Scottish alliance format of 18-hole, one-day competitions which will be held in back-to-back double-headers at relatively adjacent courses to save competitors' accommodation expenses.
Only the 14th and last event on the 2013 schedule - the
Tour Championship at Marriott Dalmahoy, Edinburgh (a Solheim Cup
venue in the past) - will be over two days and 36 holes.
Christopher Campbell, the Grantown-on-Spey-born head professional at Trump International Links, said:
“We are pleased to support Paul Lawrie and the local businessmen behind this initiative aimed at developing Scottish female professionals and the top amateur golfers in the country.
Estimated prize funds are based on fields of 30 players. A breakdown of the distribution of prize money is also available on www.scottishladiestour.co.uk.
The inaugural Paul Lawrie Golf Centre Scottish Ladies Open Tour will call in at some of Scotland's best links and inland courses in its 14-event schedule which tees off in April and runs through to mid-October.
The experimental tour is designed to provide a testing ground for lady professionals so that they can raise their game to the standard required to qualify for the Ladies European Tour.
But the organisers would also welcome entries from competitors
who are already members of the Ladies European Tour and also LETAS so that keen
competition is assured.
PLGC SLOT events are also open to female amateurs
with single-figure handicaps so they can assess, by playing alongside
professionals, whether or not they are good enough players to turn pro.
The tour, which is also being backed by the R&A, is modelled on the no-frills Scottish alliance format of 18-hole, one-day competitions which will be held in back-to-back double-headers at relatively adjacent courses to save competitors' accommodation expenses.
Only the 14th and last event on the 2013 schedule - the
Tour Championship at Marriott Dalmahoy, Edinburgh (a Solheim Cup
venue in the past) - will be over two days and 36 holes.
Ryder Cup hero and Open champion at Carnoustie in
1999, Aberdeen-born Paul Lawrie is thrilled by the fact that the fledgling tour, which bears
his name, will be hosted by a variety of links and inland courses,
enabling the players to hone their skills.
“It's fantastic news. Many, many thanks to everyone
involved in allowing the lady professionals and up-and-coming amateur girls the
chance to play on such high profile courses," said Paul.
Nicola Melville, the only lady
PGA teaching professional at St Andrews, and veteran golf writer Colin
Farquharson are co-organisers of the first all-female open pro tour to be held
in Scotland. Nicola will be the focal point for competitors at all the events
Nicola said:
"The fact that so many quality courses appear on our first schedule is
bound to help us attract competitors from outwith Scotland - which is a
necessity as there are not enough lady pros in Scotland, even if they all
turn up on the same day, to make the enterprise a viable proposition.
"There has been a great deal of interest shown in our new tour already
with would-be player registrations from outwith Scotland - England,
Germany and Spain among others to date."
"The fact that so many quality courses appear on our first schedule is
bound to help us attract competitors from outwith Scotland - which is a
necessity as there are not enough lady pros in Scotland, even if they all
turn up on the same day, to make the enterprise a viable proposition.
"There has been a great deal of interest shown in our new tour already
with would-be player registrations from outwith Scotland - England,
Germany and Spain among others to date."
Christopher Campbell, the Grantown-on-Spey-born head professional at Trump International Links, said:
“We are pleased to support Paul Lawrie and the local businessmen behind this initiative aimed at developing Scottish female professionals and the top amateur golfers in the country.
“What Paul
has done for Scottish junior golf, especially in the North-east of Scotland is
great for the game of golf and the well-being of children growing up in the
area. He has now put his name to a Scottish Ladies Open Tour which will further
enhance the game in Scotland so we were happy to offer the required tee times
for the competitors on Monday, May 6.”
The Paul Lawrie Golf Centre Scottish Ladies Open
Tour will debut at Marriott Dalmahoy, Edinburgh on April 18 and call at
venues such as Trump International Links, Carnoustie, Blairgowrie, The Duke's,
Fairmont St Andrews, Craigielaw and Haggs Castle before returning to the
Edinburgh venue for its closing fixture of 2013, the Tour Championship,
which will have prize money of £5,000 (based on a field of 30 players),
over 36 holes on October 9-10.
The remainder of the events, if they attract 30
entries, will have prizefunds of £2,500 or £3,500, depending on the level of
sponsorship. All entry fees will go into the prizefunds. In all, the inaugural PLGC Scottish Ladies
Open Tour will be offering total prize money well in excess of £30,000.
News of the PLGC SLOT entries and directions to the
courses, where to stay and how to go about obtaining practice rounds, is
available on its website: http://www.scottishladiestour.co.uk/home
Entries can be made online and no entry fees have
to be paid until the draw for that particular tournament has been made.
There is no minimum or maximum age for the
lady/girl amateurs as long as they have single-figure handicaps. Ten amateurs
is the maximum entitlement in a field of 30. If the amateurs do not take
up their entitlement, the vacant places will go to lady professionals in order
of entry.
Most of the
fields will be limited to around 30 players because the host clubs are giving
the courtesy of the course. It will be first come first served for lady pro
entries. If there are more than 10 amateur entries for a tournament, the lower
handicap players will be given priority.
The organisers will be consulting competitors
throughout the season with a view to expanding the size of the fields next year
when, subject to the players' wishes, two-day events will become the norm.
As a player-friendly tour, no official prizegiving
ceremonies will be held except for the Tour Championship. Otherwise players can
leave the venue as soon as they have checked and signed their scorecards,
leaving a mobile telephone contact number with Nicola Melville.
Players can collect their prize money (or amateur
voucher) from Nicola at the next venue if they do not wish to hang around until
the end of play when Nicola will draw up a list of final scores and prize money
distribution.
End of tournament information will be posted on
www.scottishladiestour.co.uk and www.kirkwoodgolf.co.uk ASAP.
Estimated prize funds are based on fields of 30 players. A breakdown of the distribution of prize money is also available on www.scottishladiestour.co.uk.
Amateurs will not have separate prizelists. They
are competing against the professionals and, depending on their position in the
final standings at any tournament, can win vouchers up to a maximum value of
£500 (limited by the Rules of Amateur Status).
The leading pro in the PLGC SLOT Order of Merit at
the end of the Tour Championship in October will win an all-expenses-paid trip
to Morocco for the 2013 LET Q School or to compete in the Moroccan Ladies
Challenge which is planned to be played between Stage 1 and Stage 2 of the Q
School at Marrakesh.
The leading amateur in the Order of Merit will win
a stay at self-catering accommodation at Gleneagles Village (to the value of
£500).
To allow for players travelling long distances to
the courses, in general the first tee times will not be until around 1.30 or
2pm with the odd exception.
Labels: Amateur Ladies, Pro Ladies
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