For the first time this millennium, PGA Tour and LPGA Tour players will tee it up together in a co-sanctioned mixed-team event at this week's Grant Thornton Invitational. The JCPenney Classic, the last co-sanctioned mixed event, ran from 1960 to 1999.
The format's return is met with plenty of star power for an impressive $4 million prize money payout, as five women in the top 10 of the Rolex Women's World Rankings will tee it up alongside three men in the top 25 in the Official World Golf Ranking. Aside from the CME Group Tour Championship, the prize pool is larger than every non-LPGA major on the tour's 2023 schedule.
This event borrows the three-round blueprint from the now defunct QBE Shootout, using a similar format and still played at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Fla. Starting Friday, 16 pairs will play a scramble format, moving to alternate shot on Saturday and finishing Sunday with a modified four-ball where each pair will tee off, then play their teammate's ball the rest of the hole.
Here are five teams that have out attention heading into the much-anticpated team event.
Thompson, 28, is the only LPGA player with multiple years of experience in the events format; she competed with the men in the QBE Shootout in 2021 and 2022. The 11-time LPGA winner, however, is coming off one of her strangest years on tour. For the first time in her 13-year career, she did not make the CME Group Tour Championship. A resounding end-of-the-season charge, with three consecutive top-10s and nearly becoming the first woman to make a PGA Tour cut at the Shriners Open in October at least put Thompson back in more familiar territory at the top of LPGA leaderboards and in form heading into this week. She has also six top-10s in her last eight appearances at the CME, including a win in 2018.
Fowler, menawhile, comes in having finished 17th in a 20-player field at the Hero World Championship, only his second start since the PGA's Tour Championship in late August.
Vu enters as the No. 1 player in the Rolex Women's World Rankings and arguably in the best form of anyone in the field. The 26-year-old finished T-4 at the CME Group Tour Championship two weeks ago to become the first American to win the Rolex Player of the Year Award since Stacy Lewis in 2014, capping off a dominant year where she won two majors, the first time that's happened since Jin Young Ko accomplished the feat in 2019. Dahmen, at No. 166 in the OWGR, has not played in six weeks following a season mostly to forget. The bright side for Dahmen is how the 36-year-old strung together a pair of top-15 finishes at the Sanderson Farms Championship (T-13) and the Shriners Children's Open (T-7) in October to end his season with one of his best stretches of the year. Of course, we're also looking for how Dahmen coordinates outfits with Vu.
This Swedish duo is the only pair to have been members of their respective winning Solheim and Ryder Cup teams this year. Aberg, 24, has been on an absolute heater of late, losing in a playoff at the Sanderson Farms Championship, followed by a pair of top-15s and his first career PGA Tour victory at the RSM Classic two weeks ago. Sagstrom, meanwhile, has played at the venue five times, including a T-16 three weeks ago at the LPGA's CME Group Tour Championship.
Both lauded amateurs, they team up following their first tour victories. Theegala, 26, broke through at the Fortinet Championship in September. Zhang, 20, won the Mizuho Americas Open in June, only two weeks after winning her second individual NCAA title. Theegala has only made two starts since his maiden PGA victory, while Zhang closed out her rookie season with three consecutive top-15 finishes. Theegala also was part of the winning team (along with Tom Hoge) at last year's finale QBE Shootout.
The Grant Thornton Ambassador pairing has some of the most experience in the field at the format. Korda is one of two LPGA players in the field who played at the QBE, joining Lexi Thompson last year, the first time the tournament had two LPGA players in the event. Korda impressed in her debut, finishing T-5 with Denny McCarthy. Korda has six top-10s in seven starts at the LPGA’s Tour Championship at Tiburon, including a T-8 three weeks ago. Finau played with Thompson multiple times at the QBE, including a T-4 in 2017.
Of the public options sprinkled across Naples, Greg Norman's Tiburón courses at the Ritz-Carlton provide the best balance of quality golf and convenience, situated in the heart of North Naples. That ideal combination comes at a cost, though, as green fees can be upwards of $300. The Gold course—ranked on our Best Courses You Can Play in Florida list—features stacked sod wall bunkers and no conventional rough and is home to the LPGA’s CME Group Tour Championship and the new mixed-team Grant Thornton Invitational, including pairs of LPGA and PGA Tour players competing together for the first time since 1999.
9:10 a.m. -- Mel Reid/Russell Henley
9:10 a.m. -- Allisen Corpuz/Cameron Champ
9:25 a.m. -- Leona Maguire/Lucas Glover
9:25 a.m. -- Madeline Sagstrom/Ludvig Aberg
9:40 a.m. -- Rose Zhang/Sahith Theegala
9:40 a.m. -- Lilia Vu/Joel Dahmen
9:55 a.m. -- Megan Khang/Denny McCarthy
9:55 a.m. -- Cheyenne Knight/Tom Hoge
10:10 a.m. -- Brooke Henderson/Corey Conners
10:10 a.m. -- Ruoning Yin/Nick Taylor
10:25 a.m. -- Céline Boutier/Harris English
10:25 a.m. -- Andrea Lee/Billy Horschel
10:40 a.m. -- Lydia Ko/Jason Day
10:40 a.m. -- Charley Hull/Justin Rose
10:55 a.m. -- Lexi Thompson/Rickie Fowler
10:55 a.m. -- Nelly Korda/Tony Finau
Golf Channel will have live coverage from 1-4 p.m. EST on Friday. On Saturday, coverage begins on Golf Channel from 2-3 p.m., then continues on NBC from 3 to 5 p.m. On Sunday, Golf Channel has the broadcast from 1-2 p.m., with NBC finshing things up from 2-4 p.m.
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