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Ginn Open

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Ginn Open
Image
Tournament information
LocationReunion, Florida
Established2006
CourseGinn Reunion Resort
Par72
Length6,505 yards (5,948 m)
TourLPGA Tour
FormatStroke play - 72 holes
Prize fund$2,600,000
Month playedApril
Final year2008
Tournament record score
Aggregate269 - Lorena Ochoa (2008)
To par-19 - Lorena Ochoa (2008)
Final champion
Mexico Lorena Ochoa

The Ginn Open was a women's professional golf tournament on the LPGA Tour. It was played from 2006 to 2008 at Ginn Reunion Resort in Reunion, Florida. For all three years, the tournament was broadcast on CBS Sports.The title sponsor was Ginn Resorts, a resort development and management firm with headquarters in Celebration, Florida. With a purse exceeding $2 million, the tournament winner automatically qualified for the season-ending ADT Championship.

The tournament used the front nine of the Legacy Course designed by Arnold Palmer and the front nine of the Independence Course designed by Tom Watson.[1]

Tournament names

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  • 2006 Ginn Clubs & Resorts Open
  • 2007-2008 Ginn Open

History

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Inaugural tournament

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The 2006 inaugural Ginn Open tournament, was the most expensive LPGA inaugural tournament to date. The purse was the 3rd largest in the LPGA. In addition, the tournament weekend featured concerts by Brooks & Dunn.[2]

Winners

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YearDateChampionCountryWinning scoreTo parMargin
of victory
Runner(s)-upPurse ($)Winner's
share ($)
2008Apr 20Lorena OchoaImage Mexico68-67-65-69=269−193 strokesTaiwan Yani Tseng2,600,000390,000
2007Apr 15Brittany LincicomeImage United States67-72-67-72=278−101 strokeMexico Lorena Ochoa2,600,000390,000
2006Apr 30Mi-Hyun KimImage South Korea70-66-69-71=276−122 strokesMexico Lorena Ochoa
Australia Karrie Webb
2,500,000375,000

The tournament record was set in 2008 by Yani Tseng.

YearPlayerScoreRound
2008Yani Tseng64 (−8)2nd round

Source:[1]

Ending

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It was announced on January 28, 2009, that Ginn was ending all golf tournament sponsorships due to the economy.[3] As a result, the tournament was cancelled for 2009, and no substitute tournament was announced. The LPGA sued Ginn for breach of contract due to the cancellation.[3]

References

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  1. 1 2 "Tournaments: Ginn Open". Where2Golf. Retrieved November 7, 2024.
  2. "Inaugural Ginn Open Is Most Expensive Ever On LPGA". GolfBlogger.com. April 24, 2006. Retrieved November 7, 2024.
  3. 1 2 "PGA Tour sues Ginn Resorts". ESPN. Associated Press. January 30, 2009. Retrieved November 7, 2024.
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