GAINESVILLE, Va. — LPGA Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan took responsibility Saturday for the tour’s failure to get fans to the Solheim Cup in time to see the opening tee shots a day earlier but did not offer a full explanation of the debacle.
Players teed off Friday morning in front of half-empty grandstands at Robert Trent Jones Golf Club, muting what could have been a raucous first-tee atmosphere in the team competition between the United States against Europe. The stands were full on Saturday, but the damage had been done, with media coverage more focused on the logistical problems than the dominant first day of golf by Nelly Korda and the U.S.
“At the end of the day, I’m the leader of the organization and I have to own it,” Marcoux Samaan said.
RTJ is tucked into a private residential community serviced by a single road off U.S. Route 29 in this exurb about 40 miles west of Washington, D.C. The venue hosted four Presidents Cups in the 1990s and 2000s and a PGA Tour event in 2017 without any significant transportation problems.
Marcoux Samaan said there simply weren’t enough buses at Jiffy Lube Live, the concert venue where fans paid $30 for parking, without explaining why the LPGA didn’t have a fleet of vehicles ready to shuttle spectators who were motivated to get to the golf course before dawn. Instead, they spent hours standing in lines with little or no access to restrooms.
Asked how many buses were available, Marcoux Samaan declined to answer directly.
“It’s a complicated question, and again, we were writing spreadsheets and trying to figure it all out,” she said. “We didn’t have enough buses in the morning, clearly.”
The LPGA Tour is responsible for on-site operations at the Solheim Cup when it is played in the United States. The last U.S. event was in 2021 in Ohio, with the COVID-19 pandemic limiting the number of international fans.
“This was an LPGA issue,” Marcoux Samaan said.
The commissioner said the tour staff spent much of Friday in “triage mode” trying to diagnose the problem and ensure departing fans would be shuttled off the golf course efficiently. More than 12 hours passed before the LPGA posted a statement on social media promising improvements for Saturday and emailed a letter to fans that included an offer of free tickets for use this weekend.
“We had some staff out there and we were trying to communicate to the people that were there,” Marcoux Samaan said. “I think we thought that was more important than getting something out more broadly on social.”
During a year that has seen major audience growth for women’s sports including basketball and soccer, the LPGA attracted modest viewership this spring when the top-ranked Korda won six times in seven starts, including a major championship.
Marcoux Samaan, who has been the LPGA commissioner for three years, pointed to increased participation in the sport as a sign of her tour’s growing popularity.
“The percentage of women playing has escalated over the last several years. Young girls playing golf has continued to grow,” she said. “I think our team is working really hard to grow the game.”