The LPGA, founded in 1950, didn’t hire its first commissioner until 1975. Babe Zaharias’ business manager, Fred Corcoran, was the tournament manager of the newly-formed tour 75 years ago, and Patty Berg was the first president. But it wasn’t until Ray Volpe, in the mid-70s, insisted on having the title of “commissioner” and answering to a board of directors that the current system was put into place.
Mollie Marcoux Samaan was named the ninth commissioner in May 2021. The former Princeton athletic director announced she was stepping down on Dec. 2, 2024.
Here’s a look at the history of all nine LPGA commissioners:
The LPGA’s second female commissioner held the post for a little more than three years.
The current U.S. Golf Association CEO had the longest run of any LPGA commissioner. He came in and saved the tour from utter collapse, taking the LPGA back to its “act like a founder” roots. Whan restored confidence with checkwriters and rebuilt player trust.
The LPGA’s first female commissioner was driven out by the players after losing a large number of events. Bivens struggled with relationships in all aspects of the job.
Votaw first joined the LPGA as the tour’s general counsel in 1991 and was promoted a year later as LPGA commissioner Charles Mechem’s special assistant. After serving as vice president of business affairs, he became commissioner in 1999. He left the tour in 2005 to work for the PGA Tour, where he played a key role…
..
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Golfweek…