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World-class golfers returning to Rich Harvest Farms

ORLANDO, FL. — The Ladies PGA Tour is returning to Chicago — but it won't be until 2016. And then it will be for the staging of an extraordinary new team event.

Mike Whan, the LPGA commissioner, highlighted the first day of the 60th PGA Merchandise Show by announcing the arrival of the International Crown event. It'll make its debut July 21-27 at Caves Valley, a Tom Fazio design in Owings Mills, Md., in 2014, and the second staging will be in the summer of 2016 at Rich Harvest Farms in Sugar Grove.

Jerry Rich, owner and designer of the Rich Harvest private facility that hosted the 2009 Solheim Cup matches, was a leader in making the new event happen.

“Three days after Mike became commissioner (in 2010), I brought him to Chicago and said we've got to do something special,” said Rich. “The greatest players aren't just from America. They're from Asia and around the world.”

That started the process, which led to Thursday's announcement at the Orange County Convention Center.

Rich Harvest's Solheim Cup set attendance records and was a rousing success, but didn't lead to the return of an annual LPGA stop in Chicago. The last LPGA event was the Kellogg-Keebler Classic at Aurora's Stonebridge in 2004. That tourney had a three-year run in the aftermath of the U.S. Women's Open being played at Merit Club in Libertyville in 2000.

The International Crown, though, might well rival the success of the Solheim with the top players worldwide guaranteed to compete.

“At the Solheim Cup we had the largest event (the LPGA) ever had,” said Rich. “We had 120,000 people in Chicago — the greatest golf city in the world. Maybe this (new) event won't approach the Ryder Cup that we just had at Medinah, but it will be huge.”

Rich probably could have hosted the 2014 International Crown, but decided against it.

“I needed four years to wait because of our junior programs,” said Rich. His staff has studied the nearly 2,000 high school girls programs in five states. Those players, along with college players, will be invited to the International Crown with lodging already being arranged at Northern Illinois University and Aurora University.

Whan predicted The International Crown will “take women's golf to the next level and allow fans to rally behind their homelands.”

The International Crown will be held in even-numbered years to avoid conflict with the Solheim Cup, the biennial competition between the U.S. and European teams. The International will feature 32 players from eight countries battling to determine, according to the LPGA, “the world's best golf nation.”

Competition will be over four days, three for best-ball matches and one for singles matches. Teams will be determined by the top four players on the Rolex World Rankings after the 2013 CME Group Titleholders event, the last tourney of the LPGA season. If the International Crown were to be held today, the eight teams participating would be South Korea, the U.S., Japan, Sweden, Australia, Taiwan, Spain and England.

The four players who will compete for each country will be determined at a later date.

“Our tour is so global, we need this type of an event,” said Stacey Lewis, the top-ranked American player. “People always want to know why golfers from Asia are so good. Now we can see how all the countries stack up.”

Taiwan's longtime world No. 1 player, Yani Tseng, likened the lead-in to the International Crown to “preparing for the Olympics.”

The Rich Harvest version of the International Crown will about a month before the Olympics in Brazil, when golf will make its return to the Olympic Games.

The first International Crown event will offer a $1.6 million purse with each member of the winning team receiving $100,000. Ambassadors and financial supporters will be announced at a later date, as will the nature of the trophy going to the winning nation.

Ÿ For more golf news, check out lenziehmongolf.com. Len can be contacted by email at lenziehm@gmail.com.

The International Crown, a new LPGA event involving the worldÂ’s best female golfers, will take place in Maryland in 2014 and move to Rich Harvest Farms in Sugar Grove in 2016. Four top golfers shared the stage Thursday for the announcement with LPGA commissioner Mike Whan. Photo courtesy of LPGA
Jerry Rich, owner and founder of the Rich Harvest Farms golf club in Sugar Grove, hopes the success of the 2009 Solheim Cup will carry over into The International Crown, which will be played at his course in 2016. Daily Herald file
  Michelle Wie waves an American Flag after Team USA defeated Europe at the final round of the Solheim Cup in Sugar Grove in 2009. The Solheim Cup drew more than 120,000 fans to the biennial competition. JOHN STARKS/jstarks@dailyherald.com
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