2010 Ladies European Tour

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2010 Ladies European Tour season
DurationFebruary 2010 (2010-02) – December 2010 (2010-12)
Number of official events25
Most wins5 (tie):
England Laura Davies
South Africa Lee-Anne Pace
Order of MeritSouth Africa Lee-Anne Pace
Player of the YearSouth Africa Lee-Anne Pace
Rookie of the YearSouth Korea In-Kyung Kim
Lowest stroke averageNorway Suzann Pettersen
2009
2011

The 2010 Ladies European Tour was a series of golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world which took place from February through December 2010. The tournaments were sanctioned by the Ladies European Tour (LET).

The tour featured 25 official money events, as well as the European Nations Cup. Lee-Anne Pace won the Order of Merit with earnings of €339,517.77, ahead of Laura Davies. In-Kyung Kim won Rookie of the Year honours, after finishing 4th in the Order of Merit.

Schedule[edit]

The table below shows the 2010 schedule. The numbers in brackets after the winners' names show the number of career wins they had on the Ladies European Tour up to and including that event. This is only shown for members of the tour.

Key
Major championships
LET majors in bold
Regular events
Team championships
Dates Tournament Host country Winner Notes
25–28 Feb New Zealand Women's Open  New Zealand England Laura Davies (40) Co-sanctioned by the ALPG Tour
4–7 Mar ANZ Ladies Masters  Australia Australia Karrie Webb (n/a) Co-sanctioned by the ALPG Tour
11–14 Mar Women's Australian Open  Australia Taiwan Yani Tseng (n/a) Co-sanctioned by the ALPG Tour
18–20 Mar Lalla Meryem Cup  Morocco Germany Anja Monke (3)
22–25 Apr European Nations Cup  Spain Sweden Anna Nordqvist
and Sophie Gustafson
Team event; unofficial prize money
7–9 May Turkish Airlines Ladies Open  Turkey England Melissa Reid (1)
13–16 May UniCredit Ladies German Open  Germany England Laura Davies (41)
27–30 May Allianz Ladies Slovak Open  Slovakia Spain María Hernández (1)
4–6 Jun ABN AMRO Ladies Open  Netherlands England Florentyna Parker (1)
17–20 Jun Deutsche Bank Ladies Swiss Open  Switzerland South Africa Lee-Anne Pace (1)
25–27 Jun Ladies Open of Portugal  Portugal Australia Karen Lunn (9)
1–4 Jul Tenerife Ladies Open  Spain England Trish Johnson (16)
22–25 Jul Evian Masters  France South Korea Jiyai Shin (n/a) Co-sanctioned by the LPGA Tour
29 Jul – 1 Aug Ricoh Women's British Open  England Taiwan Yani Tseng (n/a) Co-sanctioned by the LPGA Tour
6–8 Aug AIB Ladies Irish Open  Ireland Sweden Sophie Gustafson (14)
12–15 Aug S4C Wales Ladies Championship of Europe  Wales South Africa Lee-Anne Pace (2)
18–20 Aug Ladies Scottish Open  Scotland France Virginie Lagoutte-Clément (3)
27–29 Aug Finnair Masters  Finland South Africa Lee-Anne Pace (3)
3–5 Sep UNIQA Ladies Golf Open  Austria England Laura Davies (42)
9–12 Sep Open de France Feminin  France England Trish Johnson (17)
16–19 Sep Open De España Femenino  Spain England Laura Davies (43)
22–24 Oct Sanya Ladies Open  China South Africa Lee-Anne Pace (4) Co-sanctioned by the LAGT
29–31 Oct Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open  China South Africa Lee-Anne Pace (5) Co-sanctioned by the LAGT
4–7 Nov Daishin Securities-Tomato M Korea-European Ladies Masters  South Korea South Korea Kim Hyun-ji (2) Co-sanctioned by the KLPGA Tour
11–13 Nov Hero Honda Women's Indian Open  India England Laura Davies (44) Co-sanctioned by the LAGT
8–11 Dec Omega Dubai Ladies Masters  United Arab Emirates Denmark Iben Tinning (6)

Order of Merit rankings[edit]

Rank Player Country Earnings
1 Lee-Anne Pace  South Africa €339,517.77
2 Laura Davies  England €311,573.48
3 Melissa Reid  England €270,871.59
4 In-Kyung Kim  South Korea €193,154.69
5 Iben Tinning  Denmark €163,562.50
6 Virginie Lagoutte-Clément  France €153,526.09
7 Suzann Pettersen  Norway €149,489.66
8 Florentyna Parker  England €145,240.36
9 Trish Johnson  England €139,924.93
10 Vikki Laing  Scotland €126,733.57

Source:[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ LET Tour Guide 2011. Ladies European Tour. 2011. pp. 143–188. Retrieved 26 September 2023.

External links[edit]