Indy Women in Tech Championship

The Indy Women in Tech Championship is a women's professional golf tournament on the LPGA Tour, played in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Indy Women in Tech Championship
Tournament information
LocationSpeedway, Indiana, U.S.
Established2017
Course(s)Brickyard Crossing
Par72
Length6,456 yards (5,903 m)
Tour(s)LPGA Tour
FormatStroke play – 72 holes (2018)
Prize fund$2.0 million
Month playedSeptember (2019)
Tournament record score
Aggregate265 Park Sung-hyun (2018)
265 Lizette Salas (2018)
To par−23 as above
Current champion
M. J. Hur
Speedway
Location in the United States
Speedway
Location in Indiana

On September 27, 2016, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway announced that the LPGA will return to Indiana with a tournament at the Pete Dye-designed Brickyard Crossing Golf Resort at the speedway. Guggenheim Life and Annuity was named the sponsor of the Indy Women in Tech Championship, with the schedule from September 7–10, 2017.[1] The Speedway had previously hosted PGA Tour and LPGA events on the former Speedway Golf Course (which was replaced with the Brickyard Crossing) in the 1960s, and a Champions Tour event in the 1990s on the Dye course.

Although planned as a 72-hole event with a cut, it was shortened to 54 holes and ended on Saturday in 2017 since its date was the week before the Evian Championship, and players would be able to be in France in order to prepare for the major. For 2018, the Big Machine 400 was moved to the September date that was used by the IWIT Championship in 2017. Speedway officials were able to have the tournament moved to August, and will host the event as a full 144-player, 72-hole full-field event for 2018.

For spectator reasons, the course is re-routed for tournament play. The front nine consists of holes 11–18, then hole one. The back nine is holes 2–10. This allows the four holes inside the track infield (ordinarily holes 7–10) to be played as the four finishing holes.

Winners

YearDatesChampionCountryWinning scoreTo parMargin
of victory
Purse ($)Winner's
share ($)
2019Sep 26–29M. J. Hur South Korea63-70-66-68=267−214 strokes2,000,000300,000
2018Aug 16–19Park Sung-hyun South Korea68-63-66-68=265−23Playoff2,000,000300,000
2017Sep 7–9Lexi Thompson United States63-66-68=197−194 strokes2,000,000300,000

Tournament records

YearPlayerScoreTo parRound
2018Lizette Salas62−101st
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See also

References

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