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US LPGA adds three more events to schedule

One month before its season begins, the US LPGA Tour has announced a 28-tournament schedule that includes five majors, three additional tournaments and prize money closing in on $US50 million ($A48 million).

Tour commissioner Mike Whan delivered a balanced schedule on Tuesday that circles the globe.

It starts next month in Australia.

More than half the tournaments are in North America.

The Asian swing late in the year includes a new tournament in China.

And the season ends in November with the Titleholders and $US700,000 to the winner, the biggest payoff in women’s golf.

Whan also announced that CME, the title sponsor of the season-ending Titleholders, has extended its deal through 2016.

The US LPGA Tour previously announced a new tournament in the Bahamas on May 23-26 and a return to Texas, its first official event in the Lone Star State since the US Women’s Open at Colonial in 1991.

The North Texas Shootout will be from April 25-28, three weeks before the US PGA Tour arrives in town for its Texas swing.

The third new tournament is in China toward the end of the year – the Reignwood Pine Valley LPGA Classic the first week in October, which launches an Asian swing that will take players to Malaysia, South Korea, Taiwan and Japan.

“The performance, approachability and growing popularity of our players is the No.1 factor in the LPGA’s continued momentum, which has led to expanding coverage on Golf Channel, the growing slate of playing opportunities and our ever-increasing fan base,” Whan said.

The Evian will become the fifth major, held from September 12-15 in France with a $US3.25 million purse.

That will be the last of a strong line-up of majors that includes the US Women’s Open going to Seabonack on Long Island, and the Women’s British Open returning to the Old Course at St Andrews.

The season begins on February 14 with the Women’s Australian Open at Royal Canberra, followed by stops in Thailand and Singapore before the domestic schedule starts on March 14 with the Founders Cup in Arizona.

Stacy Lewis was the tour player of the year in 2012, the first American to win the highest award since Beth Daniel in 1993.

Inbee Park captured the money title, and 2012 also saw the emergence of Na Yeon Choi, who won the US Women’s Open and the Titleholders.

The biggest surprise was Yani Tseng, who won three tournaments before April to cement her status as the best in women’s golf, only to fall in a mysterious slump.

Her lead in the ranking was so large that Tseng goes into the season still at No.1.

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