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In Addition to Language Requirements, LPGA Should Implement a Weight Limit, Too

The LPGA has spoken, and if you understand English, the message is clear: the tour will henceforth be a one-language operation, which creates all sorts of ironical hilarity since a good many tour winners are from non-English speaking countries.

No matter. In an effort to improve sponsorships, and presumably ratings, the tour is getting the Stepford Wives treatment: Homogenize everything. In addition to English-only requirements, players will also be encouraged to bleach their hair blond and get breast implants. Because if there's anything LPGA fans love more than watching golfers speak a language we can all understand (and by "we," I mean "lazy Americans"), it's watching golfers speak a language we can all understand while being able to point and gawk in the process.

Perhaps I've overstating things a bit, but the whole idea of requiring players to learn English is farcical. The theory for the new rule goes something like this: the amateurs who take part in pro-ams can't communicate with the pros because of the language barrier. Apparently, that's a no-no, and a much bigger concern than finding a way to mass-market the tour to a wider audience. Which probably goes a long way in explaining the tour's current run on abysmal ratings.

LPGA Tells Players: Speak English or Else


The LPGA is telling its golfers that speaking English is now a requirement for playing on the tour, and that women who fail to learn English will be kicked out.

Golfweek Magazine is reporting that at a mandatory meeting for South Korean players at last weekend's Safeway Classic, the tour told the players that once they've been on tour for two years, they must pass an oral evaluation of their English skills, and that if they fail their membership will be suspended.

The great South Korean golfer Se Ri Pak says she understands the policy but thinks kicking golfers off the tour for failing to speak English is too severe.

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