GAINESVILLE, Va. — The opening matches of the Solheim Cup began in front of half-empty grandstands surrounding the first tee at Robert Trent Jones Golf Club on Friday morning, with transportation issues preventing fans from getting to the golf course.
Fans posted on social media that they were stuck for hours waiting in lines for buses at Jiffy Lube Live, a concert venue near the golf course about 40 miles west of Washington, D.C.
“2 hours in the parking lot and only 200 yard from the front it’s a disgrace refunds need to be issued,” one fan, Jon Davidson, wrote on X.
“I’ve been in line for about an hour and only moved 15 feet… And I had hopes of making it to the first tee,” wrote Jason Berstein.
In the 20 minutes before the matches began, a small trickle of fans speed-walked toward the grandstand, but there was no sign of the record crowds that organizers had promised.
“We recognize and deeply apologize to all fans affected by the challenges with shuttling from parking to the golf course,” the LPGA said in a statement on X. “We’ve made significant changes to our transportation system to mitigate these issues moving forward, and we’re working on ways to express our regret to those impacted.”
Esther Henseleit struck the opening tee shot for Europe in the team competition against the United States as part of an alternate-shot pairing with Charley Hull. Allisen Corpuz followed for the U.S., paired with top-ranked Nelly Korda.
Europe is seeking to capture the Solheim Cup for a record fourth straight time.
“The Solheim is the LPGA’s time to shine,” GolfWeek’s Beth Ann Nichols wrote on X. “The crown jewel of the tour. Complete disaster. One of the worst I’ve seen in 20 years covering the tour.”
Players frequently describe the opening tee shot at the Solheim Cup as more nerve-wracking than anything in women’s golf, fueled partly by fans who fill grandstands hours in advance to cheer the home team.
The few hundred fans who made it in time for Friday morning’s opening remained quiet for the European tee shots and cheered throughout as the Americans hit theirs, a departure from golf etiquette that players have come to embrace at team competitions.
— With AP