Lexi Thompson’s New Chapter: Why Part-Time Golf Might Be the Tour’s Future
I’ve been around professional golf long enough to know that when a 15-time LPGA Tour winner gets married on a Saturday in a Tuscan-style estate in Florida, it’s worth more than just wedding congratulations. It’s a statement—one that tells us something important about where the game is heading, particularly for its elite female competitors.
Lexi Thompson married her partner Max Provost last weekend at La Casa Toscana in southwest Florida, about four months after he proposed on New Year’s Day in Whistler. By all accounts, it was a beautiful celebration surrounded by family, close friends, and a stellar lineup of fellow golfers including Stacy Lewis, Paula Creamer, Morgan Pressel, Megan Khang, and Brittany Lincicome. The event even drew a custom touch from longtime sponsor Puma, who created bespoke all-white sneakers featuring flowers and the wedding date.
Thompson posted to Instagram:
“The best day of my life. I married my best friend, surrounded by the people we love most, at the most beautiful venue, La Casa Toscana. Every moment felt like a dream and my heart has never been so full. Forever starts with you.”
But here’s what really struck me about this moment: Thompson is doing something I’ve watched very few top-tier LPGA players successfully navigate—she’s recalibrated her career without stepping away from it entirely.
The Retirement That Isn’t
In May 2024, Thompson made headlines by announcing she was moving to a part-time schedule. In my 35 years covering this tour, I’ve seen plenty of players dial it back, but rarely have I seen someone at Thompson’s level—a player still hungry, still capable of winning—do it with such clarity and purpose. She wasn’t running from the game. She was redefining her relationship with it.
What’s remarkable is that even with a reduced schedule, Thompson remains competitive. She finished 54th in the Race to CME Globe last year, which seems almost invisible until you realize she played a fraction of the schedule her competitors did. Her recent appearance at the Grant Thornton Invitational alongside Wyndham Clark saw her and her partner finish T10th despite a stunning 55 in round one. That’s not the play of someone mentally checked out.
I think what we’re witnessing here is an evolution in how elite female golfers can structure their careers. Thompson told Golf Monthly:
“I’m still practicing, maybe not spending as many long days on the course or in the gym, but every time I tee it up, I still want that feeling of competing to win. There’s less stress and pressure on myself, but I’ll always have high expectations. It’s nice to have that freedom now.”
Having caddied professionally back in the ’90s and covered countless tours since, I can tell you—that’s maturity talking. It’s the voice of someone who’s figured out what actually matters.
The Solheim Cup Question
What strikes me most about Thompson’s current positioning is her unwavering commitment to the Solheim Cup. She’s been on every U.S. team since 2013, and she’s made clear her desire to continue that streak, with The Netherlands hosting later this season. Even more intriguingly, she’s already thinking about her future role as a captain.
Thompson said:
“It’s my favorite tournament, and I’d love to be captain one day. But I think I have to be an assistant captain first.”
In my experience, when a player starts talking about captaincy, it often signals a shifting mindset—from “what can I achieve individually” to “what can I build for the next generation.” Thompson’s willingness to embrace that progression, even at the peak of her competitive abilities, suggests she’s thinking legacy. That’s the kind of player who eventually becomes invaluable to the sport beyond tournament scores.
A Model That Could Work
Here’s what I think matters most about this story: Thompson is proving that elite female golfers don’t have to choose between personal fulfillment and professional excellence. The LPGA Tour, unlike some sports, has traditionally demanded absolute commitment to a grueling schedule. Thompson’s success with a part-time approach—if she can continue competing at a high level—could offer a blueprint for other players.
The tour hasn’t lost Lexi Thompson. It’s simply gotten a version of her that’s sustainable, intentional, and arguably more valuable for the game’s broader ecosystem. She remains a draw. She remains competitive. And now she’s got a partner, a marriage, and a clearer sense of what winning actually means.
Is she still hungry? Absolutely. But she’s hungry on her own terms, which might be the smartest play anyone on tour has made in recent years.

