Report: LPGA commissioner agreeable to buyout

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BETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP) - LPGA commissioner Carolyn Bivens reportedly is agreeable to a buyout of the final two years of her contract amid calls for her resignation by key tour players.

Sports Business Daily, citing sources, reported on its Web site Thursday that the LPGA Tour board has authorized a golf industry executive to contact potential candidates to replace Bivens.

The sports trade daily reported the tour's board was not actively negotiating a buyout, but talks are expected to begin soon. Bivens is owed $500,000 per year for the final two years of a three-year extension she signed in 2008, the report said.

The LPGA Tour squabble has overshadowed what should be the biggest week of the season in women's golf, the U.S. Women's Open, which kicked off Thursday.

LPGA Tour spokesman David Higdon reiterated his statement from earlier in the week, saying the tour will not comment on internal matters. He said the focus should be on the U.S. Women's Open and that the LPGA players, staff and board are working together to grow the tour.

More than a dozen players, including top-ranked Lorena Ochoa, sent a letter to the board seeking Bivens' resignation. In the letter, the group said the tour's problems can't be blamed on the dismal economy and a new leader is needed, according to GolfWeek Magazine, which broke the story Monday.

The tour has lost seven tournaments since 2007.

The talk in the days leading up to the start of the championship at Saucon Valley Country Club was as much about the controversy as it was course conditions.

Players at the Women's Open have been peppered with questions about the letter, Bivens and the tour's future. Most have sidestepped the issue, citing respect of the USGA event.

Ochoa didn't hide her concern for the future of the tour and called for more player participation in moving the organization forward.

"We as players, we want to be more involved in what is happening and we want to see the tour going in a better direction," Ochoa said Wednesday, on the eve of the first round.

"There's not much we can do. I believe they will do the best for us, and hopefully things will start, you know, moving in a good direction, because we are worried that we're losing tournaments and we want to get back on a good track."

Suzann Pettersen acknowledged signing the letter calling for Bivens to step down.

"All we are doing is standing up for our tour," Pettersen told Golfweek Magazine. "Now it's up to our leadership and our board to find a solution."

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