Connect with us

Business

Michelle Wie West partners with Ford to launch LPGA rookie program

Published

on

Michelle Wie West partners with Ford to launch LPGA rookie program

In team sports, athletes get a built-in support system thanks to teammates going through the same journey as them most of the time. 

In golf, it’s you, the ball and the course – no matter what kind of team you have behind the scenes. And for those elite players, like Michelle Wie West, who has been playing LPGA Tour tournaments since she was 12 years old, it can be tough navigating a professional world at the onset. 

Advertisement

To that end, West teamed up with Ford to launch “Power Her Drive,” a new mentorship platform designed to support LPGA rookies on and off the course. It’s a program built on Wie West’s own experience as a teenager trying her hardest to make an impact on the course, while dealing with everything else that comes with being a professional athlete. 

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Michelle Wie West walks course

CBS Sports reporter Amanda Balionis, former LPGA player Michelle Wie West and Golf Channel reporter Kira Dixon laugh during the Golden Bear Pro-Am prior to the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club on May 28, 2025, in Dublin, Ohio. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images / Getty Images)

“This is probably the easiest yes I’ve had when it comes in terms of sponsorship,” Wie West said in a recent call with FOX Business ahead of “Power Her Drive” debuting at the Ford Championship, which begins in Phoenix, Arizona, on March 26. “This really, deeply aligns with my passion. Now that I’m retired and in my post-retirement career, hosting my tournament, having juniors involved and mentorship was a big part of it as well. I think what Ford is doing is amazing. Since our early conversations, it was very clear it wasn’t just about logos – it was about empowerment.

“Golf is an individual sport, and this is what I tell the juniors all the time: you have to lean into community. You have to lean into your support group.”

Advertisement

PGA TOUR UNLEASHES AI REVOLUTION WITH AWS TO TRANSFORM GOLF VIEWING EXPERIENCE FOR FANS WORLDWIDE

Wie West said she was lucky to have her parents as a strong support system, but since they didn’t expect their daughter to be as successful as she was at an early age, the 2014 U.S. Women’s Open winner admitted, “It was the blind leading the blind a lot of the times.”

So, with women’s sports in general seeing unprecedented growth, Wie West’s passion was one Ford immediately wanted to help out with in their partnership. 

Michelle Wie West tee shot

LPGA player Michelle Wie West plays her shot from the 14th tee during the Golden Bear Pro-Am at Muirfield Village Golf Club on May 28, 2025, in Dublin, Ohio. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images / Getty Images)

“I think this all started with the idea that we were very committed to becoming the official vehicle partner for the LPGA Tour. But then we started exploring it more deeply. How can we do this in a very unique way?” Lisa Materazzo, Ford’s global chief marketing officer, said to FOX Business. 

Advertisement

“We don’t want to just sponsor the tournament. It’s very important, so I don’t want to downplay that at all, but we saw an unmet need when we began speaking with the LPGA and an opportunity for deeper connection with the athletes. Really authentically supporting their development, and this to us felt very right for Ford, to demonstrate that we have this unique commitment to the players and the LPGA, and more broadly, this sport and women’s sports in general.”

“Power Her Drive” will begin with a Class of 2026, featuring a bright group of LPGA Tour rookies: Camille Boyd, Briana Chacon, Hailee Cooper, Laney Frye, Melanie Green and Yana Wilson. 

As these rookies look to cement themselves as winners, or even stars, on the LPGA Tour, “Power Her Drive” plans to help them deal with what comes off the course, including brand sponsorships, financial advice and more. 

Michelle Wie West swing

Michelle Wie hits a tee shot during the first round of the Pure Silk Bahamas LPGA Classic at the Ocean Club Golf Course on Jan. 25, 2018, in Paradise Island, Bahamas. (Andy Lyons/Getty Images / Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Advertisement

“The score on the leaderboard is what you see, but there’s so many layers behind that,” Wie West added. “I hope with our partnership, people will kind of see the peeling of the onion and see the support these players are getting. We’re going to go through and talk about personal brand building, talk about leadership skills. Even though it’s an elite individual sport, you’re still a leader of your own team – your caddy, your trainer, etc. I think all of this is going to be so much fun to go through with the rookies.”

Materazzo added: “We are a big business – we’re a 122-year-old big, global brand. We know how to do these things, we know how to operate in a business environment. So, we can help those young golfers build their brands… If we can make other pieces of it an easier lift, that makes us, in theory, proud and very humble to be a part of that journey for them.”

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Business

St George signs MOU with Brazilian firm

Published

on

St George signs MOU with Brazilian firm

Three days after being added to the ASX All Ordinaries, rare earths developer St George Mining has taken another key step at its flagship Brazilian project.

Continue Reading

Business

Rates Spark: Inflation Expectations On The March Again

Published

on

Rates Spark: Inflation Expectations On The March Again

Rates Spark: Inflation Expectations On The March Again

Continue Reading

Business

LAX approves rideshare fee hike for companies like Uber, Lyft

Published

on

LAX approves rideshare fee hike for companies like Uber, Lyft

If you take an Uber or Lyft from Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), your ride could soon cost more.

The Los Angeles Board of Airport Commissioners on Tuesday approved an increase in rideshare fees, raising the charge from $4 to as much as $12 per trip, a move Uber is warning will affect both riders and drivers, FOX 11 reported.

Advertisement

Under the new plan, rideshare vehicles will pay a $6 base fee to enter LAX. An additional $6 fee will apply for pickups or drop-offs at the airport’s Central Terminal Area, according to FOX 11.

WAYMO LANDS FIRST PERMIT TO TEST SELF-DRIVING CARS IN NEW YORK CITY

Travelers wait at Los Angeles International Airport

Travelers wait for rideshare pickups at the LAX-it rideshare pickup location at Los Angeles International Airport March 10, 2026, in Los Angeles.  (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images / Getty Images)

Right now, rideshare companies pay about $4 per pickup or drop-off. Taxi companies pay $4 for pickups, while limousines pay $5. Taxis and limos are not charged for drop-offs, according to FOX 11.

Airport officials say the higher fees are meant to reduce traffic congestion and encourage travelers to use the airport’s new SkyLink automated people mover once it opens, according to ABC7 Los Angeles.

Advertisement

“To be able to be dropped off there will be a $2 increase to the rideshare companies,” Vanessa Rodriguez, deputy executive director of external affairs at Los Angeles World Airports, told ABC7 Los Angeles. 

“As the new front door to the airport, essentially a traveler will be able to get on the SkyLink train and do the full loop of the horseshoe in 10 minutes.”

UBER PARTNERS WITH CHINESE TECH GIANT TO ROLL OUT DRIVERLESS VEHICLES ACROSS MULTIPLE GLOBAL MARKETS

Cars outside LAX

Vehicles at LAX in Los Angeles June 29, 2023.  (Brittany Murray/MediaNews Group/Long Beach Press-Telegram via Getty Images / Getty Images)

However, Uber says the fee will be passed directly on to all travelers and would be nearly triple the $4.24 average across major U.S. airports.

Advertisement

“The board’s decision significantly increases the cost of getting to and from LAX,” Danielle Lam, head of local California policy at Uber, told FOX Business in an email. “A 140% fee hike will directly impact riders and reduce demand for drivers who rely on airport trips.”

Higher passenger fees usually reduce demand for airport trips, limiting drivers’ earning opportunities. The proposed LAX fee increase could result in approximately $1,000 in lost earnings per driver each quarter, according to Uber.

UBER ANNOUNCES FEATURE ALLOWING WOMEN TO SELECT FEMALE PREFERENCE FOR RIDERS, DRIVERS

Ride-sharing companies Uber and Lyft are threatening to leave Minneapolis over a new mandate guaranteeing a minimum wage for drivers.

The Uber and Lyft logos on a sign. (Smith Collections/Gado via Getty Images / Getty Images)

“We support investments that improve the airport experience, but they must be transparent and balanced,” Lam added.

Advertisement

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

Los Angeles World Airports and Lyft did not immediately respond to FOX Business’ request for comment.

Continue Reading

Business

Form 13D/A BJs RESTAURANTS For: 11 March

Published

on


Form 13D/A BJs RESTAURANTS For: 11 March

Continue Reading

Business

Independent Kimberley fuel importer now WA's cheapest petrol retailer

Published

on

Independent Kimberley fuel importer now WA's cheapest petrol retailer

One of Western Australia’s most remote bowsers is now also its cheapest, offering diesel at a discount of more than 50 cents per litre compared to Perth outlets.

Continue Reading

Business

Aged care tech inks $8.8m deal

Published

on

Aged care tech inks $8.8m deal

Leederville-based aged care technology developer InteliCare Holdings will have its AI platform installed in 22 Victorian aged care facilities as part of an $8.8 million deal.

The company told the market this morning it had inked a five-year agreement with MECWA Limited, trading as Mecwacare, for the deployment of InteliCare‘s integrated analytics, alerts, sensor and nurse call platform at all of the company’s Victorian residential aged care facilities.

The $8.8 million deal represents the largest contract in InteliCare‘s history, and comes following a three-month pilot program at Mecwacare’s Trescowthick Centre in Prahan, Victoria, in mid-2025.

InteliCare executive director Tim Chapman said the agreement was a milestone for the company.

Advertisement

“Securing a five-year agreement with Mecwacare validates the scalability of our platform and confirms that data-drive, real-time intelligence is becoming foundational to the future of aged care,” he said.

“This agreement positions InteliCare as a strategic technology partner for sector wide transformation and we look forward to announcing further partnerships in due course.”

Mr Chapman said the Trescowthick pilot program demonstrated outstanding improvements in residential safety, clinical oversight and operational efficiency. 

“Within the pilot, the InteliCare platform was successfully integrated into Trescowthick’s clinical management system, as well as its nurse call system, demonstrating its interoperability,” he said.

Advertisement

InteliCare‘s ability to connect with critical third-party systems and operate as the backbone of the Trescowthick’s digital ecosystem, allowed consolidation of key operational data streams which enhanced visibility, supporter compliance, and ultimately, delivered positive care outcomes for residents.”

Publishing results of the pilot program, the company said it achieved a 100 per cent fall detection accuracy, with no missed or false falls during the evaluation period.

It also said the program resulted in a decrease in the number of residents requiring three-hourly overnight welfare checks from 55 to just four thanks to its real-time vitals and bed occupancy monitoring functions.

Advertisement

All eleven success criteria covering reliability, care outcomes and operational performance were met or exceeded during the trial.

Mecwa care chief executive Anne McCormack said shifts in the industry had catalysed the provider’s digital transformation.

“The aged care industry is facing significant structural challenges which include increasing cost pressures, workforce shortages and increasing complexity of resident needs,” she said.

“As part of Mecwacare’s focus on great client outcomes and our evidence-based model of care, we are investing in a digital transformation of which this partnership with InteliCare forms an important component, enabling our teams to deliver a safer, more responsive and more sustainable resident experience and model of care.

Advertisement

“The evaluation at Trescowthick demonstrated that InteliCare‘s platform enhances clinical visibility, improves operational efficiency and most importantly supported better resident care and social outcomes.

 “We view InteliCare as a long-term strategic partner in shaping how we will deliver aged care into the future.”

The agreement itself will result in a structured rollout across the 22 sites between FY26 and FY28, with revenue from recurring subscription fees, hardware supply and implementation, and ongoing service.

Shares in InteliCare Holdings Limited (ASX:ICR), which includes notable names like Dr Neale Fong and founder Greg Leach on its board, were up 15 per cent to 2.3 cents per share following the announcement.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Business

US dollar hovers near 2026 highs as oil’s rise spurs hawkish central bank bets

Published

on

US dollar hovers near 2026 highs as oil’s rise spurs hawkish central bank bets


US dollar hovers near 2026 highs as oil’s rise spurs hawkish central bank bets

Continue Reading

Business

Papa John’s reviews $1.5 billion takeover bid from Qatari-backed fund

Published

on

Papa John's reviews $1.5 billion takeover bid from Qatari-backed fund

Papa John’s International is reportedly reviewing a new proposal to take the company private in a potential $1.5 billion acquisition, according to Reuters. 

Irth Capital Management, a Qatari-backed investment fund supported by Brookfield Asset Management, reportedly submitted the proposal on Wednesday, offering $47 per share, a 44% premium over the stock’s most recent closing price.

Advertisement

Following the announcement, the stock surged by a significant 15%, closing around $38.86. 

The bid comes after Papa John’s has been pursuing a turnaround strategy following years of weak demand under multiple CEOs.

BAHAMA BREEZE TO CLOSE ALL ITS RESTAURANTS

Papa John's

Papa John’s International Inc. signage is displayed on top of a delivery vehicle. (Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Irth Capital, a relatively new firm founded in 2024 and backed by a member of the Qatari royal family, reportedly already holds about a 10% stake in Papa John’s

Advertisement

Led by co-founders Sheikh Mohamed bin Abdulla Al-Thani and Matthew Bradshaw, the firm is working alongside Brookfield Asset Management on a high-stakes offer that, if successful, would mark one of Irth’s first major transactions, Reuters said.

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
PZZA PAPA JOHN’S INTERNATIONAL INC. 38.86 +6.32 +19.42%

The potential acquisition would become one of the firm’s first major deals, following a period of financial recovery and previous failed buyout attempts by other investors, including Apollo Global, which had partnered with Irth last year on a joint offer exceeding $60 per share.

RESTAURANT GIANT FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY UNDER MASSIVE DEBT SHORTLY AFTER TOUTING MAJOR EXPANSION

Papa John's Dragon Flame Pizza with garlic sauce

Papa John’s Dragon Flame Pizza is seen in an advertisement. (Papa John’s)

Mounting speculation about the company’s future has also prompted activist investor Irenic Capital Management to build a stake in the pizza chain, according to the outlet. 

Advertisement

While the bid is significant, there is no guarantee of an agreement as the pizza giant remains open to other potential buyers. 

CLICK HERE TO GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO

Papa John Schnatter

Papa John Schnatter is the founder and former chairman and CEO of Papa John’s International (PZZA).

Papa John’s has previously struggled with weak consumer spending and tough competition in the pizza industry, specifically among North American restaurants.

In the last quarter, the company reported a 5.4% drop in North American same-store sales. To improve profitability, it announced plans to close roughly 300 underperforming restaurants in the region by the end of 2027.

Advertisement

Reuters contributed to this report.

Continue Reading

Business

US Stock Market | S&P 500, Dow end lower as escalating Iran war sours risk appetite

Published

on

US Stock Market | S&P 500, Dow end lower as escalating Iran war sours risk appetite
U.S. stocks closed lower on Wednesday as markets largely looked past a tame inflation report, focusing instead on intensifying hostilities and mounting repercussions related to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.

Trade was choppy for much of the session as investors were caught in a tug-of-war over oil supply concerns. Iran continued to attack ships in ‌the blockaded Strait of ⁠Hormuz, but ⁠OPEC assured markets that Saudi Arabia had ramped up production and the International Energy Agency (IEA) agreed to release 400 million barrels of oil from its strategic reserves.

The Dow logged the steepest percentage drop among the three major U.S. equity indexes, while chip manufacturers lifted the tech-heavy Nasdaq to a marginal, late-session gain.

The Labor Department’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) indicated that inflation remained moderate last month, matching analyst expectations.

Advertisement

Annual CPI growth is now within half a percentage point of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s 2% target. Still, markets shrugged off the report, as it predated the war on Iran, which has sent crude prices soaring and could stoke inflation. Inflation jitters mounted after Iran’s military command said the world should prepare for crude prices to hit $200 per barrel, more than double their current level.


“In such an uncertain environment, ⁠the markets ‌and investors are kind of starving for any signal, in one direction or another,” said Matthew Keator, managing partner in the Keator Group, a wealth management firm in Lenox, Massachusetts. “There have been these false or inaccurate reports, and the markets are swinging on that type of news.”
“It’s ⁠all about the consumer, and how the shock of a sustained increase in oil prices is going to affect the consumer’s pocketbook and their spending habits,” Keator added. The Fed is widely expected to let its key interest rate stand at its upcoming policy meeting, during which policymakers are likely to weigh the possibility of spiking prices against signs of a softening jobs market, a combination that raises concerns over potential stagflation.

“I think the word ‘transitory’ may come back,” said Chuck Carlson, chief executive officer at Horizon Investment Services in Hammond, Indiana. “I think they’re probably more concerned about jobs than they are about inflation right now, the spike in oil notwithstanding.”

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 289.24 points, or 0.61%, to 47,417.27, the S&P 500 lost 5.68 points, or 0.08%, to 6,775.80 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 19.03 points, or 0.08%, to 22,716.14. Among the 11 major ‌sectors of the S&P 500, consumer staples notched the largest percentage decline, while energy was the clear outperformer, rising 2.5% on rising crude prices.

Front-month WTI and Brent crude futures settled up 4.6% and 4.8%, respectively. Tech was also marginally higher, with a boost from Oracle, which provided better-than-anticipated revenue guidance on expectations that the artificial intelligence-related spending boom ⁠will extend through 2027. Its shares jumped 9.2%. JPMorgan Chase marked down the value of certain loans held by private-credit groups and is tightening its lending to the sector, a report said. Ares Management slid 4.8% and Apollo Global fell 1.9%. Campbell’s tumbled 7.1% after the packaged food company cut its annual forecasts and warned of increasing pressure in the second half from revised U.S. tariffs. Defense company AeroVironment dropped 6.3% after forecasting 2026 adjusted profit below estimates.

Advertisement

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.84-to-1 ratio on the NYSE. There were 71 new highs and 121 new lows on the NYSE.

On the Nasdaq, 1,960 stocks rose and 2,696 fell as declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.38-to-1 ratio.

The S&P 500 posted 2 new 52-week highs and 13 new lows while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 44 new highs and 112 new lows.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was 17.79 billion shares, compared with the 20.09 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Hints, Answers and Player Reactions

Published

on

Nancy Guthrie

The New York Times’ popular word-association game Connections delivered another clever brain teaser on Wednesday, March 11, 2026, with puzzle No. 1004 featuring a mix of straightforward synonyms, idiomatic phrases and tricky homophones that left players debating categories and celebrating quick solves.

Connections, launched in 2023, tasks players with grouping 16 words or phrases into four themed sets of four. Categories range in difficulty from yellow (easiest) to purple (hardest), and players get four mistakes before the puzzle ends in defeat. The game has surged in popularity alongside Wordle, Strands and other daily NYT brain games, drawing millions who share scores and frustrations on social media.

The New York Times Connections
The New York Times Connections

For March 11’s edition, the 16 words were: DRESS, HEE, ICE CREAM, JAZZ, LIFT, MI, OUI, PALM, PINCH, PINE, POCKET, SNOW, SPIFF, SPRUCE, TRAFFIC and YEW.

Hints circulated quickly online from sites like Mashable, CNET, Forbes and The Gamer, offering subtle nudges without full spoilers. Common early clues pointed to “take without permission” for the yellow group, “enhance, perhaps vertically” or “make nicer with ‘up’” for green, “conical variety” or “photoreceptor cells and funnels” for blue, and “sounds like…” or “pronoun homophones” for the challenging purple.

The yellow category proved the most accessible: **STEAL** — LIFT, PALM, PINCH, POCKET. These are all informal verbs meaning to pilfer or swipe something discreetly, from “lifting” goods in retail slang to “palming” an item or “pinching” pennies.

Advertisement

Green followed as **MAKE NICER, WITH “UP”** — DRESS, JAZZ, SPIFF, SPRUCE. Each word pairs with “up” to form a phrase meaning to improve appearance or style: dress up, jazz up, spiff up, spruce up. Reviewers noted this as a classic Connections trope relying on common idioms.

The blue group, rated medium difficulty, was **KINDS OF CONES** — ICE CREAM, PINE, SNOW, TRAFFIC. This category highlighted diverse uses of “cone”: the frozen dessert, the evergreen tree part, a weather phenomenon like a funnel cloud variant, and the road safety device. Players often spotted “ice cream” and “traffic” first, then connected the others.

The purple category, as usual the trickiest, required thinking phonetically: **PRONOUN HOMOPHONES** — HEE, MI, OUI, YEW. These sound like the English pronouns “he,” “me,” “we” and “you” but come from other languages or spellings — “hee” (a variant or laugh sound approximating “he”), “mi” (as in do-re-mi, sounding like “me”), “oui” (French for “yes,” homophone to “we”), and “yew” (the tree, pronounced like “you”). Many solvers called this one “bizarre” or “diabolical,” with some needing multiple mistakes before cracking it.

Player reactions flooded Reddit’s r/NYTConnections subreddit and X, where the daily thread for March 11 garnered hundreds of comments. Scores varied widely: some finished in perfect runs with few guesses, while others struggled with the purple group, reporting three or four mistakes. “That purple had me yelling at my screen,” one user posted. Another praised the cone category: “Once I saw traffic and snow, it clicked — great misdirect with pine though.”

Advertisement

The puzzle’s difficulty rated around average for midweek, with the purple homophones providing the biggest hurdle. No major bugs or complaints surfaced, unlike occasional past issues with ambiguous words.

Connections continues to evolve under NYT Games, occasionally introducing themed variants like Sports Edition (No. 534 on March 11 focused on athletics terms). The core game remains free with limits or via subscription for unlimited play.

For those who missed it or want a rematch, the official NYT site archives puzzles, though spoilers abound online. Strategy tips from experts include scanning for obvious pairs first, avoiding early submissions on uncertain groups to preserve mistakes, and considering multiple meanings — literal, slang, homophones or phrases.

As Connections marks its third year, puzzle No. 1004 exemplified why the game endures: clever wordplay, escalating challenge and that satisfying “aha” moment when groups lock in. With daily refreshes at midnight Eastern Time, players in Incheon and beyond already eye tomorrow’s grid.

Advertisement

Whether you’re a streak maintainer or casual solver, March 11’s edition reminded fans that Connections rewards lateral thinking — and a good ear for sounds-alike tricks.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025