is the league’s $170million effort to complete its COVID-19 ravaged season at Disney’s World Complex in Orlando, Florida.
What happened to her nude photos?
Spiranac has spoken out on the - and how she managed to take back control of her body by getting her "t*ts out" on her own terms.
The social media personality once sent a nude picture to a guy she was dating, but things turned nasty after they broke up.
Her ex decided to share the picture among his friends, and before long the image had circulated beyond control, with Spiranac having to face a barrage of messages from strangers that had seen the image.
When the golfer decided to confront people as to how they had got their hands on the picture, they refused to tell her.
On her podcast, she said: "It was horrible, just getting these random messages from people you don’t know and they’ve seen you in such a vulnerable way. It was disgusting.
"When I finally confronted the guy and said, ‘I can’t believe you did this to me’, he said - and I’ll never forget this - ‘You are the sl*t who sent it to me, you deserve this."
“Also, that was one picture. I don’t know what else he had or what he was going to release. If he did it once, he could do it again and again and again.”
Spiranac also felt the ludicrous double standards of some men, as she was continuously "sl*t shamed" for the picture - while simultaneously being sent pictures of men's genitalia from strangers.
She had always dreamed of appearing in the swimsuit edition of Sports Illustrated, and when the opportunity arose, it helped her lay her demons to rest once and for all.
"I felt so empowered and I was like, ‘OK, if I’m going to do this, I’m doing it on my terms' and I took it back, I took my body back.
“That was the moment I won, right there, when I did Sports Illustrated Swimsuit and I had my t**s out.”