volume 4/ issue 4/ 5.10.05
 
    from the fringe   view from chateau   teeing off   the gallery
   
 



An Exciting Summer on the Horizon!


The Thunderbirds Personify the Spirit of Giving


Two Companies to Add Spice to AJGA Events


Creamer Named Winner of Sixth Annual Nancy Lopez Award


A Superstar that Promoted the Game


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A Superstar that Promoted the Game
By Jordan Frye
2005 Communications Intern

With over 57 career victories, Patty Berg was not only a tremendous golfer, but also a fantastic teacher and a brilliant promoter of the sport. Her contributions to women’s golf are immeasurable.

Patty Berg
Berg won 15 majors as a professional, including the first U.S Women’s Open in 1946, the Western Open seven times and Titleholders Championship four times.

A pioneer in women’s golf, Berg was the first president of the LPGA, which was established in 1948. Berg was recognized as a member of the Big Four, along with Babe Didrickson Zaharias, Betty Jameson and Louise Suggs.

Born in Minneapolis on Feb. 13, 1918, Berg was a natural athlete. Always a competitor at heart, she participated in many sports during her youth, including speed skating. She began to concentrate on golf at age 13, and it became her life-long passion.

In 1934, Berg won the Minneapolis City Championship, her first tournament win as an amateur.

“That was my proudest moment ever,” Berg said. “After that, I began to dream.”

After a few disappointing losses in the Women’s Amateur, Berg finally won the event in 1938. It would be one of 10 wins she would acquire as an amateur that year.

At a time when women’s golf was in its beginnings, Berg established herself as a leading lady when she turned professional in 1940. She won her first tournament in 1941 in the Women’s Western Open, but a car accident shortly following the tournament kept her away from the game for 18 months.

After the successful rehabilitation of her knee and a two-year period in the Marines, Berg, a graduated second lieutenant, returned to golf and won the first U.S. Women’s Open in 1946.

Throughout her career, Berg has executed a full schedule of exhibitions and clinics all over the world. She began as a promoter for Wilson Sporting Goods and has continued to reach thousands of people across the globe—an estimated 10,000 performances in her career.

While maintaining this vigorous schedule even during her full-time professional competition, Berg attained several milestones as a female golfer.

Berg was the leading money winner in the LPGA in 1954, 1955, and 1957 and became the first woman to win $100,000 in career earnings. She was awarded the Vare Trophy for lowest scoring average in 1953, 1955 and 1956. The Associated Press voted her outstanding woman athlete of the year three times, and she was honored by the USGA in 1963 with the Bob Jones Award for outstanding sportsmanship.

Berg won her final professional event in 1961, but still played well into her seventies. After cancer surgery in 1971, she continued to compete until hip replacement surgery nine years later put her competitive career to rest.

Her lifetime achievements were honored by the LPGA in 1978 when the association created the Patty Berg Award. This award is presented yearly to the lady golfer who has made the greatest contribution to the sport throughout that year.

Berg will forever be remembered for her lifetime dedication to the world of women’s golf.