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Will Annika make the cut....what will she shoot?

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by ROCKSS, May 22, 2003.

  1. Band Geek Mobster

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    Interesting news is that Annika said she would never try this again...so it could very well take a long time before another female golfer at her level will attempt to take on the PGA...
     
  2. 4chuckie

    4chuckie Member

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    Bottom line is on a course custome made for her (very short course) she was out of contention. Now I have no doubts she could play on the PGA tour full time and be a mediocure pro but I doubt she would do that to herself.

    She has a very consistent swing and is very accurate. her putting sucks (for a pro). If she was ever going to compete on the PGA tour she needs to really work on that partr of her game.

    All in all I think she showed on (on the first day) she was good enough to compete but on the second day she fell off.

    But- I think if she played in tougher tounaments (Majors, other longer courses) at this point she woudl be in big trouble. On these relatively short courses she was not at a big disadvantage beign a little shorter on the drives, but if you put her on Bethpage Black last year I think the combination of length and teh rough woudl really kill her (much like it did to most of the players on teh PGA last year)

    Congrats to her though she put on a good show and she DID NOT embarras herself, which IMO was the most important thing.
     
  3. Smokey

    Smokey Member

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    If Annika can't do it, I don't think any woman in the LPGA can. They say Michelle Wie will be the first female to play regularly on the PGA. I think it would suck if she was the only one who could make the final rounds.
     
  4. mr_oily

    mr_oily Member

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    Actually its been about 60 years since a female played in a PGA tournee. (AND SHE MADE THE CUT)
    Did everyone forget about Beaumonts own Babe Didrickson?!
    Oh yeah she was pretty good at a few things.;)


    Babe was declared by Bobby Jones to be one of the 10 best golfers of all time, male or female.

    The record of Mildred (Babe) Didrikson Zaharias for athletic versatility stands at the top for both men and women.

    She was voted the world’s greatest woman athlete of the first half of the 20th Century in a poll conducted by the Associated Press.

    She was six times named Woman Athlete of the Year by the Associated Press, 1931, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1950, and 1954. No other athlete in either division, man or woman, made this honor so many times.

    As a golfer, both amateur and professional, Babe knew no peer in her sex. She won every major professional championship at least one time and in the case of most of them, more than one time.

    She became the first American to capture the British Women’s Amateur and the first performer to win both the United States Women’s Amateur and the British Women’s Amateur.

    She was the first woman to win the Western open three times. She won this event as an amateur and a professional.

    Babe knew little about golf and did not take up the game until after she had gained world fame in track and field and All-American status in basketball. She also had mastered tennis, played organized baseball and softball and was an expert diver, roller-skater and bowler.

    Then, she reached the heights in golf and is known as the player who did more than any other to popularize women’s golf.

    Babe is a member of the Ladies Golf Hall of Fame and Helms Athletic Foundations Golf Hall of Fame.

    She won 17 amateur tournaments in a row, including the British Amateur, the U.S. Amateur and the All-American.

    She was a three-time All-American basketball player – 1930, 1931, and 1932. In track and field, she either held or tied for the world record in tour events and held the United States – AAU record in four events.

    Babe won two gold and one silver medal for the U.S. in the 1932 Olympics. Establishing Olympic records in two events, and tying for the record in the third. In one instance she established the world record and in another she tied for the world record. She was given the second place medal in the event in which she tied – the high jump – in what has been recognized as a miscarriage of justice. Later, Babe was credited with the Olympic record (tie) as well as the world record.

    Here is a resume of the height of her success in each track and field event in which she excelled:

    80 METER HURDLES – Won 1932 Olympics with an Olympic record time of 11.7. A world mark which stood until the next games in 1936. Won the AAU sanctioned United States event in 1931 at 12 seconds, an AAU-United States record which was not broken for 18 years.

    JAVELIN – Won 1932 Olympics with a throw of 143 feet, 4 inches, an Olympic mark which stood until the 1936 Games. Won the AAU sanctioned United States championship in the event in 1930 with a throw of 133 feet, 6 inches, an AAU-U.S. record. Beat her own record in 1932 at 139 feet, 3 inches. Her original mark in this event was not broken for 25 years. Babe’s marks in the javelin were considered world records before 1932.

    HIGH JUMP – Tied for the 1932 Olympics title with an Olympic record jump for 5 feet 5 inches with Jean Shiley. Miss Shiley was given the gold medal and Miss Didrikson was accorded the silver medal (actually it was half-gold and half-silver, the only such medal in Olympics history) when officials ruled Babe out for using the “Western Roll”. Later Babe was credited with the Olympic first place tie. The International Amateur Federation sanctioned Miss Didrikson’s jump as the world record, which she held jointly with Miss Shiley for six years. Prior to the Olympics, her jumping style had not been questioned. The Olympic mark stood for 16 years. Miss Didrikson tied for the AAU – sanctioned United States high jump championship in 1932 with Miss Shiley with a jump of 5 feet, 3 inches. The 1932 Olympic jump of Didrikson and Shiley stood as the best effort in the United States for 23 years.

    LONG JUMP – Won AAU-sanctioned United States championship in 1931 with a jump of 17 feet, 11 inches. Prior to this, only Stella Walsh had jumped further. Babe jumped 18 feet, 8 inches in the National AAU meet for an unofficial world record, but in the same meet, Walsh bested her mark by a half-inch.

    BASEBALL THROW – Won AAU sanctioned United States championship in 1930, 1931, and 1932. Her 1932 throw of 272 feet, 2 inches was the all-time record. This is the only track and field record which still is held by Didrikson. The baseball throw event existed 35 years, from 1923 through 1957, when the event was abandoned.

    In earning her place on the 1932 Olympic team, the 5 foot, 7 inch , 115 pound girl qualified for five events. She was allowed to enter only three in the actual games.

    Two weeks before the Olympics she had won the national women’s AAU and Olympics tryouts single-handled, with 30 points, in what has been declared to be the greatest single achievement in a series of events in the history of athletics.

    The Illinois Women’s Athletic Club, with 22 contestants, finished second.

    She entered eight of the 10 events, or all except the 50 and 220 yard dashes.

    In a field which included more than 200 athletes and teams which ranged from 15 to more than 20 members. Babe hurried from one event to another in winning the shot put with 39 feet, 6 ¼ inches; baseball throw (for the third year in a row) with 272 feet, 2 inches; javelin with 139 feet, 3 inches, better than her own recognized world record of 133 feet, 5 ½ inches established in 1930; 80 meter hurdles in 12.1, and high jump with 5 feet, 3 ½ inches (tie with Jean Shiley). In the 80 meter hurdles she won one heat 11.9, which was one-10th of a second better than her previous accepted world record.

    She finished fourth in the discuss.

    Babe placed in seven events, winning five outright and tying for first in another, for her 30 points. The second place Illinois CA had 22 points.

    In 1930, in the national AAU in Dallas, she won the javelin and baseball throw. She broke the recognized world record in the long jump at 18 feet, 8 ½ inches but finished second to Stella Walsh, who then leaped ½ farther.

    In 1931, in the national AAU in Jersey City, Babe was the leading scorer with three firsts – long jump, baseball throw (world record at 296 feet) and 80 meter hurdles (national AAU record of 12 seconds).

    In 1932, she won the Texas AAU meet single-handed.

    In her career, Babe won 82 golf tournaments, including amateur and professional. A pioneer of the Ladies Professional Golf Association tour, playing in the days when tournaments were few, she won 31 events before her tragic death in 1956.

    When Babe won the 1954 U.S. Women’s Open on the long and tough Salem Country Club course at Peabody, Mass., she played the four round in 72, 71, 73, and 75 – 291, and this was within three strokes per round of the best that ever had been done by the men in either U.S. Open or the British Open.

    In 1946 and 1947, Babe won 17 amateur tournaments in a row.

    She won the United States Women’s Amateur (British Ladies Championship) in 1947, the first American to capture the British title which had been begun in 1893.

    She would become one of two players, along with Louis Suggs, to win both the United States Women’s Amateur and the United States Women’s Open.

    Babe won the Women’s Trans-Mississippi Amateur in 1946 and the women’s North and South Amateur in 1947.

    She twice qualified for the Los Angeles (men’s) Open.

    In winning the U.S. Women’s Amateur in 1945, she turned back the finest women golfers of the era, including Louise Suggs, Maureen Orcott, Helen Sigel, Dorothy Kirby and Peggy Kirk.

    In actual competition she beat Miss Kirk, Betty Jean Rucker, Miss Orcott (5 and 4), and Miss Sigel (3 and 2), and then smashed Clara Callender Sherman 11 and 9 in the 36 hole title round, a record margin. Babe shot an eagle on the seventh hole in the last round.

    In the British tournament in 1947, she was not taken past the 16th green and beat Jean Donald, the Scotland champion, by 7 and 5, in the semifinals. In the final, she defeated Jacqueline Gordon 5 and 4, by knocking in an eagle on the 20th hole.

    Babe was the leading money-winner on the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) tour for four years in a row – 1948 through 1951.

    She won the Vare Trophy in 1954 with a 75.48 average.
    In 1951 she won the All-American Open, World Championship, Ponte Verda Open, Tampa Open, Fresno Open, and Texas Open.

    Babe set a record of 12 shots as the biggest victory margin in the 1954 Women's Open at the Peabody Country Club in Salem, Mass.. This record has been tied, but not broken. Babe set this mark after having undergone one hernia operation (in 1951) and the major colostomy operation for cancer in 1953.

    In baseball, she was a pitcher on the House of David team which was managed by Grover Cleveland Alexander. She also played shortstop and third base.

    In softball, she was on two teams which won city championships in Dallas, Texas.

    In 1952, Babe was operated on for a hernia.

    The Babe Zaharias Open was started in her honor in Beaumont, Texas in 1953. Babe won the first event and soon thereafter, cancer struck. She underwent a serious operation (involving colostomy) on April 17, 1953, in Beaumont, Texas.

    Later that year, she competed in the All-American at the Tam O'Shanter, in the midsummer heat in Chicago Illinois, finishing third. Six months after her operation she won the Servin Women's Invitational.

    The next year, as stated, she won the U.S. Women's Open and the Tam O'Shanter All-American.

    In 1955 she won two tournaments but again was hospitalized in Galveston and underwent an operation for a ruptured disc.

    Babe Zaharias died on September 27, 1956, at the age of 45, and is buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery in Beaumont, Texas.

    1976 - National Women's Hall of Fame.

    BTW:
    ;)
     

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