10. Morgan Pressel
Morgan Pressel (born May 23, 1988) is an American professional golfer currently playing on the LPGA Tour. She is the youngest-ever winner of an LPGA major tournament, and has reached number 4 in the Women’s World Golf Rankings. Pressel turned professional in November 2005, after appealing to the LPGA to become a member as a 17-year-old. LPGA rules state that members must be 18 years old. -wikipedia.org
9. Melissa Reid
8. Michelle Wie
Michelle Sung Wie (Korean: Wie Seong-mi Hangul, born October 11, 1989) is an American professional golfer who plays on the LPGA Tour. In 2006, she was named in a Time magazine article: “one of 100 people who shape our world.” At age 10, she became the youngest player to qualify for USGA amateur championship. Wie would also become the youngest winner of the US Women’s Amateur public links and the youngest to qualify for a LPGA tour event. Wie turned professional with an enormous amount of hype and endorsements. -wikipedia.org
7. Laura Baugh
Laura Zonetta Baugh (born May 31, 1955 in Gainesville, Florida) is an American golf champion. As a child she won the National PeeWee Championship five times, her first coming at age 3. Her parents divorced when she was 11 years old and she moved with her mother from their Florida home to Long Beach, California. She studied briefly there at Long Beach City College and California State University, Long Beach. Lacking the money to pay green fees, she and friends would sneak onto golf courses to play. At age 14 she won her first of two straight Los Angeles Women’s City Golf Championships. In 1971, at the Atlanta Country Club in Atlanta, Georgia, she defeated Beth Barry to win the United States Women’s Amateur Golf Championship. Her physical appearance brought her considerable publicity and for 1971 she was chosen as a Los Angeles Times “Woman of the Year” and Golf Digest’s 1972 “Most Beautiful Golfer.” She made a commercial for UltraBrite toothpaste that won a Clio Award. -wikipedia.org
6. Cristie Kerr
Cristie Kerr (born October 12, 1977 in Miami, Florida) is an American professional golfer who plays on the LPGA Tour. Kerr turned professional in 1996, playing on both the Futures Tour and Players West Tour. Her first professional victory came at the Ironwood FUTURES Classic in 1996. Late in 1996 she tied for sixth at the LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament to gain exempt status for 1997. Her LPGA career started fairly slowly. It took her three years to make the top fifty on the money list. In 2002 she won for the first time on the LPGA at the Longs Drugs Challenge. By 2004 she was one of the leading players on the tour, with three tournament victories, and a fifth place finish on the money list. -wikipedia.org
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5. Erica Blasberg
Erica Blasberg (born July 14, 1984) is an American golfer who plays on the LPGA Tour. She was born in Orange, California and now lives in Las Vegas, Nevada. Blasberg turned professional in June 2004 and played on the Futures Tour that season. She won the Laconia Savings Bank Futures Golf Classic and en route to her first professional win broke the Tour’s 18 hole scoring record, shooting a 62. She earned non-exempt status for the LPGA Tour at the 2004 LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament. Non-exempt status meant she was able to play on the Tour, but only when space was available in events. -wikipedia.org
4. Paula Creamer
Paula Creamer (born August 5, 1986), nicknamed the “Pink Panther,” is an American professional golfer who plays on the U.S.-based Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) Tour. In her four seasons as a professional, she has won 10 tournaments, including eight LPGA Tour events. Creamer has been as high as No. 2 in the Women’s World Golf Rankings. As an amateur, Creamer won numerous junior golf titles, including 11 American Junior Golf Association (AJGA) tournaments. Creamer joined the LPGA Tour in the 2005 season, and her victory in that year’s Sybase Classic made her the LPGA’s second-youngest event winner. -wikipedia.org
3. Jan Stephenson
Jan Lynne Stephenson (born 22 December 1951 in Sydney, Australia) is a professional golfer. She became a member of the LPGA Tour in 1974 and won three major championships and 16 LPGA Tour victories in all. While a teenager, Stephenson won five consecutive New South Wales Schoolgirl Championships in Australia, beginning in 1964, and followed that up with three straight wins in the New South Wales Junior Championship. She turned pro in 1973 and won the Australian Open that year. Stephenson joined the LPGA Tour in 1974 and was named LPGA Rookie of the Year. -wikipedia.org
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2. Anna Rawson
Anna Rawson (born 5 August 1981) is an Australian professional golfer and model. She currently plays on the LPGA Tour. Rawson turned professional at the end of 2004, played a full season on the Future Tour and missed the cut at the 2004 LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament. She finished third at the Ladies European Tour 2005 qualifying tournament and was a season 2006 LET rookie. On December 5, 2007, Anna notified fans via her Myspace page that she had been invited to join the LPGA tour. In 2008 she qualified for a full time tour card via Q school for the 2009 tour. -wikipedia.org
1. Natalie Gulbis
Natalie Anne Gulbis (born January 7, 1983) is an American professional golfer who plays on the U.S.-based LPGA Tour. Gulbis started finding interest in the game at the early age of 3-1/2. By the time she reached 7 years old she had won her first tournament. In three years, at age 10, she was breaking par. She played in her first LPGA tour event as an amateur at the age of 14. She attended Granite Bay High School and graduated when she was 16. She turned professional at age 18 after playing for one season on the women’s golf team at the University of Arizona. -wikipedia.org
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CDGA (Chicago District Golf Association) on the Golf Scene TV. Green House – Turf Grass Program. Provides solution for golf course super intendents. Analyze grass samples. The Chicago District Golf Association (CDGA) is a non-profit association of member clubs and individual golfers in Illinois and parts of Indiana, Wisconsin and Michigan. With nearly 100000 member golfers at 370 member clubs, the CDGA is one of the largest and oldest golf associations in the United States. Founded on March 18, 1914, the CDGA was established to promote amateur golf in the Midwest. The CDGA is directed by a district-wide board of directors and an advisory committee comprised of past presidents of the Association. Directors, known as “Blue Coats,” donate their services and time, amounting to more than 15000 man-hours a year. The Association is serviced by a staff of 17 and is based at the Midwest Golf House Complex in Lemont, Ill. A Central Illinois office is located in Peoria, IL. CDGA services and benefits are extended principally to Association member clubs and individual golfers at these facilities. These golfers are served through the CDGA in its interpretation of the Rules of Golf, processing of applications for reinstatement to amateur status, handicapping, the tournament program, course measuring and rating as well as the CDGA’s various educational services. The CDGA also handles thousands of inquiries annually through personal visits, phone contacts and correspondence regarding …