JoAnne Carner biography
Date of birth : 1949-04-04
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Kirkland, Washington, U.S.
Nationality : American
Category : Sports
Last modified : 2011-10-07
Credited as : woman professional golfer, LPGA tour, World Golf Hall of Fame
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Major Championships:
Professional: 2
• U.S. Women's Open: 1971, 1976
Amateur: 5
• U.S. Women's Amateur: 1957, 1960, 1962, 1966, 1968
Awards and Honors:
• Member, World Golf Hall of Fame
• LPGA Tour money leader, 1974, 1982, 1983
• 5-time LPGA Tour Vare Trophy (scoring) winner
• LPGA Tour player of the year, 1974, 1981, 1982
• 4-time member, U.S. team, Curtis Cup
• Captain, U.S. team, 1994 Solheim Cup
JoAnne Carner compiled one of the finest amateur records of any woman golfer. Then she compiled one of the finest professional records. And Carner was still compiling records well into her 60s.
Carner first gained national notice in 1956, when - as JoAnne Gunderson - she won the USGA Girls Junior championship and lost in the title match at the U.S. Women's Amateur. The following year she won the first of what would become five U.S. Women's Amateur championships.
Carner played in LPGA Tour events here and there as she was dominating the women's amateur scene. Her several high finishes in pro events culminated in 1969 when she won the LPGA Burdine's Invitational.
The following year, at age 30, Carner finally turned pro. And kept right on winning. She got her first U.S. Women's Open in 1971. She had gone winless for two years when, in 1974, Carner claimed six tour victories and led the money list for the first time.
Another U.S. Women's Open title came in 1976, in an 18-hole playoff against Sandra Palmer, but it would be Carner's last professional major. She came close several more times, even well after her prime - losing an 18-hole playoff to Laura Davies at the 1987 U.S. Women's Open, and tying for second at the 1992 LPGA Championship at the age of 53.
Carner's most productive years were in the early 1980s, when she won three Vare Trophies, two money titles and two player-of-the-year awards.
Carner's last LPGA Tour win was in 1985. But she continued playing the tour. In 1999, at age 60 and playing the du Maurier Classic, she became the oldest player to make the cut at an LPGA major. In 2004, at age 64, she became the oldest to make the cut at any LPGA event.
Carner's booming drives matched her booming personality. She smoked while she played and was quick with a joke in her raspy voice. Carner earned a reputation after her tour career slowed as a top golf instructor for women.
JoAnne Carner was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1985.