Kathy Whitworth, winningest pro golfer in history, dead at 83
Send a link to a friend
[December 26, 2022]
By Rory Carroll
(Reuters) - Kathy Whitworth, whose 88 LPGA Tour victories are the
most ever by a player on a pro tour, passed away suddenly on
Saturday while celebrating Christmas Eve with family and friends,
her longtime partner Bettye Odle said. She was 83.
"It is with a heart full of love that we let everyone know of the
passing of the winningest golf professional ever, Kathy Whitworth,"
Odle said in a statement on Sunday.
"Kathy left this world the way she lived her life, loving, laughing
and creating memories."
The cause of death and location were not disclosed.
Raised in Jal, New Mexico, Whitworth first began playing golf at the
age of 15 with her grandfather's clubs and after winning titles as
an amateur and attending Odessa College in Texas, turned pro at 19
and joined the LPGA Tour.
"I was really fortunate in that I knew what I wanted to do,"
Whitworth said in a remembrance published on the LPGA Tour's
website.
"Golf just grabbed me by the throat. I can't tell you how much I
loved it. I used to think everyone knew what they wanted to do when
they were 15 years old."
Her mother and father supported her amid a sluggish start to her pro
career and she won the first of her 88 LPGA Tour titles at the Kelly
Girls Open in 1962.
"I'm glad when I look back on it that I didn't succeed right away,"
Whitworth said.
"When it
happened, I was ready."
She went on to claim six major championships, was named LPGA Tour's
Player of the Year seven times and became the first LPGA player to
pass $1 million in career earnings. She claimed her final title at
the United Virginia Bank Classic in 1985.
"Winning never got old," Whitworth said.
[to top of second column] |
Former LPGA star Kathy Whitworth 22/9/02 Action Images / Richard
Heathcote/File Photo
Her career
included a rivalry with fellow late World Golf Hall of Famer Mickey
Wright, who is second behind Whitworth in LPGA Tour wins with 82.
Tiger Woods and Sam Snead are tied for the most wins on the PGA Tour
with 82.
Her contemporaries said Whitworth's fiercely competitive nature is
what set her apart.
"She just had to win," Betsy Rawls, another one of Whitworth's
rivals, said on the LPGA website.
"A lot like Mickey Wright and Louise Suggs. There's just something
that drives them. Kathy was a very intelligent person. It was
unacceptable for her to make a mistake.
"She hated herself when she made a mistake. She was wonderful to
play with — sweet as she could be, nice to everybody — but oh, man,
she berated herself something awful. And that's what drove her."
LPGA Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan praised Whitworth's impact
both on and off the course.
"She inspired me as a young girl and now as the commissioner and I
know she did the same for so many others," Samaan said on the LPGA
website.
"We all mourn with Bettye, her family and the entire golf world."
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Editing by Howard Goller)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |