4-time major champion while raising
2 daughters, dies at 83
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[October 03, 2024]
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) — Susie Maxwell Berning, the
three-time U.S. Women's Open winner who was a pioneer as a mother
while competing on the LPGA Tour, died Wednesday after a two-year
battle with lung cancer. She was 83.
The LPGA said Berning, inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in
2022, died at her home in Palm Springs.
“We are saddened by the passing of one of our greats,” LPGA Tour
Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan said in a statement. “Susie
Maxwell Berning was not just a fantastic player and a member of the
World Golf Hall of Fame, but also a wonderful ambassador for the
LPGA and women’s sports overall.
“We will always point to her as a role model for balancing homelife
and career, winning major championships while also raising a family.
Susie was a strong, pioneering athlete who I have personally admired
and whose legacy will continue to inspire future generations of
athletes.”
Inducted into the World Gold Hall of Fame in a class that featured
Tiger Woods, Berning won the U.S. Women’s Open in 1968, 1972 and
1973 and the then-major Western Open in 1965. She had 11 career LPGA
Tour titles and was the 1964 rookie if the year.
Susie Maxwell was born in Pasadena, California, and her family moved
to Oklahoma City when she was 13. She was introduced to golf in a
most unusual way.
She was walking her colt on a bridle path when it got spooked and
broke free, and the young girl chased after it down fairways and
across greens at Lincoln Park Golf Course. The head pro said he
would forget the incident if she taught his kids how to ride, and
the pro eventually invited her to the course where Patty Berg was
giving a clinic.
“I said to myself: ‘Oh, boy, she’s having a lot of fun. If that’s
what golf is about, I think I want to try it,'" Berning said.
She won won three straight state high school titles and became the
first female player to receive a golf scholarship to Oklahoma City
University, where she played on the men’s team.
“Golf has been great to me,” Berning said in 2021 when she was
elected to the Hall. “Throughout my golf career, I was able to raise
a family, which was icing on the cake. That’s one reason I didn’t
play as many years or as many events. But when I did play, I enjoyed
it.”
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Susie Maxwell Berning speaks during her induction into the World
Golf Hall of Fame, March 9, 2022, in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. (AP
Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)
Family, including her two daughters, came first.
She played only nine times in 1968 because she took time off for a
honeymoon after marrying Dale Berning. She won the first of her
three U.S. Women’s Open titles that year.
She played just seven tournaments in 1970 when she was pregnant with
her daughter, Robin, returning to win the Women's Open in 1972 and
1973. She played twice in 1977, the year she gave birth to a second
daughter, Cindy.
“I always thought that having my own family on tour was not just a
blessing, but it was an advantage,” Berning said when she was
inducted. “No matter how the round went, I was mom first. My
priorities were always to make sure their day went well and to spend
time with them, to show and teach them that their goals are worth
going after, that tough competition can happen in a loving
environment.”
Berning, a pupil of Jim Flick, became a renowned teaching
professional. She split time between The Reserve Club in Palm
Springs and Maroon Creek Country Club in Aspen, Colorado.
“I still believe that we should swing the golf club,” Berning said
in 2021. “We don’t try and hit the ball with our core. My hands are
the most important thing I have in golf. And then the second most
important thing is my feet. That’s the way I played. I swung the
club.”
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