Kirkland native JoAnne Carner inducted into golf hall of fame

Former LPGA Tour star and Kirkland native JoAnne Carner will be inducted into the Legends Hall of Fame Friday at the French Lick Springs Hotel in French Link, Ind.

Former LPGA Tour star and Kirkland native JoAnne Carner will be inducted into the Legends Hall of Fame Friday at the French Lick Springs Hotel in French Link, Ind.

The induction will be held during tournament week of The Legends Championship, set for Aug. 29-30, at the Pete Dye Course at French Lick Resort.

“This is an honor I will cherish for the rest of my life and it makes my life’s work seem all the more valuable to me,” Carner said. “I am thrilled to be inducted into the Legends Hall of Fame.”

During a career that spanned from 1970 to 2005, Carter won 43 LPGA tournaments, and was one of the nation’s all-time top women amateur players before turning professional. She is still the only woman to have won United States Golf Association titles at the U.S. Girls’ Junior, U.S. Women’s Amateur and U.S. Women’s Open championships.

Carner won the 1956 U.S. Girls’ Junior Amateur and captured five U.S. Women’s Amateur Championships (1957, 1960, 1962, 1966 and 1968). In addition, she competed on four U.S. Curtis Cup teams and remains as the last amateur to have won an LPGA Tour event with her first LPGA victory at the 1969 Burdine’s Invitational. She won the U.S. Women’s Open in 1971 and again in 1976, and tied for second at the 1987 U.S. Women’s Open, losing in an 18-hole playoff.

At the age of 65, she also became the oldest player to make the 36-hole cut at an LPGA tournament at the Kraft Nabisco Championship in 2004, as well as at the Chick-fil-A Charity Championship.

Carner has been honored many times during her four decades on the LPGA Tour. She was inducted into the LPGA and World Golf Halls of Fame in 1982. She also earned the 1981 Bob Jones Award and the Golf Writers Association of America Player of the Year Award in 1982-83. In addition, Carner served as captain of the victorious U.S. team at the 1994 Solheim Cup.

Carner, 74, now lives in Lake Worth, Fla. and still competes on The Legends Tour, the official senior tour of the LPGA. She has posted four top-10 finishes and played in six ISPS Handa Cup international team competitions before taking over as Team U.S.A. Captain in 2012. Carner will serve as the 2015 PING U.S. Junior Solheim Cup Team Captain in Germany in September.

The Legends Hall of Fame is a permanent installment displayed year-round at West Baden Springs Hotel in French Lick and was created by the resort to showcase some of the greatest names in women’s golf history. The Legends’ exhibit features photos and memorabilia showcasing the history of players’ careers.

Nominated candidates are reviewed and approved annually for induction by a five-member Legends Hall of Fame Induction Committee comprised of French Lick Resort officials and ambassadors, as well as active and former Legends Tour players.

Annual inductions of two individuals are held in conjunction with The Legends Championship. One inductee is an active member of The Legends Tour who is still regularly competing in official Legends Tour events. The second inductee is a semi-retired Legends Tour member who has made a significant impact on the game during her LPGA and Legends Tour careers.

Carner will join Legends Tour Hall of Fame members Nancy Lopez and Jane Blalock (inducted in 2014) and Jan Stephenson and Kathy Whitworth (inducted in 2013).