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Catherine Lacoste

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
French amateur golfer

Catherine Lacoste
Personal information
Full nameCatherine Lacoste
NicknameCrocodile Kid
Born (1945-06-27)27 June 1945 (age 79)
Paris, France
Sporting nationality France
ResidenceSaint-Jean-de-Luz,France
SpouseJaime Prado y Colón de Carvajal (1970–c.1978)
Angel Piñero (2000–present)
Children4
Career
StatusAmateur
Best results in LPGA major championships
(wins: 1)
U.S. Women's OpenWon:1967

Catherine Lacoste (born 27 June 1945) is a French amateurgolfer and the only player who has won theU.S. Women's Open as an amateur.

Early life

[edit]

She was born and grew up inParis, France, with her parents,René Lacoste andSimone de la Chaume and three older brothers.[1] Her father was, beside a world class tennis player (having won sevenGrand Slam singles titles), also a 6-handicap golfer.[2] Her mother was a world class golfer, having won several major international amateur championships.

Young Lacoste practised many different sports; skiing, skating, swimming, horse riding and tennis and, from 8 years of age, golf. Her family spent many holidays in the coast resort area ofSaint-Jean-de-Luz, in France close to the Spanish border, near the Golf de Chantaco.[2] The club was founded by Lacoste's grandfather René Thion de la Chaume in 1928, as a celebration of theBritish Ladies Amateur triumph a year earlier by Lacoste's mother.[3]

French golferJean Garaïalde and his father Raymond were her golf teachers when she learned the game at young age. When she was 13 years old, Jean gave her a putter that she used through her entire career.[2] Always hitting the long clubs with ease, favoring the 1-iron, she was soon dominating golf tournaments in the region around her club.

Career

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In1964, at age 19, Lacoste was selected to the French three-women team for the firstEspirito Santo Trophy, the inaugural world team championship of amateur golf, atGolf de Saint Germain, 20 kilometers west of Paris, France. The French team of Lacoste,Brigitte Varangot andClaudine Cros, under the captaincy ofLally de Saint Sauveur, won the championship and Lacoste finished tied first individually.[4][5][6]

The year after, Lacoste was invited to the1965 U.S. Women's Open atAtlantic City Country Club inNew Jersey. She crossed the Atlantic by boat with her parents and finished 14th.

She was part of the Continent of Europe team at the 1965Vagliano Trophy, winning for the first time over the Great Britain and Ireland team.[7] Lacoste came to be part of the European team repeating that victory in 1967 and 1969, to take three in a row.[8][9]

At the1966 Espirito Santo Trophy at Mexico City GC,Mexico, the French team finished bronze-medalists and Lacoste lone third individually.[4][5][6]

Lacoste decided to skip the1967 European Ladies' Team Championship to travel to the1967 U.S. Women's Open, to be played June 29 to July 2 at the Cascades Course ofThe Homestead, inHot Springs, Virginia. This time Lacoste traveled by air and alone.[10] On Tuesday of the tournament week, Lacoste celebrated her 22nd birthday. Going into the last round, Lacoste held a 5-stroke lead. It stretched to seven strokes before she bogeyed five straight holes in bad weather on the back nine of the final round, but she secured the victory with a birdie on the par-4 17th hole by hitting a 2-wood over trees to cut the corner of a dogleg, which her competitors were not able to do, to finally win by two strokes. As an amateur, she received no prize money and the first prize of$5,000 was added to the second prize and shared by the tied runners-upSusie Maxwell and Beth Stone.[11][12] Lacoste's victory came on the same day as her famous father's birthday.

Playing on this occasion – as an amateur – in just her third professional golf tournament, she was the first European and only the second non-U.S.-citizen to win anLPGA major afterFay Crocker ofUruguay (whose father was American), and she remained the only French woman to have done so untilPatricia Meunier-Lebouc won the 2003Kraft Nabisco Championship. Lacoste was the youngest woman ever and remains the only amateur ever to win the U.S. Women's Open.[1] It was also the first win by an amateur on the LPGA Tour.

Trying to defend her U.S. Open title in1968, she finished tied 13th and never again entered the U.S. Women's Open. Lacoste won the 1968Women's Western Amateur, one of the most prestigious amateur tournaments in the United States. At the1968 Espirito Santo Trophy at Victoria Golf Club,Melbourne, Australia, Lacoste was again the individual winner and the French team bronze-medalists.

In 1969, Lacoste won the two most important amateur tournaments in the world, theU.S. Women's Amateur and theBritish Ladies Amateur, becoming the third women in golfing history to achieve that feat in the same year. Only one other player has done that since. Lacoste and her mother are the only mother and daughter to have both won the British Ladies Amateur.[2] This year Lacoste became the only women to have held the open amateur titles of United States, Great Britain, France and Spain at the same time. The same year, Lacoste made her first appearance at theEuropean Ladies' Team Championship and led the French team to victory.

At the age of 25, having won several of the most prestigious tournaments in the world, Lacoste retired from tournament golf, except a few appearances in France and Spain, and never turned professional.

The following years, Lacoste continued to play for her country's team at the Espirito Santo Trophy, where she finished second individually in1970 and in1976, and the European Ladies' Team Championship, being part of the winning team again in1975.[4][5][6] After her competitive career, she served as a non-playing captain of the French women's senior amateur team.

Personal life

[edit]

Lacoste is the daughter of French tennis playerRené Lacoste (1904–1996), winner of sevenGrand Slam singles titles, and his wifeSimone de la Chaume (1908–2001), in 1927, first French winner of the British Ladies Amateur. They married in 1930.[3]

She has been a member of the board ofLacoste, the major fashion company, founded in 1933 by her father, who invented the crocodile trademark. The management of the company was transferred in 1963 from her father to her brotherBernard Lacoste (1931–2006). The family sold the company and the brand in November 2012 to Swiss family-held group Maus Frères.[1]

The Chantaco Golf Club has always been managed by a member of the Lacoste family. In 1974, Lacoste succeeded her mother as president, with assistance of her brother François. In 2009, she was replaced by Camille Lacoste, the niece of her parents, until 2013, when Camille was replaced by Lacoste's daughter Veronique Smondack.[3] Lacoste was awarded Honorary President of the club.

In 1970, Lacoste married Jaime Prado y Colón de Carvajal and the couple had four children. Her youngest daughter Veronique played collegiately atWake Forest University,North Carolina, in 1998. Her second oldest daughter Caroline Devaux, also took up the game.[10]

Until 1978, Lacoste competed under the nameCatherine Lacoste de Prado. After divorcing from her first husband, she married Angel Piñero, a classical guitar player, in 2000. Besides living inSaint-Jean-de-Luz, the two of them have a home inMadrid,Spain.

Amateur wins

[edit]

Sources:[13][14][15]

Professional wins (1)

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LPGA Tour wins (1)

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Legend
LPGA Tour major championships (1)
Other LPGA Tour (0)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runners-up
12 Jul1967U.S. Women's Open
(as an amateur)
+10 (71-70-74-79=294)2 strokesUnited StatesSusie Maxwell
United StatesBeth Stone

Major championships

[edit]

Wins (1)

[edit]
YearChampionshipWinning scoreMarginRunners-up
1967U.S. Women's Open
(as an amateur)
+10 (71-70-74-79=294)2 strokesUnited StatesSusie Maxwell,United StatesBeth Stone

Results timeline

[edit]
! Tournament1965196619671968
U.S. Women's OpenT141LAT13

Note: Lacoste only played in the U.S. Women's Open.

  Win
  Did not play

LA = Low amateur
T = tied

Team appearances

[edit]

Amateur

References

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  1. ^abcGlenn, Rhonda (25 June 2013)."Catherine Lacoste: A Transatlantic Triumph for Legendary Amateur". USGA. Retrieved29 August 2020.
  2. ^abcdFilling, Jane (2017)."Catherine Lacoste – The Only Amateur Winner of the U.S. Women's Open". Womensgolf.com. Retrieved27 August 2020.
  3. ^abc"Our History". Golf de Chantaco. Retrieved28 August 2020.
  4. ^abcJansson, Anders (1979).Golf - Den gröna sporten [Golf - The green sport] (in Swedish). Swedish Golf Federation. pp. 180–181.ISBN 9172603283.
  5. ^abcJansson, Anders (2004).Golf - Den stora sporten [Golf - The great sport] (in Swedish). Swedish Golf Federation. p. 184.ISBN 91-86818007.
  6. ^abc"World Amateur Team Championships, Women's Records". International Golf Federation. Retrieved26 August 2020.
  7. ^"Britain Women Lose Vagliano Cup".The Glasgow Herald. 6 September 1965. p. 4.
  8. ^"Britain Women Lose Narrowly".The Glasgow Herald. 9 September 1967. p. 4.
  9. ^"Britain Women Defeated".The Glasgow Herald. 29 September 1969. p. 4.
  10. ^abWilliams, Julie (5 June 2020)."Catherine Lacoste, the only amateur winner of the U.S. Women's Open, played a different kind of game". Golfweek, USA Today Sports Media Group. Retrieved4 September 2020.
  11. ^"U.S. Women's Open won by La Coste".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Associated Press. 3 July 1967. p. 14.
  12. ^Mulvoy, Mark (10 July 1967)."'But Papa, I played like a clod'".Sports Illustrated. p. 24. Archived fromthe original on 13 December 2013.
  13. ^The Golfer's Handbook 1973. Munro-Barr Publications Ltd, Glasgow. 1973. pp. 171–172, 400.
  14. ^The Golfer's Handbook 1993. Macmillan London Ltd. 1993. p. 351.ISBN 0-333-58895-9.
  15. ^The Golfer's Handbook 1984. Macmillan London Ltd. 1984. p. 521.

External links

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† event won in a playoff; ‡ winner held lead wire-to-wire; # event won by an amateur; ∞ event won in match-play
International
National
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