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Page 2


HRGolfGuide.com


USGA Founder and World Golf Hall of Fame Member Marilynn Smith Dies at 89


stroke in an 18-hole playoff, and then successfully defended that title in 1964.


One of the tour’s most effective spokeswomen, Smith was president of the LPGA from 1958 to 1960 and in 1973 became the first woman to work a men’s event as a television broadcaster. She was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2006.


Marilynn attended the University of Kansas, where she won the 1949 national


individual Written by Ron Sirak “Marilynn has always been a


giver. She worked so diligently as president of the LPGA, out selling the tour to sponsors,” said fellow LPGA Founder Shirley Spork Marilynn Smith, whose role as


one of the 13 Founders of the La- dies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) and pioneering work as a television broadcaster landed her in the World Golf Hall of Fame, died early Tuesday morning at the age of 89 surrounded by her family and friends. She would have turned 90 on April 13 and was last seen in public greeting finishers behind the 18th green at the Bank of Hope Founders Cup in Phoenix on March 24.


In 1950, Smith along with Alice


Bauer, Patty Berg, Bettye Danoff, Helen Dettweiler, Marlene Bauer Hagge, Helen Hicks, Opal Hill, Bet- ty Jameson, Sally Sessions, Shirley Spork, Louise Suggs and Babe Zah- arias founded the LPGA, the oldest women’s professional sports orga- nization in the world. Hagge and Spork are the surviving Founders. “Marilynn was my Founder, my North Star and most importantly my


friend,” said LPGA Commissioner Mike Whan. “In her life, she broke barriers, shattered stereotypes and made others ‘believe.’ I’ll miss her weekly handwritten cards, her daily calls to my office and her love for every LPGA teacher, tour player, and staff member. Quite simply, Marilynn left this world better than she found it — and set a standard that will guide us forever.” Smith turned pro in 1949 at a time when the major golf equipment companies – Wilson, MacGregor and Spalding chief among them – realized the growth potential for the game among women in post-World War II America and hired promi- nent female players to promote their products. Smith signed a $5,000 contract with Spalding for 50 to 100 clinics annually and eventually had a signature line of clubs. Marilynn got the first of her 21 LPGA victories at the 1954 Fort Wayne Open and the last


at the


1972 Pabst Ladies Classic. She also took two major championships, the 1963 Titleholders, when she beat the great Mickey Wright by one


intercollegiate


championship after capturing the Kansas State Amateur title from 1946-48. It was while at Kansas that she encountered the gender dis- crimination that shaped her life. At the time, Kansas did not have a women’s golf team, but Smith wanted to play in the 1949 nation- al


intercollegiate tournament and


needed help with travel expenses. When her father asked Phog Al- len, the legendary athletic direc- tor, for financial assistance, Allen said: “Mr. Smith, it’s too bad your daughter is not a boy.” Somehow, the Smith’s managed to scrape together the money to get Marilynn to the tournament, which she won. When Smith would tell the Phog Allen story to today’s players it was not with a sense of anger but rather with the intent of educating young people of how it once was. That incident also led her to create the Marilynn Smith LPGA Char- ity Pro-Am which, for the last 10 years, has raised scholarship money to help female golfers with college expenses. “That’s what inspired me to start this event,” Smith said about the Allen incident last year when her tournament provided


$5,000


grants to 30 young women. ‘A SISSY SPORT’


Marilynn, who was born in Tope-


ka, Kan., grew up in Wichita, where her father worked in life insurance and both of her parents played golf. But golf was not a game that grabbed the interest of the extreme- ly athletic child. “I thought golf was a sissy sport,”


she said. “I ran a boys baseball team and was the pitcher and man- ager. One day I came home and my mother asked how I’d done. I used a four-letter word and she washed out my mouth with Lifebuoy soap. Mom told my dad, who suggested taking me to Wichita Country Club for the more ladylike sport of golf.” Smith began playing at 11 and


her father said he’d buy her a bi- cycle when she broke 40 for nine holes, which she managed to do at 14. When Marilynn won the Kan- sas State Amateur three consecutive times she was called “The Blonde Bomber” because she blasted the ball 25 yards past everyone else in the field. As feisty as Marilynn was as a competitor and as fiercely as she advocated for equal treatment for women, it was the size of her heart and the generosity of her spirit that those who knew her best remember most.


“Marilynn has always been a giv-


er,” said Spork, who met Smith at a college tournament in 1947. “She worked so diligently as president of the LPGA, out selling the tour to sponsors. When we traveled, we drove and we’d pull into a gas sta- tion and Marilynn would start chat- ting up a young person there and she’d say, ‘You need new shoes,’ and she’d end up giving away more money than we paid for the gas.” The affection and high regard current players had for Smith – many of whom got to know her after the


USGA Hall of Famer Dies - Continued on Page 15


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