The U.S. Womens Mid-Amateur Championship originated in 1987
as a result of a need determined by an ad hoc committee headed by
Dena Nowotny, a member of the USGA Womens Committee.
The Womens Mid-Amateur, the USGAs 13th championship, was
created to provide a national competitive arena for amateurs age 25
and older.
By 1987, it had become increasingly difficult for female amateur golfers
beyond college to compete equitably with their collegiate counterparts,
for whom golf was nearly a full-time vocation.
One must go back to 1973 and Carol Semple Thompson to find the last
career amateur to win the U.S. Womens Amateur.
As with any new championship, there was initial concern with the level
of entries. In this case, women amateurs responded with enthusiasm.
The first championship attracted 320 entries, only 22 fewer than the
number that had entered the 1987 Womens Amateur a few weeks
earlier.
The starting field of 130 players was determined by sectional qualifying.
The first Womens Mid-Amateur was played at Southern Hills Country
Club in Tulsa, Okla. The inaugural championship was won by Cindy Scholefield,
27, of Malibu, Calif.
The Womens Mid-Amateur has been the setting for a number of
noteworthy finals. In 1989, Robin Weiss, of Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.,
defeated Page Marsh Lea on the 22nd hole. In 1990, despite the tremendous
pressure of competing on her home course as a crowd favorite, Carol
Semple Thompson, 41, of Sewickley, Pa., defeated Page Marsh Lea, 3
and 1, at the Allegheny Country Club, where Semple Thompson had learned
the game.
Sarah LeBrun Ingram, of Nashville, Tenn., in 1994 became the first
player to capture consecutive Womens Mid-Amateur championships.
She had previously won in 1991 and 1993 and is the only three-time
winner.
In 2000, Ellen Port, 39, of St. Louis, Mo., won her third Womens
Mid-Amateur Championship at Big Canyon Country Club in Newport Beach,
Calif. She also won the title in 1995 and 1996. Ports third
win tied the record set by Sarah LeBrun Ingram, who won her third
title in 1994. |