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Betsy Rawls
Winner of 55 LPGA events, including eight major championships,
Betsy Rawls won the 1949 Texas Amateur Championship just four
years after taking up golf at age 17, and then repeated again in
1950. She is ranked fourth in LPGA careers wins behind Kathy
Whitworth, Mickey Wright and Patty Berg, all who are previous
Memorial Tournament honorees.
Rawls joined the LPGA Tour in 1951 after graduating Phi Beta
Kappa from the University of Texas. She won three events that
year, including the U.S. Women’s Open. In 1952, she was the
tour’s leading money winner. From 1951–1962, Rawls won multiple
events each year, then in 1959, captured an amazing 10 titles
and earned the Vare Trophy during a season in which she set a
money-winnings record. The next year, she was inducted into the
LPGA Hall of Fame.
When Rawls joined the tour, it consisted of about 20 players and
20 tournaments. She served under the legendary Bade Zaharias as
LPGA secretary, and also headed the tournament committee that
set up the courses, gave rulings, made pairings, kept
statistics, did bookkeeping and performed many other duties.
During the rest of the year, she typically traveled the country
by car with Patty Berg, the two sharing about 120 golf clinics
annually.
After retiring in 1975, Rawls began a six-year tenure as the
LPGA’s tournament director and head rules official. She was also
the first woman to serve on the Rules Committee for the men’s
U.S. Open.
In 1995, Rawls received the Sprint Lifetime Achievement Award
and in 1996 won the USGA’s highly prized Bob Jones Award for
distinguished service. Rawls lives in Wilmington, Delaware,
where she served as Executive Director of the McDonald’s LPGA
Championship for 23 years. Rawls recently retired and now serves
as Vice Chairman of the Board.
Cary Middlecoff
Winner of two U.S. Open Championships and the Masters
Tournament, Cary Middlecoff collected 37 titles during a career
that begun only after he gave up practicing dentistry in favor
of playing professional tournament golf.
Born in Halls, Tennessee, Middlecoff won his state amateur
championship four straight years (1940-43), a collegiate
tournament by 29 strokes while at the University of Mississippi,
and was the first amateur to win the North and South Open while
playing the tournament in 1945 with star professionals Ben Hogan
and Gene Sarazen. After serving in the military practicing
dentistry, he decided in 1947 to give the pro circuit a try.
After turning professional in 1947, he shot a final round 62 at
the Charlotte Open in only his third tournament, and won. At
that point, he decided to forego dentistry for good to pursue a
full-time competitive career.
Two years later, Middlecoff won his first major championship,
the 1949 U.S. Open at Medinah in Chicago, and then in 1955
achieved the Masters largest winning margin of seven strokes
earning a green jacket. At the 1956 U.S. Open at Oak Hill in
Rochester, Middlecoff held off Ben Hogan and Julius Boros to
capture his second national championship. In 1958, he earned the
Vardon Trophy for the lowest scoring average on the tour,
following which he became the leading money-winner of the 1950s
and the seventh on the all-time tour money list. He also
captured at least one tournament every year until his retirement
in 1961, when he began a successful career as a television
commentator. He was inducted into the PGA World Golf Hall of
Fame in 1986.
Ms. Middlecoff died in 1998 of heart failure at the age of 77.
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