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Cristie Kerr

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Nationality
  
United States

Name
  
Cristie Kerr

Spouse
  
Erik Stevens (m. 2006)

LPGA Tour
  
18

Weight
  
63 kg

Professional wins
  
25

Height
  
1.6 m

Turned professional
  
1996

Role
  
Golfer


Cristie Kerr celebhealthycomwpcontentuploads201409Cristi

Born
  
October 12, 1977 (age 46) Miami, Florida, U.S. (
1977-10-12
)

Current tour(s)
  
LPGA Tour (joined 1997)

Former tour(s)
  
Futures Tour (1996)Players West Tour (1996)

Education
  
Miami Sunset Senior High School

Similar People
  
Paula Creamer, Morgan Pressel, Brittany Lincicome, Lexi Thompson, Juli Inkster

Profiles

Cristie kerr ends korean born golfers streak with win


Cristie Kerr (born October 12, 1977) is an American professional golfer who plays on the LPGA Tour. She has 19 wins on the LPGA Tour, including two major championships, and over $15 million in career earnings. Kerr was the number one-ranked golfer in the Women's World Golf Rankings for three time periods in 2010. She is naturally left handed but plays golf right handed.

Contents

Cristie Kerr Cristie Kerr Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

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Amateur career

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Kerr was born in Miami, Florida, and started playing golf at the age of eight. She had a successful amateur career, winning the 1994 Junior Orange Bowl International Golf Championship and the 1995 Women's Western Amateur. She was the 1995 American Junior Golf Association Junior Player of the Year. In 1996 she played in the Curtis Cup and was the low amateur at the U.S. Women's Open. She graduated from Miami Sunset High School in West Kendall, Florida.

Professional career

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Kerr's first win in a professional tournament came in April 1995 in the Ironwood FUTURES Classic on the Futures Tour, which she played while still an amateur.

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She turned professional in 1996 at age 18 after graduating from high school, playing on both the Futures Tour and Players West Tour. In October 1996, she tied for sixth at the LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament to gain exempt status for 1997. Her LPGA career started fairly slowly; she broke into the top fifty on the money list in her third season in 1999, but did not win until her sixth season. In 2002 she won her first LPGA event at the Longs Drugs Challenge in California. By 2004 she was one of the leading players on the tour, with three tournament victories, and a fifth-place finish on the money list. She won two tournaments in 2005 and moved up to third on the money list. She tied for second at the 2000 U.S. Women's Open, matched by her performance in the 2006 Women's British Open. Her first win of 2006 came at the Franklin American Mortgage Championship where she posted a tournament-record score of 19 under par. In 2006, she was the only American to win more than one event on the LPGA Tour, winning three times. She won the 2007 U.S. Women's Open, her first major championship. She was also a member of the United States Solheim Cup team in 2002, 2003, and 2005.

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The hallmarks of Kerr's game are putting; she finished in the top five on the LPGA Tour in putts/greens hit in 2005 and 2006 and iron play. She was fifth in greens-in-regulation in 2005. In 2005, Kerr finished in the top 10 in half of the tournaments she entered, and ranked second in the LPGA in scoring average, trailing only Annika Sörenstam.

In 2010, Kerr won two of the first 10 tournaments on the LPGA Tour, including the LPGA Championship, which she won by a record-breaking 12-stroke margin over the second-place finisher Song-Hee Kim. As a result of this finish, she went to the top of the Women's World Golf Rankings on June 28, 2010. Kerr held the position for three weeks before Ai Miyazato again regained the top ranking by a margin of 0.0006 average points.

In 2015, Kerr won the CME Group Tour Championship by one shot over fellow American Gerina Piller and South Korean Ha-na Jang.

Breast cancer activism

Kerr is actively involved in fundraising for breast cancer research.

The LPGA and the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation awarded Kerr the 2006 LPGA Komen Award due to her dedication to find a cure for breast cancer through the foundation that she founded called Birdies for Breast Cancer. Kerr donates $50 per birdie. As of August 2009 she has raised over $750,000 through donations and an annual charity event. Kerr created the foundation in honor of her mother, Linda, who has been her inspiration. The foundation was created in 2003, the year that her mother Linda was diagnosed with breast cancer. Kerr also founded Curvature Wines, which helps to raise money for breast cancer charities. All Trump resorts carry the 2006 cabernet sauvignon under the Curvature Wines label.

Kerr is 5 ft 3 in (1.60 m) in height. In 1999 she weighed 175 pounds (79 kg), a weight that caused her to have back spasms. Her parents, who are divorced, are both diabetics, and her mother had a heart attack when Kerr was in the ninth grade. After her weight peaked, Kerr began exercising regularly and went on a diet. By 2002, she had lost 50 pounds (23 kg), and weighs 125 pounds (57 kg).

Personal life and off-course activities

Kerr made an appearance on an episode of the third season of Donald Trump's television series The Apprentice in 2005. In 2006, Kerr married businessman Erik Stevens. Kerr and Stevens maintain a residence in Scottsdale, Arizona. One of her sponsors is Mutual of Omaha, which donates money to her breast cancer research foundation every time she places third or better.

On December 8, 2013, Kerr and Stevens welcomed their first child, a son named Mason, via a surrogate.

LPGA Tour wins (19)

LPGA Tour playoff record (3–3)

Futures Tour wins (1)

^ Won as an amateur, top professional (Comstock) earned $4,500.

Other wins (6)

  • 2004 (1) Wendy's 3-Tour Challenge (with Grace Park and Juli Inkster), unofficial event
  • 2007 (1) Wendy's 3-Tour Challenge (with Natalie Gulbis and Morgan Pressel), unofficial event
  • 2009 (1) Wendy's 3-Tour Challenge (with Natalie Gulbis and Suzann Pettersen), unofficial event
  • 2010 (1) Notah Begay III Foundation Challenge (with Hunter Mahan)
  • 2011 (1) Notah Begay III Foundation Challenge (with Hunter Mahan)
  • 2013 (1) Wendy's 3-Tour Challenge (with Natalie Gulbis and Stacy Lewis), unofficial event
  • Results timeline

    Results not in chronological order before 2015.

    ^ The Women's British Open replaced the du Maurier Classic as an LPGA major in 2001
    ^^ The Evian Championship was added as a major in 2013.
    LA = Low amateur
    DNP = did not play
    CUT = missed the half-way cut
    WD = withdrew
    T = tied
    Green background for a win. Yellow background for a top-10 finish.

    Summary

  • Most consecutive cuts made – 36 (2002 Kraft Nabisco – 2010 British Open)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 4 (2009 U.S. Open – 2010 LPGA)
  • LPGA Tour career summary

  • Official through the end of the 2016 season.
  • * Includes match play and other events without a cut

    World ranking

    Position in Women's World Golf Rankings at the end of each calendar year.

    Team appearances

    Amateur

  • Curtis Cup (representing the United States): 1996
  • Professional

  • Solheim Cup (representing the United States): 2002 (winners), 2003, 2005 (winners), 2007 (winners), 2009 (winners), 2011, 2013, 2015 (winners), 2017 (winners)
  • Lexus Cup (representing International team): 2007, 2008 (winners)
  • International Crown (representing the United States): 2014, 2016 (winners)
  • Solheim Cup record

    1 Kerr conceded the match at the start because of injury; Solheim Cup rules categorized this as a 10 and 8 loss.

    References

    Cristie Kerr Wikipedia