Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Momoko Ueda

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Nationality
  
Japan

LPGA Tour
  
2

Weight
  
54 kg

College
  
none

Name
  
Momoko Ueda

Former tours
  
LPGA

Turned professional
  
2005

Role
  
Golfer

LPGA of Japan tour wins
  
11

Professional wins
  
11

Height
  
1.6 m


Momoko Ueda Momoko Ueda Pictures HSBC Women39s Championship

Born
  
15 June 1986 (age 37) Kumamoto, Japan (
1986-06-15
)

Current tour(s)
  
LPGA of Japan Tour (joined 2005)

Residence
  
Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan

Similar People
  
Sakura Yokomine, Ai Miyazato, Lee Bo‑mee, Miho Koga, Erina Hara

Momoko ueda high speed golf swing


Momoko Ueda (上田 桃子, Ueda Momoko, born 15 June 1986) is a Japanese female professional golfer who in 2007 at the age of 21 became the youngest player in the history of the Japan LPGA Tour (JLPGA) to finish first on the money list. She is currently playing on the United States-based LPGA Tour.

Contents

Momoko Ueda Momoko Ueda Photos HSBC Women39s Championship Round

Momoko ueda on driving range honda ptt thailand 2010 day 3 wmv


Amateur career

Momoko Ueda Momoko Ueda Videos amp Photos Golf Channel

Ueda was born in Kumamoto, Japan. She started playing golf at the age of nine, and entered the prestigious Sakata School at ten. In twenty three amateur events, she placed in the top 10 fifteen times, including three wins, and five second-place finishes.

Professional career

Momoko Ueda www1steptobettergolfcomgolfersheadshotmomoko

Ueda turned pro in August 2005 and won the JLPGA rookies cup that year. In 2006, she placed 4th in two JLPGA events, and tied for 9th in the Mizuno Classic, a joint JLPGA and LPGA event.

Momoko Ueda Momoko Ueda Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

2007 was her breakout year on the JLPGA, with five wins, six runners-up, a 3rd and a 5th. Internationally, she represented Japan in the World Cup, and played in the Women's British Open at St Andrews. In April she won the Life Card Ladies at her home town of Kumamoto. She went on to win the Resort Trust Ladies and the Stanley Ladies, and placed 2nd in the Fujitsu Ladies, before winning the Mizuno Classic in November. A highlight of her tournament was a double-eagle during the tournament's final round. She became the tournament's first Japanese winner in nine years and only the 16th non-LPGA member in history to win an LPGA event. Two weeks later at the Elleair Ladies she won her fifth tournament and became the youngest money title winner in the history of the JLPGA tour.

Momoko Ueda Momoko Ueda Photos LPGA Thailand Day One Zimbio

Her win at Mizuno qualified her to play on the LPGA tour in 2008. In her first tournament of the year, the SBS Open at Turtle Bay, she finished fifth.

Momoko Ueda File2009 Women39s British Open Momoko Ueda 5jpg

Ueda again won the Mizuno Classic in 2011. She birdied the 3rd hole of a sudden death playoff to defeat Shanshan Feng.

JLPGA Tour (12)

Momoko Ueda Momoko Ueda Pictures HSBC Women39s Championship Round

  • 2007 (5) Life Card Ladies, Resort Trust Ladies, Stanley Ladies, Mizuno Classic (co-sanctioned with LPGA), Daio Paper Elleair Open
  • 2008 (2) Suntory Ladies Open, Miyagi TV Cup Dunlop Women's Open
  • 2009 (1) AXA Ladies Open
  • 2011 (1) Mizuno Classic (co-sanctioned with LPGA)
  • 2014 (2) CAT Ladies, Hisako Higuchi – Morinaga Ladies
  • 2017 Chukyo TV Bridgestone Ladies Open
  • LPGA Tour (2)

    LPGA Tour playoff record (1-0)

    Results in LPGA majors

    ^ The Evian Championship was added as a major in 2013.
    DNP = did not play
    CUT = missed the half-way cut
    "T" tied
    Yellow background for a top-10 finish.

    Summary

  • Starts – 26
  • Wins – 0
  • 2nd-place finishes – 0
  • 3rd-place finishes – 0
  • Top 3 finishes – 0
  • Top 5 finishes – 0
  • Top 10 finishes – 2
  • Top 25 finishes – 5
  • Missed cuts – 9
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 9
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 1
  • LPGA Tour career summary

  • Official as of the 2013 season
  • Team appearances

    Professional

  • World Cup (representing Japan): 2007
  • The Queens (representing Japan): 2015 (winners)
  • References

    Momoko Ueda Wikipedia