Mickey Wright biography
Mickey Wright, byname of Mary Kathryn Wright, (born February 14, 1935, San Diego, California, U.S.—died February 17, 2020, Florida), American golfer who's broadly thought of the game’s best feminine competitor, identified for her record-setting play within the Nineteen Fifties and ’60s.
Wright had begun enjoying golf by age 12. In 1952 she received the U.S. Golfing Association junior ladies’ championship. She attended Stanford University for one 12 months earlier than deciding to commit full time to golf. She was the 1954 World Amateur champion and in addition was the novice winner of the U.S. Women’s Open event in 1954 earlier than turning skilled later within the 12 months.
A robust hitter able to 300-yard (274-metre) drives, Wright had an almost flawless swing. She turned probably the most profitable gamers within the historical past of golf, posting 82 victories in her profession, together with titles on the U.S. Women’s Open (1958, 1959, 1961, 1964), the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) championship (1958, 1960, 1961, 1963), and the Titleholders’ championship (1961, 1962). Wright’s four-round complete of 290 on the 1958 Open broke Babe Zaharias’s document. A five-time recipient of the Vare Trophy for finest yearlong common on the LPGA tour (1960–64), Wright set a document in 1963 with a mean of 72.81, a mark she lowered to 72.46 in 1964. She received an unprecedented 13 tour victories in 1963.
Wright withdrew from common competitors about 1969, however she continued to compete into the Nineties. She was the LPGA’s prime complete cash winner till 1969, when she was surpassed by Kathy Whitworth. Wright was named to the LPGA Hall of Fame (1964), the World Golf Hall of Fame (1976), the International Women’s Sports Hall of Fame (1981), and the PGA of America Hall of Fame (2017).
