Laura Baugh Always the Survivor

Laura Baugh, winner of the 1971 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship which was held at Atlanta Country Club, Atlanta, Ga. 

Laura Zonetta Baugh Born May 31, 1955 in Gainesville, Florida was a professional golfer from the early 1970s into the 21st century. She never lived up to the promise of her amateur career, and battled drinking problems, but earned a good living through endorsements as one of the LPGA’s glamour girls.
She was smart (Baugh turned down a full academic scholarship to Stanford University), glamorous blonde, who also happened to be very good at golf. Baugh turned pro before she was 18, and seemed on the path to a great career. In 1973, she finished second in her first LPGA event and, despite not recording a victory, Baugh was the LPGA’s Rookie of the Year.

Significant Wins
1971 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship
Although Baugh played for many years on the LPGA Tour, and made appearances on the Japanese tour, she never won a professional golf tournament on a significant world tour.
(Buy Baugh’s book)

In the Majors
Laura Baugh’s best finish in an LPGA major was a tie for eighth place at the 1979 U.S. Women’s Open.
But she never won a professional tournament. Baugh did play her way into one playoff, at the 1979 Mayflower Classic, against Judy Rankin and Hollis Stacy. Stacy won, and Baugh never got closer to winning than that.
But her stardom wasn’t quick to dim. Baugh’s beauty garnered her much attention, including many more endorsement deals than were common for LPGA players at the time. She also appeared in fashion and sports magazine photo shoots in bikinis, and in glamorous poses. By some estimates, she made as much as $300,000 a year from endorsements, a huge sum for an LPGA golfer (or any golfer) in that era.
Her LPGA career lasted through 2001. … Baugh developed a serious drinking problem that nearly killed her. She entered the Betty Ford Clinic in 1996, and in 1999 wrote about her battles with alcoholism in a book, Out of the Rough. … Baugh was married four times, twice to South African golfer Bobby Cole. Baugh and Cole had seven children together. … After her retirement, Baugh dabbled in television work and running golf clinics for women. … She played on the 1972 American Curtis Cup team. … Post-LPGA, Baugh has worked as a teaching professional and played on the women’s senior tour.

Laura Baugh begins next chapter in golf life at Sawgrass CC – Sports – The Florida Times-Union – Jacksonville, FL  Posted Dec 14, 2015 at 5:14 AM

Laura Baugh’s colorful and sometimes controversial life started a new chapter recently when she moved to Ponte Vedra Beach to become a golf instructor at the Sawgrass Country Club.
Baugh was a Los Angeles city champion at the age of 14,
a high school graduate at 15 and a U.S. Amateur champion at 16.
Even though she was born in Gainesville and lived in Cocoa Beach until the
age of 10, she was the epitome of California glamour, blonde and a smile so dazzling one of the first of her many endorsements was for Ultra Brite toothpaste 1974.
But Baugh always had a girl-next-door image that differed with the other LPGA sex symbol of that era, Jan Stephenson. While Stephenson posed for a poster, naked in a bathtub and covered with hundreds of golf balls, Baugh was more like a “Brady Bunch” girl – with a lethal putting stroke.

“There’s no mold that you really have to fit into,” said Baugh,
who bombs it off the tee. Last year Baugh told Golfweek she hit 260.

Baugh signed up for U.S. Women’s Open qualifying because it’s one of the few opportunities she has to play in a bona fide competition before the U.S. Senior Women’s Open July 29-Aug. 1 at Brooklawn Country Club, which happens to be the site of Baugh’s best USWO finish (T-8 in 1979).
This year’s U.S. Women’s Open will be played for the first time at The Olympic Club in San Francisco June 3-6. Baugh chose Bradenton Country Club as her preferred site for the 36-hole qualifier on May 3 because the last time she played in a competition was last August at Bradenton Country Club in the Florida Women’s Senior Open.
“I hit it plenty far,” said Baugh. “I’m a good putter. I don’t have the yips. So you ask yourself well, why wouldn’t you? Right now, my only excuse to myself is my age, and that’s not OK.”
Last June, Baugh launched Laura Baugh Golf Schools at Palencia Golf Club in St. Augustine, Florida. She teaches amateurs, collegiate players and several Korn Ferry Tour and mini-tour pros. Her son Eric, 32, competes on the KFT.
Baugh qualified for her first U.S. Women’s Open in 1970 at age 14. She missed the cut by one that year at Muskogee Country Club. This year marks the 50th anniversary of Baugh’s U.S. Women’s Amateur victory. She finished 33rd at the USWO in 1972 at Winged Foot at age 17.
Baugh has made 14 USWO appearances in all, with her last coming in 1987. Baugh said she frequently shoots under par from 6,600 yards in casual rounds but knows that’s not the same as feeling the pressure of a qualifier. Especially when she goes nearly a full year without competing.
Bradenton Country Club is expected to play around 6,300 yards.
“I will tell you, when the bell goes off,” said Baugh, “I have the occasional seven that shows up.” Baugh’s children range in age from 23 to 37. Daughter Haley, a frequent golf partner, will caddie for her in Bradenton. Baugh, who is single with two grandkids, was an immensely popular LPGA player who frequently appeared in ads for the likes of Ford, Wilson and Colgate.
“I’m not in any way trying to be 30 again,” said Baugh, who was part of the contingent that pushed for a Senior Women’s Open, going as far as competing in a men’s U.S. Senior Open qualifier to help bring attention to the void.

    LPGA Founders: 13 who made their dreams come true (foregals.com)

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“What can I tell you?”
  “Fore in golfing” —actually, fore!—is a word of warning yelled out by a golfer who hits an errant shot. If your shot is in danger of hitting or landing very close to another golfer or group of players on the golf course, you should yell “fore!” to warn players to watch out. Baugh always the gamer, becoming the youngest player to win the U.S. Women’s Amateur in 1971 at age 16.
The striking blonde beauty turned professional and joined the LPGA in 1973, earning Rookie of the Year honors. She gave birth to eldest daughter Chelsea nine years later and married PGA Tour winner Bobby Cole, the father of all seven of her children, twice, sometimes balancing it all on the road as a single mom. Though Baugh never won on the LPGA, she was immensely popular, appearing in ads for the likes of Ford, Wilson and Colgate. She also had a successful clothing line.

Golfweek recently caught up with 64-year-old Baugh, who now lives in Ponte Vedra Beach. Her seven children now range in age from 37 to 22. She’s single again and has two grandkids. Son Eric, 31, lives in Delray Beach, Florida, and competes on the Korn Ferry Tour.

With 15 moms currently competing on the LPGA, it’s a fitting time
to talk to Baugh about lessons learned on her most unusual journey.

Here are excerpts from that conversation:
I was told that I couldn’t have children. My plan in golf was to do my commercials and do my promotions – because I had some wonderful opportunities that other golfers didn’t have, I was really lucky and then
I was going to be serious about my golf and then adopt a couple children.
That was my plan. I got pregnant and I had a baby, a little boy. He didn’t make it.
At 6 months, I had a miscarriage. Two weeks later, I got pregnant with Chelsea.
So I was pregnant for about a year and a half the first time.

I was really in love with being a mom. We traveled in a large van and had great times, saw the Smithsonian. But my golf definitely suffered. A single mom with seven kids playing the LPGA tour sounds bizarre, but at the same time, we had great times. I homeschooled my oldest. There’s a six-year difference (between the two oldest kids), so I could continue to play the tour and be with her. I did it in a combo to where I had the same criteria. I went and got the same books, so that when I got back in the offseason, she could go ahead and be in school and be right there with the students. That gave me extra time.
Then, as the children got older, I thought, you don’t want to homeschool and play professional golf and travel. I did everything. At one point there, I hired a nanny. First time it was a woman, the second time it was a young man who was a friend of my eldest daughter. … When I went and played, I took the ones that weren’t in school and the ones that were in school stayed and attended school.

In the summertime, they all came out. Even when I went to Sweden and different places, I would take the bottom two with me. I was very much a hands-on mom. I always had children with me.

It was a gift and a blessing that I didn’t expect to experience in life.
I taught them all to play golf. One out of seven really found the passion.
But tomorrow I’m playing golf with Haley (30). My kids now love golf in their own way. Haley plays a lot. She hits it a long way. I haven’t lost my distance, which is fun. We have driving contests. So for parents that teach their kids and think oh my kids are never going to play golf, you never know when they’re going to pick it up.

I probably hit it 260. I hit it plenty long. I don’t hit it short. When I played
in the Senior Women’s Open, it was ‘My god, how did you bomb it so far?’
I run a lot. I’m really blessed that there’s nothing wrong with me physically. Although my chipping and putting is where it’s all at, it’s still a rush to hit it long. Baugh was open about her struggles with alcoholism in her book
“Out of the Rough.”

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I will be sober 25 years on the 17th of May.

During that journey, some of my relaxation was just to take a glass of wine,
and I took that too far. I’m very strong in my (12-step) program.
I was beaten at one point. Not (by) the father of my children, but before that.
I deal with abuse. I do speaking (engagements) in that realm.
I do a lot of work for people in recovery. I do inspirational speaking for them. The reason I do that is to carry the message. But the main thing is to make what I did good. In other words, if a woman that is being abused sees that there’s a way out, then my abuse was not all bad.

Or if I speak to sobriety, then some of the bad decisions I made while still drinking are not for all bad. There’s some good. I can carry a message of hope.

I’ve never missed a tee time. One time I was staying at a Residence Inn and
for some reason my alarm didn’t go off.
When I did look at the clock, I had 20 minutes before my tee time and I’m staying 25 minutes from the golf course. Well, you finally missed a tee time, Laura. Part of my dad’s deal was that you never give up, so we tried. I picked
up the children, they were sleeping and I put them gently in the van, grabbed some clothes and drove to the golf course. I put on the clothes that I had worn the day before. It was the only thing I could find. I drove pretty much the speed limit but there must not have been many people on the road. I drove to the course and the daycare was right across the street. I pulled in. There was a nice young lady standing there and I said ‘You know, I play in a couple minutes.
My kids are asleep in the van.’ She said, ‘I’ve got them!” I went to the first tee, put my shoes on and actually made it. I shot 74.

Professional golfers, women, are very different from the men’s tour.
If a great player, Tiger Woods, has a child, he goes out the following week
and plays. Women have a child, they don’t go out the next week and play.
The soonest I played was less than a month after giving birth, many times.
Jamie went into daycare about seven weeks out, maybe eight weeks.
I’m lucky, my body kicked back quickly.
I was playing in the LPGA Championship. I was doing quite well. It was Saturday and the pace of play had been quite slow. I was in the second to the last group and we were on TV. If you nurse your children, you get larger as you play. Sometimes in the gallery if there are children that cry, your milk kind of knows that.

Going to the 17th tee there was a little baby crying and the front of my shirt
got wet because I’m nursing. So now I’m going down there and I think NBC is televising and I’m in contention, so I don’t really know what to do. For some reason I walked to the back of the tee and there was a (cooler) of water. I just wet the whole front of my shirt, so that it didn’t stand out, and played the 17th and 18th holes. Those are things that happen!

Joanne Carner and I used to play practice rounds together.
I was pretty long but when I was pregnant, I was 20 pounds heavier and hit it really big. We used to have driving contests. I never played after seven months. Everybody always concentrates on the physical parts of having the baby. Although that is a challenge, that is, to me, the least of the challenges.
The challenge is the mental part. I’d have been a better player and a better mom if I didn’t try to do everything.

In other words, I would never work on my 5-footers as much as I think
I should when I had children. I will never be there as much as I want to be around my children because I‘m working on 5-footers. Just don’t be as hard on yourself. Practice your 5-footers if you’re putting badly. If you’re putting well, go home and really play with your children. Have a mommy-and-me afternoon.
Do what your gut instinct tells you. Being able to hug your child does more for you mentally than being out there practicing.

Brian Mogg has been named one of the Top 50 Teachers In America by
Golf Digest for 10 straight years. His students have won 29 times on Tour.
Including Y.E. Yang’s win over Tiger Woods for the PGA Championship.
And now he’s sharing one of his biggest secrets for gaining distance…
no matter what your age.
This video reveals how Power Loading makes it simple for golfers to
gain yardage… even as they age. It takes just 40 practice balls to master it. 
And the new distance gained through Power Loading actually stays.
It doesn’t fade away like some cheap “trick” or “gimmick”.
One of the reasons it works so well is because it allows golfers to swing with their body, not against it. This is the key to loading the club with more power.
Press the play button on the video at the top of this page to begin watching.
Use This “Power Loading” Formula For A Boost In Natural Yardage In Less Than 40 Practice Balls – Performance Golf Zone

LPGA: Paula Creamer signs up for LPGA stop at Kingsmill (usatoday.com)

The Top 10 Hottest Women on the LPGA Tour (sport.one)

• • •

Life without God in it, isn’t Life at all!!!

It is ok to disagree with me……..
I can’t force you to be right all the time.

Th difference between Winning or Losing is….

That different Feeling you have the next morning!

Life is one big oxymoron.

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