JoAnne Carner Photo

JoAnne Carner

  • Birthplace Kirkland, Washington
  • Enshrined 1982
  • Born Apr 04, 1939

First she was known as “The Great Gundy.” Then “Big Momma.”

She loved match play, showboating to the galleries, riding motorcycles and partying in the clubhouse with members after her rounds. As JoAnne Gunderson, and later JoAnne Carner, she dominated women’s golf and nobody had more fun dominating than she did. There was a little Babe Ruth in her, a little Babe Zaharias, a little Walter Hagen and a little Shelly Winters, too. It made for some package.

“The ground shakes when she hits it,” Sandra Palmer once said, and with that statement the LPGA had a different type of folk hero to package with the glamour of Jan Stephenson and the youthful innocence of Nancy Lopez. While the youngsters were selling the LPGA Tour, Carner was going back to her Gulfstream motor home, where her husband, Don, had prepared dinner and found a stream where the fish were just waiting to take their lures. “I play better golf living in our trailer,” Carner said, and for a long while, nobody played it better.

As an amateur golfer, Gunderson was the historic equal of Zaharias and Glenna Collett Vare. Born in Kirkland, Washington, she came out of the Pacific Northwest and won the U.S. Girls’ Junior title in 1956. One month later, she lost in the final of the Women’s Amateur to Marlene Stewart to begin a 13-year run where she either won the national title or finished second seven times. Four of her five championship finals were blowout victories, but in 1966, it took Carner 41 holes to defeat the then-married Marlene Stewart Streit. It was the longest final match in U.S. Women’s Amateur history.

Only Vare, with six, has more U.S. Women’s Amateur titles. Carner won her first at age 18 and her last at age 29. It wasn’t until after winning the Burdine’s Invitational as an amateur in 1969 that Carner finally turned professional. She was also undefeated in Curtis Cup singles (4-0-1). “That first U.S. Amateur victory was a huge thrill,” Carner has said. “I really loved playing head-to-head, and I enjoyed all my battles in the Curtis Cup matches.”

Fact

JoAnne Carner extended her record as the oldest player to make a cut on the LPGA Tour to age 64 during the 2004 season.

Realizing there was nothing left to accomplish as an amateur, she turned professional and in just 12 seasons won 35 events to qualify for the LPGA Hall of Fame. “Some people are afraid to win, others are afraid to lose,” Carner has said. “I think winning is a lot more fun.”

Carner’s second victory as a professional came in the 1971 U.S. Women’s Open, making her the only golfer in history to win the U.S. Girls’ Junior, the U.S. Women’s Amateur and the U.S. Women’s Open titles. She won the Women’s Open again in 1976 and 42 LPGA titles in a 14-year period from 1970 to 1984. Three times she was Player of the Year, five times the Vare Trophy winner and all the time the clubhouse leader in body language, crowd interaction and exhortations.

Win or lose, “Big Momma” was quite a show. “Concentration and getting involved with the shot are important, but if I get too serious I can’t play,” Carner said. “I relieve the pressure by light chatter with the gallery, although I never get into conversation. I enjoy being able to show more emotion as a professional. I get so enthused with golf that if the ball is going for the pin or in the cup, I am the first one to yell.”

JoAnne Carner was originally inducted through the LPGA category.

  • U.S. Women’s Open: 1971 and 1976
  • 1970: Wendell West Classic
  • 1971: Bluegrass Invitational
  • 1974: Bluegrass Invitational, Dallas Civitan, Desert Inn Classic, Hoosier Classic, Portland Classic, St. Paul Open
  • 1975: All-American Classic, American Defender Classic, Peter Jackson Classic
  • 1976: Hoosier Classic, Lady Tara Classic, Orange Blossom Classic
  • 1977: Borden Classic, LPGA Team Championship, National Jewish Hospital Open, Talk Tournament
  • 1978: Borden Classic, Colgate Triple Crown, Peter Jackson Classic
  • 1979: Colgate Triple Crown, Honda Civic Classic, Women’s Kemper Open
  • 1980: Bent Tree Ladies Classic, Honda Civic Classic, Lady Keystone Open, Sunstar ‘80, Whirlpool Championship of Deer Creek
  • 1981: Columbia Savings LPGA Classic
  • 1981: Lady Keystone Open, Rail Charity Classic, S&H Golf Classic
  • 1982: Chevrolet World Championship of Women’s Golf, Elizabeth Arden Classic, Herendon Classic, J.C. Penny Classic, McDonald’s LPGA Kids’ Classic, Rail Charity Golf Classic
  • 1983 Chevrolet World Championship of Women’s Golf, Portland Ping Championship
  • 1984: Corning Classic
  • 1985: Elizabeth Arden Classic, Safeco Classic
  • 1996: Sprint Senior Titleholders Challenge 
  • 1955: Western Junior Girls’ Amateur
  • 1956: Pacific Northwest Amateur, Pacific Northwest GA Girls’ Junior, U.S. Girls’ Junior
  • 1957: U.S Women’s Amateur
  • 1958: Pacific Northwest Amateur
  • 1960: Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women, Southwest Amateur, U.S. Women’s Amateur
  • 1961: Women’s Trans Mississippi
  • 1962: U.S. Women’s Amateur
  • 1966: Rhode Island Women’s Amateur
  • 1966: Rhode Island Women’s Amateur, U.S. Women’s Amateur
  • 1967: Northwest Amateur, Rhode Island Women’s Amateur
  • 1968: Doherty Cup, Eastern Amateur, Harder Hall Invitational, Rhode Island Women’s Amateur, U.S. Women’s Amateur, Women’s Eastern Amateur
  • 1969: Burdine’s Invitational
  • 1974: St. Paul Open
  • 1975: Australian Women’s Open, New Zealand Open

Wins in bold

  • 1958, (tie) 1960, 1962, 1964

Wins in bold

  • 1994
  • LPGA Rookie of the Year: 1970
  • LPGA Player of the Year: 1974, 1981
  • Vare Trophy: 1974, 1975, 1981, 1983
  • Bob Jones Award: 1981
  • Golf Writers Association Player of the Year: 1981
  • Seagram's Seven Crowns of Sport Award: 1982, 1983