Alison Nicholas | |
---|---|
Nicholas at the official announcement of the 2009 Solheim Cup team
|
|
Personal information | |
Full name | Alison Nicholas |
Born |
Gibraltar |
6 March 1962
Height | 1.52 m (5 ft 0 in) |
Nationality | England |
Career | |
Turned professional | 1984 |
Former tour(s) |
Ladies European Tour (joined 1984) LPGA Tour (joined 1989) |
Professional wins | 18 |
Number of wins by tour | |
LPGA Tour | 4 |
Ladies European Tour | 12 (10th all-time) |
Other | 2 |
Best results in LPGA major championships (wins: 1) |
|
ANA Inspiration | T16: 1995 |
Women's PGA C'ship | T23: 2000 |
U.S. Women's Open | Won: 1997 |
du Maurier Classic | CUT: 1997 |
Women's British Open | 28th: 2004 |
Achievements and awards | |
Ladies European Tour Order of Merit |
1997 |
Ladies European Tour Player of the Year |
1997 |
Alison Nicholas MBE (born 6 March 1962) is an English golfer.
Nicholas was born in Gibraltar. She was educated at the School of St Mary and St Anne (now Abbots Bromley School for Girls). She enjoyed a very successful amateur career in England. She started playing golf at the age of 17 and won the 1982 and 1983 Northern Girls Amateur Open. Nicholas was the 1983 British Amateur Stroke Play champion. In 1983, Nicholas won the Yorkshire Ladies County Championship.
Nicholas turned professional in 1984 and joined the Ladies European Tour in the same year. She joined the LPGA Tour in 1989.
Nicholas won the British Women's Open in 1987, when it was recognised as a major championship by the Ladies European Tour only, and the 1997 U.S. Women's Open.
At her retirement at the end of the 2004 season, Nicholas had won 12 events on the Ladies European Tour. She topped the European Tour Order of Merit in 1997 and finished in the top-ten fifteen times in 16 seasons between 1985 and 2000. She also won four times on the LPGA Tour, between 1995 and 1999, including winning the U.S. Women's Open in 1997. In 1992, she won both the Western Australian Open and the Malaysian Open.
She won the 1991 Vivien Saunders Trophy for lowest stroke average (71.71). In 1997, she became the Sunday Times Sportswomen of the Year, was awarded The Association of Golf Writers Trophy and was voted LET Players' Player of the Year, 1997 Evening Mail Sports Personality of the Year and 1997 Midlands Sports Personality of the Year.
In 1998, she was named a Member of the Order of the British Empire in the Queen's Birthday Honours List for "services to women's golf", and in 2002 became a Life Member of the Ladies European Tour.