Janice Moodie | |
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— Golfer — | |
Moodie at the 2009 Women's British Open
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Personal information | |
Full name | Janice C. Moodie |
Born |
Glasgow, Scotland |
31 May 1973
Height | 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) |
Nationality | Scotland |
Residence | Florida, U.S. |
Career | |
College | San Jose State University |
Turned professional | 1997 |
Current tour(s) |
LPGA Tour (joined 1998) LET (joined 1997) |
Professional wins | 4 |
Number of wins by tour | |
LPGA Tour | 2 |
Best results in LPGA major championships |
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ANA Inspiration | T2: 2001 |
Women's PGA C'ship | T21: 1998 |
U.S. Women's Open | T7: 2002 |
du Maurier Classic | T23: 1999 |
Women's British Open | T3: 2001 |
Evian Championship | DNP |
Janice C. Moodie (born 31 May 1973) is a Scottish professional golfer who plays mainly on the U.S.-based LPGA Tour but is also a member of the Ladies European Tour.
Moodie was born in Glasgow. At age 11, she was taught to play golf by her mother, a former 6-handicap amateur, at Windyhill Golf Club in Bearsden, Scotland. At age 16, she left school and started working in a grocery store and Greaves sporting-goods shop in Glasgow. She had to postpone her college enrollment when her mother suffered a brain aneurysm that left her with tunnel-vision blindness and for the next three and a half years Moodie worked in the winter (including a few weeks in a nightclub) so she could play competitive amateur golf in the summer. During this period she won the 1992 Scottish Women's Strokeplay Championship and represented Great Britain and Ireland in the Curtis Cup in 1994 when her win over Carol Semple Thompson in the final singles match secured a 9- 9 tie keeping the Curtis Cup in GB&I by virtue of the GB&I win in 1992. She also played on the victorious 1996 team in Killarney, Ireland and played in the 1996 Espirito Santo Trophy World Amateur Team Championship where she finished 2nd.
Moodie enrolled at San Jose State University to play collegiate golf for the Spartans, graduating in 1997 with a degree in psychology. She won 12 collegiate tournaments including the 1995 GolfWorld/Palmetto Dunes, the 1996 Stanford Women's Intercollegiate and the 1997 Peg Barnard California Collegiate. She was Big West Champion 1994-1996, Big West Athlete of the Year 1994-1996, was All-Big West 1994 and 1995 and finished in the top ten at the NCAA Championships each year 1994-1997 thus earning First-Team All-American honours each year during 1994-1997. She posted the lowest scoring average on her team from 1996–97 and won the Golfstat Cup in 1996. She turned professional in 1997 and qualified for the LPGA Tour by tying for 21st at the LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament to earn non-exempt status for the 1998 season.