Page Dunlap | |
---|---|
Personal information | |
Full name | E. Page Dunlap Halpin |
Born |
Harrisonburg, Virginia |
December 16, 1965
Nationality | United States |
Career | |
College | University of Florida |
Turned professional | 1987 |
Former tour(s) |
Futures Tour (1987–91) LPGA Tour (1991–97) |
Professional wins | 5 |
Number of wins by tour | |
Symetra Tour | 5 |
Best results in LPGA major championships |
|
ANA Inspiration | CUT: 1987 |
Women's PGA C'ship | T35: 1994 |
U.S. Women's Open | 64th: 1997 |
du Maurier Classic | 16th: 1994 |
Women's British Open | DNP |
Achievements and awards | |
First-team All-American | 1986 |
E. Page Halpin (born December 16, 1965), née E. Page Dunlap, is an American former professional golfer who was a member of the LPGA Tour for six years during the 1990s. Dunlap is best known for winning the individual NCAA Division I Championship in 1986.
Dunlap was born in Harrisonburg, Virginia in 1965. Her parents Bunny and Bill were avid golfers, and she grew up playing the game. She attended Sarasota High School in Sarasota, Florida, and played for the Sarasota Sailors high school golf team. Dunlap was the state high school golf championship runner-up twice—as a junior in 1982, and again as a senior in 1983. She also found success as a junior amateur golfer by winning the Orange Bowl Junior Tournament in 1982 and the American Junior Golf Association tournament in 1983. She graduated from Sarasota High School in 1983.
Dunlap accepted an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where her older brother, Scott Dunlap, was already a member of the Florida Gators men's golf team. She played for coach Mimi Ryan's Florida Gators women's golf team in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) competition from 1984 to 1987, and was a member of the Lady Gators' back-to-back NCAA championship teams in 1985 and 1986. Dunlap was also a three-time collegiate tournament medalist, which included winning the Florida Intercollegiate Golf Championship in 1985, and shooting a 72-hole score of 291 to win the individual NCAA Division I Championship by a single stroke in 1986. She was a second-team All-American in 1985, a first-team All-American in 1986, and won the Broderick Award for Golf as the nation's outstanding female collegiate golfer in 1985–86.