Zaharias buoyed women's golf



She also excelled in track and field, basketball and softball.
BEAUMONT, Texas (AP) -- Olympian. Golfer. Entertainer. Braggart. Fierce competitor. Jokester.
Mildred "Babe" Didrikson Zaharias, considered by many the nation's greatest female athlete, fit all those descriptions in her lifetime.
The one thing she wasn't: boring.
Zaharias' name has come up often lately because she's the last woman to tee it up with the men at a PGA event, at the 1945 Los Angeles Open. She got in by qualifying, made the 36-hole cut and was eliminated the next day with a 79.
Attitude
If Annika Sorenstam really wanted to follow in Babe's footsteps, she'd tell the guys she was going to beat 'em all.
"Babe was a unique character. I'm glad I was able to be around her," said Betsy Rawls, who played with her on the LPGA tour, which Zaharias helped start.
"Some people were turned off by her brashness. But people learned to accept her. She was the real reason the LPGA survived back then. She brought people out to the tournaments. She entertained people so well, joked with the gallery, and the spectators loved that."
Humility was not something Zaharias practiced. While she had the talent of Michael Jordan or Tiger Woods, she also possessed the ostentatiousness of Charles Barkley and the cockiness of Joe Namath. There was also a bit of P.T. Barnum in her.
She was known for telling other players before the start of tournaments, "OK, Babe's here! Now who's gonna finish second?" or trying to psyche out competitors by asking them, "You always hold your putter like that?"
"She was a singularly self-confident woman, and I think she truly believed she was the best athlete. She wasn't just an athlete. She was an entertainer. Her goal was the front page," said Susan Cayleff, author of "The Life and Legend of Babe Didrikson Zaharias."
Challenged herself
Cayleff, chair of the Department of Women's Studies at San Diego State University, said competing with men -- whether in a PGA event, with a baseball team or in an exhibition boxing match -- was something Zaharias did partly for publicity, but also to challenge herself. It also was the only way she could chase the same prize money that men were receiving.
"I think it's important that Americans be reminded of how singular [her talents] were," she said.
She earned the nickname "Babe" because neighborhood boys who played sandlot games with her thought she hit like Babe Ruth, but Zaharias also excelled in track and field, basketball and softball. She also mastered tennis and was an expert diver, roller-skater and bowler.
She qualified for the 1932 Olympics by placing in seven track and field events at the Amateur Athletic Union Championships, either winning or tying for first place in six of them and breaking four world records. Her 30 points earned her the team title, beating the 22-member Illinois Women's Athletic Club. At the Olympics, she won two gold medals and one silver.
Golf, though, is how she's best remembered. And she didn't start playing the sport seriously until she was 21.
She ended up winning 82 golf tournaments, including 10 major championships, before her death from cancer in 1956 at age 45.
Another men's event
The 1945 Los Angeles Open wasn't her first time playing on the men's tour. She also did so at the same event in 1938, getting in simply by filling out an application.
"I think she was the greatest woman athlete and the greatest athlete of the century," said Peggy Kirk Bell, who became good friends with Zaharias when they played on the LPGA tour.
"Babe and I were contemporaries. We got along but we were not friends. She was arrogant and she was cocky," said Louise Suggs, 79, another LPGA founding member. "Our personalities were different. I didn't appreciate the way she acted sometimes."
Rhonel Didrikson, one of Zaharias' nephews, said his aunt simply told people what she thought.
"She did what she wanted to do and other people had to get in line," said Didrikson, who lives in Lufkin and works as an engineer. "She was always a fun person to be around."