Carol Mann
FameRank: 3

"Won": 1964 Women's Western Open/1964

/ titleholders = T5: 1965

/ lpga = T2: 1969

/ wusopen = "Won": 1965 U.S. Women's Open Golf Championship/1965

/ dumaurier = T26: 1979

/ wghofid = carol-mann

/ wghofyear = 1977

/ award1 = LPGA Vare Trophy

/ year1 = 1968

/ award2 = LPGA Tour#Leading money winners by year/LPGA TourMoney Winner

/ year2 = 1969

/ award3 = Babe Zaharias Award

/ year3 = 1976

/ award4 = PGA First Lady ofGolf Award

/ year4 = 2008

/ awardssection =

}}

"Carol Mann" is a former American professional golfer. She became a member of the LPGA Tour in 1961 and won two women's major golf championships/major championships and 38 LPGA Tour events in all. She is a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame.

More Carol Mann on Wikipedia.

The arc of your swing doesn't have a thing to do with the size of your heart.

What happens is that women tend to panic when they're losing it. Whereas, generally speaking, men, rather than panic, go to another place: resignation. At a U.S. Open, panic is worse. Your brain floods, everything slips away, and there is nothing you can do.

Before mental skills can really make a difference, a golfer has to develop swing skills and course management. Focusing on the mental is where a guy like Ernie can make huge strides.

Her swing changed in a way I hadn't seen before. She quit turning and got steep. She stopped being a repeater, which is what she usually does better than anybody.