Lorie Kane Inducted into Canadian Golf Hall of Fame
PGA of Canada member Lorie Kane was recently inducted into the Canadian Golf Hall of Fame.
Kane, who won the PGA Women’s Championship from 1996-1999 and again in 2001, started playing the game of golf at the age of five. As her interest and talent grew, she came under the tutelage of Canadian Golf and PGA of Canada Hall of Fame member Jack McLaughlin, whom she still credits as an inspiration and major influence in her career.
Provincially, she won the P.E.I. Junior Girls Championship twice and was the P.E.I. Women’s Amateur Champion nine times between 1983 and 1992. Her extraordinary amateur career saw her represent Canada on several occasions, including as a member of the Canadian Commonwealth Team and the Canadian World Amateur Team, as well as taking part in the World Cup. In 2015, Kane represented Canada in the first-ever golf competition at the Pan Am Games.
Kane turned professional in 1993 and three years later earned exempt status on the LPGA Tour. Over the next several years, she accumulated 34 top-10 finishes, nine of which were runner-up results. In 2000, Kane captured her LPGA Tour win at the Michelob Light Classic in St. Louis and also won three more times on tour that same year.
Throughout her career, Kane established herself as one of the most popular LPGA Tour players with players and spectators. Her accomplishments garnered her the Heather Farr Player Award in 1998 and the Mousie Powell Award in 2000. In 2006, Kane was presented with the Order of Canada.
She is known for her generosity and dedication to charitable organizations, having been the Kidsport P.E.I. official spokesperson since its inception in 1997 and currently serves as the ambassador for the CP Has Heart charity campaign.
With her induction, Kane becomes the first native of P.E.I. to be inducted into the Canadian Golf Hall of Fame.