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1990 Nabisco Dinah Shore

Coordinates: 33°47′53″N 116°25′59″W / 33.798°N 116.433°W / 33.798; -116.433
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1990 Nabisco Dinah Shore
Tournament information
DatesMarch 29 – April 1, 1990
LocationRancho Mirage, California
Course(s)Mission Hills Country Club
Old Course
(Dinah Shore Tourn. Course)
Tour(s)LPGA Tour
FormatStroke play – 72 holes
Statistics
Par72
Length6,441 yards (5,890 m)[1]
Field115 players, 74 after cut[2]
Cut151 (+7)
Prize fund$600,000
Winner's share$90,000
Champion
United States Betsy King
283 (−5)
← 1989
1991 →
Rancho Mirage is located in the United States
Rancho Mirage
Rancho Mirage
Rancho Mirage is located in California
Rancho Mirage
Rancho
Mirage

The 1990 Nabisco Dinah Shore was a women's professional golf tournament, held March 29 to April 1 at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California. This was the 19th edition of the Nabisco Dinah Shore, and the eighth as a major championship.

Betsy King won the second of her three Dinah Shores, two strokes ahead of runners-up Shirley Furlong and Kathy Postlewait.[3] She began the final round with a five-shot lead,[4] then carded a 75 (+3), with four bogeys on the last seven holes.[3] It was the third of King's six major titles; she was the reigning U.S. Women's Open champion and repeated in July.

Final leaderboard

[edit]

Sunday, April 1, 1990

Place Player Score To par Money ($)
1 United States Betsy King 69-70-69-75=283 −5 90,000
T2 United States Shirley Furlong 74-73-70-68=285 −3 42,000
United States Kathy Postlewait 73-72-68-72=285
4 United States Cindy Rarick 72-72-72-70=286 −2 28,000
5 United States Colleen Walker 74-72-67-74=287 −1 24,000
T6 United States Beth Daniel 71-73-72-72=288 E 17,217
United States Rosie Jones 72-71-71-74=288
Japan Ayako Okamoto 73-72-72-71=288
T9 United States Pat Bradley 74-73-69-73=289 +1 12,699
United States Meg Mallon 74-72-70-73=289

Source:[1][3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "LPGA Dinah Shore". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. (Florida). April 2, 1990. p. 2C.
  2. ^ Rubledo, Fred (March 31, 1990). "King bolts to a four-stroke lead". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). (Los Angeles Times). p. 3C.
  3. ^ a b c "King loses lead but not tourney". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. April 2, 1990. p. 3B.
  4. ^ "King pushes lead to five shots". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. April 1, 1990. p. 3G.
[edit]

33°47′53″N 116°25′59″W / 33.798°N 116.433°W / 33.798; -116.433