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Candy Hannemann
Rookie Year
2002
Race for the Card
0.000
5’4”...Started playing golf at the age of 9...Credits her first teacher, her parents and her family as the individuals most influencing her career...Hobbies include dancing, going to the beach and horseback riding...Fluent in Portuguese, Spanish, English and German.

2015 in a Nutshell
  • 11 events, four cuts made, $1,847 (152)

Career
  • Current member of the LPGA Tour
  • In 2003, won two titles on the Futures Tour and finished third on the Futures Tour money list to earn exempt status for the 2004 LPGA season.
  • In 2002, turned professional in June, played eight events on the Futures Tour and recorded five top-10 finishes; tied for 59th at the LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament to earn non-exempt status for the 2003 LPGA season.

Amateur
Hannemann enjoyed a decorated amateur career. She won the 1995 American Junior Golf Association (AJGA) Grand Geneva Junior Classic and the 1996 AJGA Las Vegas Legacy Founders Junior Classic. She is a three-time Women’s Western Junior Championship winner (1995-97) and a winner of the 1997 and 1998 South American Team Championship. From 1998-2001, she won the Tar Heel Invitational while a member of the Duke University Women’s Golf Team and won NCAA team championships from 1999-2002. Hannemann won the 2000 North and South Amateur Championship and, in 2001, she won the NCAA individual title, the Honda Award and was named a First-Team All-American. She was the 2001 Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Player of the Year and was the low amateur at the 2001 U.S. Women’s Open. In 2002, she won the ACC individual title, the Brazilian Amateur Championship and recorded a top-15 finish in the World Amateur Championship.