The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Major honour for P.E.I. golfer

Lorie Kane to take place with country’s best athletes, builders next year

- JASON MALLOY jason.malloy@theguardia­n.pe.ca @PEIGuardia­n Charlottet­own golfer Lorie Kane is part of Canada's Sports Hall of Fame class of 2020-21.

Lorie Kane was the one hitting long drives and sinking tough putts while competing against the best women golfers in the world, but she knew there was a strong support system back home cheering her on every step of the way.

The Charlottet­own native felt it then and said the support meant the world to her – more than those in her home province could have known.

“I can’t say enough how great it was to get the support of local Islanders,” she said Thursday morning. “The support, well, it never died, and it still hasn't until this day. …

“It’s very flattering when I am downtown, and people recognize me. That will never get old.”

Kane, 55, will proudly represent the province again next year when she takes her place in Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame. She was part of the 2020-21 class announced on Wednesday.

“If we’re 150,000 strong now, then I take this for the 150,000 of us because this is home. This is where I learned to be an athlete.”

Kane, the daughter of Jack and Marilyn Kane, will become only the fourth Islander to earn a spot in the Canadian Hall and the first in more than 50 years.

Kane is a longtime supporter and ambassador for KidSport and knows the importance sports can have on a child.

“School was tough for me, so sport was my deal,” she said.

“I am definitely a product of not just golf here on Prince Edward Island but school sports, the YMCA, all those things that I had growing up as a kid that really helped form who I am.”

She went to school at Prince Street elementary, Queen Charlotte intermedia­te and Colonel Gray high before going to UPEI for a year.

She played field hockey and basketball for the Colonels back before golf was a school sport.

Kane was introduced to golf when she was five years old while her father was the first pro at the Brudenell River Golf Course. She had to wait to turn 12 to join Belvedere.

As a junior, she was competing against a strong field of her peers but wanted more.

Her math teacher, Fred Coady, ran the provincial junior boys’ program and allowed Kane to compete on the tour, but she had to play from the same distances as the boys.

“I definitely think I learned a lot from playing with the guys,” she said. “I never felt like I didn't belong, and the guys were very accepting of me being there.”

She said 1988 was a real turning point in her career. She went to Vancouver as part of P.E.I.’s team for the Canadian women’s amateur at the Shaughness­y Golf and Country Club. Jack McLaughlin, who was the director of golf there at the time, took notice of the Islander with the sweet swing.

He became the national team coach that fall and began working with Kane.

She turned pro in 1993 and joined the LPGA Tour in 1996. While she had nine second-place finishes in the first couple of seasons, she hadn’t been able to finish atop the leaderboar­d.

In 2000, she had a break from the action and came home as Brudenell was hosting an event as part of the du Maurier series, where Kane had previously played. It was an opportunit­y to catch up with friends at the course where she began playing.

“I kind of had a reality check that life was pretty good for me,” she recalled. “I was playing profession­al golf on tour and I went to St. Louis (the next week) with a clear vision.”

She won. And then added two more victories that year and another in 2001.

After St. Louis, she went to Ottawa to play in the du Maurier Classic. A package arrived for her while she was there.

“There was a 20x20 poster sent to me from Belvedere that every member had signed. I still have it,” Kane said, and “my hotel room was full of flowers. It was really cool.”

Kane is waiting to see what this season holds.

The U.S. Senior Open and Senior LPGA Championsh­ip have both been cancelled this year.

“It’s sad, but I understand why,” the Stratford resident said. “The health of people around the world right now is, first and foremost, very important.”

Her fingers are crossed the CP Women’s Open, scheduled for the Labour Day weekend back at Shaughness­y, will go ahead as it would be her 30th Canadian open.

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