Jump to content

Junko Yasui

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Junko Yasui
安井 純子
Personal information
Born (1960-07-25) 25 July 1960 (age 64)
Himeji, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan
Height5 ft .2 in (1.53 m)
Sporting nationality Japan
Career
Turned professional1985
Former tour(s)LPGA of Japan Tour
Professional wins15
Number of wins by tour
LPGA of Japan Tour15

Junko Yasui (Japanese: 安井 純子, Hepburn: Yasui Junko, born 25 July 1960) is a professional golfer from Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan.[1][2] She studied under Kosaku Shimada and is a mentor to Nobuko Onizawa, among others.[2][3]

Yasui began playing golf at the age of 21 after graduating from Hyogo Prefectural Himeji Higashi High School. On 13 September 1984, she passed the professional exam and entered 47th class of the Ladies Professional Golfers' Association of Japan (LPGA of Japan) the following year, on 1 March 1985.[2]

In 1988, she won her first tour title at the Fujisankei Ladies Classic.[2]

In 1991, she scored two holes-in-one; one during the Daikin Orchid Ladies Golf Tournament and the other while competing in the Yamaha Cup Ladies Open.[2]

Yasui won four consecutive championships in playoffs in 1995 (Fujisankei Ladies Classic), 1999 (Kosaido Ladies Golf Cup and Sumitomo VISA Pacific Club Ladies), and 2000 (Toyo Suisan Ladies Hokkaido).[4]

Throughout her career, Yasui has often been among the top ranked in prize money earned. As of 2025, she ranks No.33, with ¥533,347,024 in lifetime winnings.[2]

Professional wins (15)

[edit]

LPGA of Japan Tour wins (15)

[edit]
No. Date Tournament Winning score To par Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
1 4 Sep 1988 Fujisankei Ladies Classic 66-73-71=210 −9 1 stroke United States Cindy Rarick
2 16 Apr 1989 Tokushima Tsukinomiya Ladies Classic Open 69-72-74=215 −1 Playoff Japan Reiko Kashiwado
3 1 Apr 1990 Tohato Ladies Golf Tournamen 68-72-74=214 −2 Playoff Japan Kayoko Yamaguchi
4 15 Apr 1990 Tokushima Tsukinomiya Ladies Classic Open 65-69-70=204 −12 Playoff Japan Reiko Kashiwado
Japan Ikuyo Shiotani
Japan Erika Nakajima
Japan Norimi Terasawa
5 15 Jul 1990 Asahi International Ladies 68-66-75=209 −7 2 strokes Japan Fukumi Tani
Japan Norimi Terazawa
6 29 Jul 1990 Stanley Ladies Golf Tournament 70-67-71=208 −8 1 stroke Taiwan Yueh-Chyn Huang
7 7 Apr 1991 Tohato Ladies Golf Tournament 70-68-33=171 −9 7 strokes Taiwan Tu Ai-yu
8 23 Jun 1991 Dunlop Ladies Open Golf 74-68-70-71=283 −5 3 strokes Japan Yuko Moriguchi
9 22 Nov 1992 Daio Paper Elleair Women's Open Golf Tournament 66-71-70=207 −9 6 strokes Japan Tomiko Ikebuchi
Japan Miyuki Shimabukuro
England Laura Davies
10 3 Sep 1995 Fujisankei Ladies Classic 69-73=142 −4 Playoff Japan Akira Nakano
11 30 May 1999 Kosaido Ladies Golf Cup 73-70-72=215 −1 Playoff Japan Miyuki Shimabukuro
12 25 Jul 1999 Sumitomo VISA Pacific Club Ladies 70-72-68=210 −6 2 strokes Japan Aki Takamura
13 16 Jul 2000 Toyo Suisan Ladies Hokkaido 66-64-74=204 −12 4 strokes Japan Mineko Nasu
14 20 Aug 2000 New Caterpillar Mitsubishi Ladies 72-68-75=215 −4 Playoff Japan Mineko Nasu
15 1 Oct 2000 Friskies Osaka Women's Open Golf Tournament 68-71-69=208 −8 Playoff Japan Orie Fujino

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "不動及ばず。L.ケーンが逆転V". GDOニュース (in Japanese). Retrieved 7 May 2025.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "|JLPGA|日本女子プロゴルフ協会". 一般社団法人日本女子プロゴルフ協会 (in Japanese). Retrieved 7 May 2025.
  3. ^ "ベテラン鬼澤信子 45歳になっても飛距離が落ちない理由とは?". GDOニュース (in Japanese). Retrieved 7 May 2025.
  4. ^ "<記録・国内女子>プレーオフ連勝記録保持者(4連勝)". GDOニュース (in Japanese). Retrieved 7 May 2025.
[edit]