1996 U.S. Women's Open
http://dbpedia.org/resource/1996_U.S._Women's_Open an entity of type: Thing
The 1996 U.S. Women's Open was the 51st U.S. Women's Open, held May 30 to June 2 at Pine Needles Lodge and Golf Club in Southern Pines, North Carolina. Defending champion Annika Sörenstam retained the title, six strokes ahead of runner-up Kris Tschetter. It was the second of her ten major titles; her third came nearly five years later. ESPN and NBC Sports televised the tournament. This was the first women's major with a winner's share of $200,000 or more; the U.S. Women's Open became the tour's richest major this year, passing the LPGA Championship.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
1996 U.S. Women's Open
rdf:langString
1996 U.S. Women's Open
xsd:integer
1996
xsd:float
35.19699859619141
xsd:float
-79.39199829101562
xsd:integer
31371904
xsd:integer
1080293951
xsd:double
35.197
xsd:double
-79.392
rdf:langString
Location in the United States
rdf:langString
Location in North Carolina
rdf:langString
Annika Sörenstam
xsd:gMonthDay
--05-30
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
(Southern Pines )
rdf:langString
Lodge & GC
rdf:langString
Pine Needles
xsd:integer
1997
xsd:integer
1995
<usDollar>
1200000.0
xsd:integer
1
xsd:integer
272
xsd:integer
200
230
xsd:string
35.197 -79.392
xsd:integer
148
xsd:integer
5
<usDollar>
212500.0
xsd:integer
70
rdf:langString
The 1996 U.S. Women's Open was the 51st U.S. Women's Open, held May 30 to June 2 at Pine Needles Lodge and Golf Club in Southern Pines, North Carolina. Defending champion Annika Sörenstam retained the title, six strokes ahead of runner-up Kris Tschetter. It was the second of her ten major titles; her third came nearly five years later. ESPN and NBC Sports televised the tournament. Sörenstam was the sixth of seven to win consecutive titles at the U.S. Women's Open, most recently accomplished by Karrie Webb in 2001, also at Pine Needles. The championship returned to the venue for a third time in 2007, won by Cristie Kerr. This was the first women's major with a winner's share of $200,000 or more; the U.S. Women's Open became the tour's richest major this year, passing the LPGA Championship.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
11615
<Geometry>
POINT(-79.391998291016 35.196998596191)