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Pepper, who won 17 titles including two majors on the LPGA tour before a series of injuries forced her retirement from competitive golf and move into the announcing booth in 2004, will not be a ...
Dottie Pepper has been a champion of many things in her career. From the amateur to professional golf circuit and a trailblazer in broadcasting to supporting non-profits in her home area of the ...
Laughter is the best medicine, so they say. Dottie Pepper, at least, was laughing, though nervously so, in the wake of her memorable close encounter of the weird kind. A decade ago, during the ...
U.S. captain Meg Mallon couldn’t have welcomed Pepper back to the ranks on a more fitting day. The Fourth of July was a red, white and Dottie day at the U.S. Women’s Open with Mallon making the ...
Dottie Pepper delivers a short message on slow play that hopefully can go a long way Published Jan. 28, 2025 9:08 a.m. ET ...
BALLSTON SPA, N.Y. — Dottie Pepper, the 17-time Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) tour champion, CBS golf broadcaster, and Saratoga Springs native, has written a book about the ...
When people saw Dottie Pepper trudging up the fairway at the Arnold Palmer Invitational this past weekend, she may have been mistaken for one of the golfers.She attacks the fairways as an analyst ...
And, in Dottie Pepper's case, it could be the wise words of a mentor along her path to stardom. Pepper is currently CBS Sports' on-course reporter during its run of PGA Tour events.
Dottie Pepper already had to overcome back and wrist injuries this year, so one last obstacle in the season-ending Arch Wireless Championship should have come as no surprise.
CBS Analyst Dottie Pepper is one of the more outspoken, opinionated voices in the sport. She doesn't suffer fools, and her assertive tone is a welcomed cadence in the chummy landscape of golf media.
Pepper made it abundantly clear this not about the final group. Harris English, an old-school player, closed with 12 pars on one of the toughest courses to win by one shot.
Pepper leaned on “respect” in her short message, and that should go a long way. Judy Rankin once brilliantly suggested that if everyone tried to make sure no one waited on them, the game would ...
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