November 23, 2024
Stephanie Sparks, a star junior golfer who made it to the LPGA and was a host of the Golf Channel reality show “Big Break,” is dead. Sparks, a former U.S. Curtis Cup golfer, was 50, the New York Post reported Saturday. She died April 13. No cause of death was...

Stephanie Sparks, a star junior golfer who made it to the LPGA and was a host of the Golf Channel reality show “Big Break,” is dead.

Sparks, a former U.S. Curtis Cup golfer, was 50, the New York Post reported Saturday. She died April 13. No cause of death was given.

“She had been a professional golfer herself, so she knew what it was like for the contestants, and she wanted them to succeed,” Golf Channel commentator Tom Abbott, who worked with Sparks on “Big Break” for seven years, told Golfweek.

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“She kind of rode their emotions in a way when we were doing the show,” he said. “She knew how tough it was.”

Sparks began her career in the 1990s with victories in the  1992 North and South Women’s Amateur and the 1993 Women’s Western Amateur and Women’s Eastern Amateur, according to Golfweek.

While playing in college for Duke, she was a first-team All-American honors as a freshman and a second-team as a sophomore.

In 1994, she was on a Curtis Cup team that tied Great Britain and Ireland in a competition played near Chattanooga, Tennessee, according to the Post.

Her career in the LPGA career lasted only one season due to injuries, most of all back pain, according to the Post.

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Before hosting shows for the Golf Channel, Sparks appeared in the role of golfer Alexa Stirling in the 2004 movie “Bobby Jones: Stroke of Genius.”

In 2008, she was given a sponsor’s exemption that allowed her to play in the Ginn Open in Reunion, Florida, NBC reported at the time.

“Having had the opportunity to get a taste of the LPGA in 2000 was definitely a lifelong dream come true for me,” she said then.

“I am so appreciative to the people at Ginn for giving me this opportunity to play again on the Tour. After my second back surgery I thought I’d never have a chance of being inside the ropes again,” she said.

“Having this opportunity is unexpected, and I will be enjoying every single second of it.”

Her obituary noted that Sparks had been living in Orlando, Florida, at the time of her death.

“The last several years of her life Stephanie spent her time being an advocate for hospice care,” it stated. “She supported Libby’s Legacy Breast Cancer Foundation and the Barber Fund in Orlando.”

She was born in Wheeling, West Virginia.

She is survived by her parents, Robert and Janie Sparks, a sister, Susan and brother-in-law, Scott, six nieces and nephews and numerous other relatives.

A private family service will be held in Wheeling.


A Note from Our Deputy Managing Editor:

I heard a chilling comment the other day: “We don’t even know if an election will be held in 2024.” 

That wasn’t said by a conspiracy theorist or a doomsday prophet. No, former U.S. national security advisor Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn said that to the founder of The Western Journal, Floyd Brown.

Gen. Flynn’s warning means that the 2024 election is the most important election for every single living American. If we lose this one to the wealthy elites who hate us, hate God, and hate what America stands for, we can only assume that 248 years of American history and the values we hold dear to our hearts may soon vanish.

The end game is here, and as Benjamin Franklin said, “We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately.”

All of this means that without you, it’s over. We have the platform, the journalists, and the experience to fight back hard, but Big Tech is strangling us through advertising blacklists, shadow bans, and algorithms. Did you know that we’ve been blacklisted by 90% of advertisers? Without direct support from you, our readers, we can’t continue the fight.

Can we count on your support? It may not seem like much, but a Western Journal Membership can make all the difference in the world because when you support us directly, you cut Big Tech out of the picture. They lose control. 

A monthly Western Journal Membership costs less than one coffee and breakfast sandwich each month, and it gets you access to ALL of our content — news, commentary, and premium articles. You’ll experience a radically reduced number of ads, and most importantly you will be vitally supporting the fight for America’s soul in 2024.

We are literally counting on you because without our members, The Western Journal would cease to exist. Will you join us in the fight? 

Sincerely,

Josh Manning

Deputy Managing Editor

The Western Journal