Paige Pierce | |
---|---|
— Disc golfer — | |
Personal information | |
Full name | Paige Ashton Pierce |
Born | 1991 Plano, TX |
Height | 5 ft 5 in (165 cm) |
Nationality | United States |
Career | |
Turned professional | 2009 |
Current tour(s) | PDGA National Tour Disc Golf Pro Tour |
Number of wins by tour | |
PDGA National Tour | 27 |
Disc Golf Pro Tour | 30 |
Best results in major championships | |
PDGA World Championships | Won: 2011, 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019 |
USWDGC | Won: 2014, 2017, 2018, 2021 |
Aussie Open | Won: 2017 |
European Masters | 3rd: 2014 |
European Open | Won: 2013, 2019, 2022 |
Champion's Cup | Won: 2022 |
Women's National Championship | Won: 2020 |
Japan Open | 2nd: 2014 |
Achievements and awards | |
PDGA Female Rookie of the Year | 2010 |
National Tour Series Champion | 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018 |
PDGA Female Player of the Year | 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019 |
Paige Pierce is a professional disc golfer from Plano, Texas. She has won 5 World Championships and 17 total Major Championships (the most of any female player), and has been consistently ranked among the top professional women since 2011. In 2018 she broke the record for the highest PDGA player rating a woman had ever achieved at 978. Since then she has broken her own record several times, most recently at 996 rated in March 2021.[1]
Pierce began playing disc golf at the age of 4 with her father and his friends. She went professional in 2009 and started touring in 2010.
In addition to holding a number of PDGA National Tour wins, she is the all-time leading women's winner on the Disc Golf Pro Tour, founded 2016 by Steve Dodge and Nate Heinhold, with 30 DGPT wins as of August 2021.
After winning the US Women's Disc Golf Championship in 2014, Pierce made history by becoming the first female to ever win the USDGC Performance Flight division.[2] She narrowly missed qualifying for the Open division in 2015, missing a playoff for the fifth qualifying spot by two strokes. In 2017, she earned a qualification for USDGC at the Aussie Open. In 2018 she once again earned a qualifying spot when she won the United States Women's Disc Golf Championship.[3]
In 2023, while practicing for the PCS Sula Open, Pierce slipped on a bridge on the course and broke her ankle. This led to her taking the rest of the season off, and she was still recovering during the 2024 season. In 2023, she married her partner Ayla Pierce.