Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Email Travel Subscribe SI About Us SI for Women Golden Goals Current Issue Message Boards Feedback Customer Service Subscribe
 
 
 
Raise cash
for your team!

Sell subscriptions to SI, SI For Kids and SI For Women and your team keeps 50%!

 

Join SI for Women's Affiliate Program
CNNSI.com Home WNBA Women's College Basketball LPGA WUSA WTA Olympic Sports Sports Illustrated SI for Kids

Use the menu below to read our biographies of the century's greatest sportswomen and then tell us who you think should be No. 1. Also, be sure to check out our expanded home page and our new issue which is on newsstands now.

76. Lisa Andersen, Surfer

1969-
Four-time world champion

  To get Andersen's attention just give her a wave.   Ben Van Hook
As a teenager, Lisa Andersen ran away from her troubled home in Florida to the surfing mecca of Huntington Beach, Calif. Her plan? To become the world champion of surfing. She eventually got there, but it was hardly an easy ride. Andersen's practice of surfing with men gave her an edge over other female surfers, and she came out of nowhere to win the U.S. amateur championship in 1987. Later that year, when she beat a group of pro surfers at the Katin Challenge at Huntington Pier, she decided to turn professional herself and went on to win the Association of Surfing Professionals Rookie of the Year title. But Andersen struggled to continue to win events at the pro level and found the lifestyle of constant travel and competition a difficult one. In 1992, she began to find her way, winning three ASP tournament titles and was looking ahead to the world championships when she found out she was pregnant. In 1993, Andersen gave birth to her daughter, Erica. The following year, she finally won the world title, and repeated that feat in 1995, '96 and '97.

They said it: "I'd only been surfing a very short time when I began to believe I had the potential to be as good or better than any other woman surfer. And I knew I'd limit myself if I surfed with other girls, so I surfed with the guys." -- Andersen

--Nancy Foley

Athletes were selected by Sports Illustrated For Women, Sports Illustrated and CNN/SI editors, writers and correspondents who considered the athletes' on-field performance and achievements, plus their contributions to women's sports. Because athletic achievement was a key criterion, women whose contributions were made solely in administration and coaching are not included.


To the top
Copyright © 2000 CNN/Sports Illustrated. An AOL Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.