Meet Cathy Gerring, the former Solheim Cup player whose career was cut short by a devastating fire

Cathy, who’d been doused with fuel, was on fire from the waist up.

GAINESVILLE, Va. — After the second round of the 1992 Sara Lee Classic, Jim and Cathy Gerring talked about a terrific shot she’d hit on her 17th hole Saturday afternoon at Hermitage Golf Course in Old Hickory, Tennessee. She’d come out of a 3-iron, and the ball had dribbled down into the water. Gerring took off a shoe and sock and hit it from the hazard to 2 inches.

“We were laughing about how lucky I was,” she recalled.

Cathy wanted to go hit balls. Jim, the head pro at Muirfield Village, wanted to eat. The players had gotten little notes from the tour, as they often did, asking them to visit the hospitality tent to thank the sponsors. Cathy had just sat down with her plate of food when Jim started raving about the chicken. She went back to the buffet line, where the chef told her that his burner had just gone out and that it would be a minute. A 30-year-old Cathy leaned up against the table to wait.

As a catering employee began to refill the burner with denatured alcohol, he realized that the flame had not gone out. There was an explosion and Cathy, who’d been doused with fuel, was on fire from the waist up.

“You know you hear that stop, drop and roll,” she recalled. “My face was – I could hear it sizzling. … I just ran.”

Jim shot up from his chair and ran after her, pulling off a tablecloth and smothering Cathy as he tackled her to the ground. She turned over and saw the skin dripping from her hands and face. As everyone in the room stood there frozen in shock, it was Cathy who yelled out, “Somebody call 9-1-1!”

Cathy was at the peak of her career when the unthinkable happened. Two years prior, she’d won three times on the LPGA and earned a spot on the inaugural Solheim Cup team. The 1990 Solheim Cup was a who’s who list of American superstars who combined to win 214 LPGA titles and 24 majors.  The dream team included Nancy Lopez, Pat Bradley, Patty Sheehan, Beth Daniel, Betsy King, Dottie Pepper, Rosie Jones and Gerring, whose name might be the only one among the eight that modern fans don’t recognize.

As the EMS worker screamed for a MedEvac flight, Gerring thought she might not survive. She asked her husband to take good care of their 3-year-old son, Zach.

Solheim Cup: Scoreboard, rosters | How to watch | Photos

“I was standing on the 10th tee when they air-vac’d her out,” said Pepper, Gerring’s close friend and Solheim Cup partner. “They stopped play.”

The nurse in the helicopter told Gerring that she couldn’t give her any pain medication because her throat was swelling shut from ingesting the alcohol. When she landed at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, there was a line of medical staff pouring saline on her hands and face every 5 feet.

“I knew my career was over,” said Gerring, “there was just no way. I had five layers of skin burned off both hands. They did skin grafts. I knew I would never have the same pair of hands.”

American golfers Dottie Mochrie (later Dottie Pepper, left) and Cathy Gerring competing in the Solheim Cup tournament at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club, Orlando, Florida, USA, 16th-18th November 1990. (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images)

Inkster, who often stayed with the Gerrings in Ohio when it was too much to get back to California, went to the hospital after her round.

“Her head was the size of a basketball,” recalled Inkster. “She lost all her eyebrows. It was just such a fluke accident. Everybody has been through a buffet with those things and for it to just blow up in her face.”

Gerring’s mother had taken Zach to Opryland that day. When the mother of six arrived at the hospital, nothing could prepare her for what she saw.

“I will never ever forget the look on my mom’s face when she came into that room,” said Cathy.

It was even harder on her father, Bill Kratzert, the longtime head pro at Fort Wayne Country Club — who’d taught the game to her and older brother Billy, a four-time winner on the PGA Tour. After Bill finished up work Saturday night, he drove to Nashville only to walk out the room in a matter of seconds after taking one look at his daughter.

Bill drove home.

“He couldn’t handle it,” said Cathy.

Laying there in the hospital suffering from immense pain, Cathy often found herself grappling with tough questions.

What did I do for God to allow this to happen to me? Am I being punished? Did I waste the talent that he gave me? Did I not do my best?

She was eventually transferred back home to Ohio, where her primary doctor, who happened to work with the Ohio State athletic department and lived on the first hole at Muirfield, told her that the sooner she could let go of the bitterness, the better.

Cathy took that message to heart and sought the help of a therapist.

“The reality is, accidents happen,” she said. “I could either accept it, or go into a place that was not going to be healthy. I know for certain that having Zach saved me … I had Zach to live for.”

Golf: Solheim Cup: Portrait of Team USA (top row, L-R:) Dottie Pepper, Patty Sheehan, Cathy Gerring, Nancy Lopez, and captain Kathy Whitworth, and (bottom row, L-R:) Betsy King, Pat Bradley, Beth Daniel, and Rosie Jones posing for team photo during ceremony before Friday Foursomes at Lake Nona Lake Nona G&CC.

Jim first met Cathy on the golf course and was struck by her competitive fire. He recalled Jack Grout, the legendary teacher of Jack Nicklaus, once saying he’d never met anyone with a greater intensity and desire to win.

“He was quite fond of Cathy,” said Jim. “They had many conversations about what he called championship golf.”

At that first Solheim Cup, Cathy was the only player on the team with a toddler, and Jim looked after Zach while she worked inside the ropes. Jim recalled going fishing at Lake Nona early in the week, and just as he’d hooked a nice-sized bass, young Zach began to scream after stepping into some fire ants. A panicked Jim took him over to Cathy, who stopped her practice round to get the medic involved, followed by some ice cream.

The reason Jim came down to Old Hickory for the Sara Lee that week was so the couple could try for a second child. The timing was right.

Cathy, a strong ball-striker with an enviable short game, could’ve driven herself insane asking all the what-if questions. On top of all that physical pain, the couple suffered more heartache with four miscarriages. The doctors told Cathy the difficulty was likely due to the accident, only to eventually discover that she didn’t have enough progesterone. She gave birth to a second child, son Jayme, in 1994.

Cathy didn’t even watch the 1992 Solheim Cup. Her first rounds of golf came several years later after the accident with Inkster and her husband Brian at Pebble Beach and Cypress Point. She wore special compression gloves to try to keep the swelling down.

“I was burned past where your sweat glands are,” she explained, “so when the humidity was high, my hands would swell, and I felt like the Michelin man trying to hold a golf club.

“I was never going to have that same pair of hands to play golf.”

Cathy Gerring clips her ball during the 2000 Du Maurier Classic at the Royal Ottawa Golf Club in Alymer, Quebec, Canada. Mandatory Credit: Harry How /Allsport

Cathy settled a $25 million lawsuit against the catering company out of court for an undisclosed amount, her career cut agonizingly short. For two years, Inkster called her every day to check in. Gerring tried to give the tour a second go, but mostly lived vicariously through Inkster’s Hall of Fame career.

A couple months back, Gerring was going through her Solheim Cup travel bag from 34 years ago and found a rules sheet and a pin sheet from Lake Nona folded up in the front pocket. What she also found was an old report card of Zach’s that he’d apparently in stuffed in there to hide from mom.

Zach, now 36, graduated from college magna cum laude with a degree in psychology and works as a registered nurse. Back then, however, he wasn’t too big on school, and that report card showed an “A” in P.E. and “D’s” and “F’s” in everything else.

Gerring got such a kick out of the discovery that she framed the report card.

“I’ve got three big trophies,” she said, “a husband and two children.”

And no room for bitterness.

A look back on the first Solheim Cup, two dream teams who poured their hearts out with no one watching

The idea of staging a female version of the Ryder Cup originally came from the late Joe Flanagan.

GAINESVILLE, Va. — The great Kathy Whitworth’s pairing philosophy for the inaugural Solheim Cup in 1990 was to partner players with similar personalities. That made the bulldog duo of Dottie Pepper and Cathy Gerring a no-brainer.

Leading up to the first day of competition, the two close friends decided that Gerring would tee off on the first hole at Lake Nona Golf and Country Club. Pepper had the even holes.

“She had ripped into me every day of the practice rounds, saying ‘If you leave a putt short, I’m going to kick your ass. If you lay up and you just don’t have the guts to go for it, I’m going to kick your ass,’ ” recalled Pepper with a laugh.

But on the way to the first tee for Day 1 Foursomes, the spirited Gerring looked over at Pepper with an ash grey face.

“Pards, I can’t do it,” Gerring said.

“Can’t do what?” Pepper asked.

“I can’t hit the first tee shot,” replied Gerring, who felt like she was hyperventilating.

SOLHEIM CUP: How to watch, format, schedule, teams

Gerring had won three times that season on the LPGA, and she wasn’t alone when it came to the terror of the first tee.

Future LPGA Hall of Fame member Patty Sheehan had a similar talk with Rosie Jones 34 years ago.

“She and I were walking to the first tee, and I just turned to her and said, ‘Well, Rosie, you’re going to hit the first tee shot,’ ” recalled Sheehan. “She’s like, ‘Oh man, partner, really?’ I said ‘Yeah, I can’t even breathe right now.’ ”

England’s Laura Davies, who was in the first match out that Friday, was standing on the first tee with Pat Bradley when she turned to countrywoman Alison Nicholas and said, “God, I’m a bit nervous.

“Well don’t turn around now,” Nicholas advised. “Nancy Lopez is walking onto the tee.”

The way Davies remembers it, she made Nicholas hit that first tee shot. Except that’s not what happened. Davies – using a pastel pink wood – hit the first shot for Team Europe, though she apparently has blacked it out.

As for who struck the first shot in Solheim Cup history, that honor goes to Bradley, who hit a beauty down the middle for the Americans. Bradley’s partner, Lopez, has long regretted that she turned down the chance.

“To think that Nancy Lopez passed on history,” marveled Bradley, “and she has not forgotten it.”

Portrait of Team USA (top row, L-R:) Dottie Mochrie, Patty Sheehan, Cathy Gerring, Nancy Lopez, and captain Kathy Whitworth, and (bottom row, L-R:) Betsy King, Pat Bradley, Beth Daniel, and Rosie Jones posing for team photo during ceremony (Photo by Jacqueline Duvoisin /Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

NASA launched a shuttle during the prelude to the Solheim Cup at nearby Cape Canaveral, and the players all scurried outside during dinner to see it. No one could’ve known at the time just how perfectly that scene encapsulated what was to come.

Nerves ran sky-high despite the humble nature of that first event, which served as a launching pad for what’s become the crown jewel of women’s golf. Even when hardly anyone was watching, players cared deeply.

The 19th Solheim Cup will be held Sept. 13-15 at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Gainesville, Virginia. While Team USA boasts the top two players in the world in Nelly Korda and Lilia Vu, Europe has won the last three contests dating to 2017. The U.S. still leads the overall series 10-7-1, with the event’s first tie coming last year in Spain.

For U.S. captain Stacy Lewis, it’s important that her players understand and appreciate the history of the Solheim Cup. Ten past captains are coming to Virginia, many of whom were on that inaugural U.S. team.

For England’s Trish Johnson, the success of the Solheim is due in large part to the stars who made up those first two teams.

“It was just the best of the best, probably ever, for both tours,” said Johnson of golf’s Dream Teams. “That’s what made it so exceptional. They paved the way. It’s not just about the play. It’s about the people … they probably care more than the players themselves now.”

The 1990 European Solheim Cup team: (back row) Trish Johnson, Helen Alfredsson, Mickey Walker, Laura Davies, Marie-Laure de Lorenzi (front row) Liselotte Neumann, Pam Wright, Dale Reid and Alison Nicholas (courtesy LPGA)

Player strategy wasn’t the only thing thrown together for that inaugural Solheim, which was announced in August at the JAL Big Apple Classic in New York and scheduled for mid-November. Mike Milthorpe, an LPGA rules official, was approached in July of 1990 about running the event. Milthorpe called Kerry Haigh, a former LPGA rules official who had since moved on to the PGA of America and was involved in preparations for the 1991 Ryder Cup.

“I asked if they had a template of what the hell you do,” said Milthorpe. “We had 90 days.”

The idea of staging a female version of the Ryder Cup originally came from the late Joe Flanagan, head of what was then the Women Professional Golfers’ European Tour. LPGA commissioner Bill Blue latched onto it and approached Karsten and Louise Solheim, founders of Ping, as a potential sponsor during the PGA Merchandise Show in Orlando, Florida, in January of 1990. The Solheims were already heavily involved in the LPGA, co-sponsoring four events around that time and working with numerous players.

At their next meeting, the LPGA proposed a two-event commitment, one in the U.S. and one in Europe. This time Karsten’s son John, who became CEO in 1995 and stepped down in 2022, was in attendance.

“If we do two events, they’ll sell it on us and be gone,” John told his father.

When mom Louise joined the conversation, she suggested they commit to 10 events. A draft of the agreement was put together in the ladies’ card room at Wykagyl Country Club in New York and finalized not long after. Blue, who was actually fired before the first Solheim took place, did not attend the event at Lake Nona.

Founder of the Solheim Cup and golf club designer Karsten Solheim presents Kathy Whitworth, Team Captain for the United States with the Waterford Crystal Solheim Trophy after Team USA defeated Europe in the inaugural Solheim Cup competition golf tournament on 18th November 1990 at the Lake Nona Golf & Country Club in Orlando, Florida, United States. (Photo by David Cannon/Allsport/Getty Images)

The Solheims gave the LPGA three options on what to name it: the Ping Cup, the Karsten Cup and the Solheim Cup.

“We knew they wouldn’t take Ping,” said John. “It wasn’t likely that they’d take Karsten. We figured it would end up Solheim.”

Pepper first heard about the Solheim Cup at a mandatory players’ meeting at the McDonald’s LPGA Championship in June.

“Points have already started to accrue,” she recalled, “so your first thought is where the hell do I stand?”

The first Solheim Cup teams only had eight players. (It increased to 10 in 1992 and 12 in 1996.) Team USA used the top seven from the money list and one captain’s pick. Kathy Whitworth, the winningest player in all of golf with 88 titles, was selected captain.

“Everybody knew that Lopez was going to be the pick,” said Pepper, who locked up the last qualifying spot, edging out Danielle Ammaccapane.

Five of team USA’s eight members went on to qualify for the LPGA Hall of Fame (Beth Daniel, Betsy King, Lopez, Bradley and Sheehan). Together, the great eight won 214 LPGA titles, including 24 majors.

European captain Mickey Walker recalled King saying on the record she expected the Americans to win all 16 points.

“I didn’t even know some of them,” recalled King. “I didn’t think there would be any chance in the world that we could lose.”

1990 Solheim Cup
American golfer Dottie Mochrie competing in the Solheim Cup tournament at Lake Nona Golf & Country Club, Orlando, Florida, USA, 16th-18th November 1990. (Photo by Stephen Munday/Getty Images)

Whitworth paired King with her former Furman teammate, Beth Daniel, who won seven times that season on the LPGA and Player of the Year honors. King, the 1989 POY, had won six times the year prior. It’s no wonder the Euros nicknamed them “God and God.”

“I know everybody talks about the first one as basically an exhibition,” said Daniel, “but I have to tell you that our team took it very seriously.”

Pepper bristles at the mere mention of the word “exhibition.”

“Hell no, my God,” she said of such an implication. “Not in any way.”

With 1988 U.S. Women’s Open champion Liselotte Neumann of Sweden and 1989 LPGA Rookie of the Year Pam Wright of Scotland competing full-time in the U.S., the Europeans took two players off the LPGA money list, five from the European Order of Merit and had one wild card pick to form their first team. The pick went to Dame Laura Davies, who’d won the 1987 U.S. Women’s Open as a non-member.

The late Dale Reid of Scotland and France’s Marie-Laure de Lorenzi, who combined for 40 titles on the LET, rounded out the team along with Helen Alfredsson, who’d recently given up a career as a model.

(In time, Davies, Reid, de Lorenzi and Johnson would become the four winningest players in LET history.)

The British-owned Lake Nona was mostly unknown at the time, situated on a two-lane road with only a 7-11 nearby. Before Chris Higgs, now a VP at Octagon, became the LPGA’s Chief Operating Officer, he worked for Executive Sports International as a tournament operator. Milthorpe called up his longtime friend and said something along the lines of “Hey, we’ve got a new event, it’s like the Ryder Cup, but it’s in 11 weeks’ time.”

“That’s very funny,” Higgs replied.

Except it was no joke. And once Higgs found Lake Nona on a map, the LPGA and ESI set out to lay the foundation of what would grow to become one of the largest women’s sports events in the world, and a financial cornerstone of both growing tours.

Tina Barnes-Budd began her decades-long career at the LPGA in January of 1990 as a promotions assistant and among her tasks for the Solheim Cup was outfitting Team USA. Izod was the official apparel partner for uniforms, but the turnaround was too short to create something special.

“We looked at their line,” recalled Barnes-Budd, “and the closest thing we could get to red, white and blue was purple, navy and gold.”

For the opening ceremony outfits, JCPenney CEO Bill Howell told Barnes-Budd to go to the local store in Daytona Beach, Florida, and pick out what she wanted, and they’d ship it.

Barnes-Budd selected navy pleated skirts, navy blazers and red silk shirts along with 10 pairs of navy panty hose and 10 pairs of navy pumps.

A general view of opening ceremony during the Solheim Cup in 1990 at the Lake Nona Golf Club in Florida, USA. (Photo By Stephen Munday/Getty Images)

The Spruce Creek High School band from Port Orange, Florida, performed at the open ceremony, which was closed to fans.

The opening gala was held at sparkling new Universal Studios, which first opened its doors in June. It was a black tie and tennis shoes affair because dinner was on the cobble-stoned streets of a New York City set. Sections of the park were closed so that players had the rides to themselves.

“I remember they had a guy who would train the animals for films,” said Walker. “He got Nancy of course, as you would, and worked with this parrot to get things off Nancy’s body.”

Lopez doesn’t remember the parrot, but she does remember what it felt like for tour rivals to come together that week.

“Players at that time,” said Lopez, “we were all kind of loners.”

While fiery and animated inside the ropes, Sheehan didn’t feel so comfortable at places like cocktail parties.

“I was so shy and not outgoing at all,” said Sheehan, “and I didn’t try to make friends.”

But at the first Solheim Cup, Sheehan looked around the room at players she’d long admired and the idea of dying over every last putt for each one of them sounded really cool.

“I think it really helped change me and helped me understand my position on tour as being one of the better players,” said Sheehan, who’d already competed on the LPGA for a decade at this point and won 25 times.

Alfredsson turned professional in 1989 after playing collegiately in the U.S. but was disqualified from the final stage of LPGA Q-School because she missed the sign-up deadline. The colorful Swede went back to Europe, where she won the 1990 Weetabix British Open in the month leading up to the Solheim.

She paired with Reid over the first two days at Lake Nona and mostly remembers being scared inside the ropes.

“I just felt like I didn’t want to be in their way,” said Alfredsson. “I kind of walked in the edges of the rough. I was almost embarrassed because they had to play with us.”

Pat Bradley and Nancy Lopez of the USA converse during the Solheim Cup in 1990 at the Lake Nona Golf Club in Florida, USA. (Photo By David Cannon/Getty Images)

The tournament hustled to find 100 volunteers who were bused over from Daytona Beach. (For reference, 1,600 volunteers will work this year’s Solheim.) There was very little money for publicity, and while the event was not televised, the Solheims paid for a one-hour highlights show to be produced as well as hourly updates on CNN.

As for fans, Milthorpe estimates there may have been 1,000 people over the course of three days. The tournament sent out 750 specially embroidered pouches to guests of the Solheims that included a pair of tickets and a personal letter from Karsten.

If anything, it almost felt like the Europeans had an advantage when it came to atmosphere as the British-owned Nona attracted a number of fans for the foreign team.

“I always kind of joke that our best friends and family were there,” said Lopez, though sparse crowds did nothing to take away from the pressure players felt.

“I’m pretty sure that every single player in that locker room felt like if we were to lose, it would really be an embarrassment,” said Sheehan.

Pepper never forgot Whitworth telling the team that though the Europeans were heavy underdogs to “expect people to do things they’ve never done against you.”

While the first match of the first Solheim Cup actually went to Europe, with Davies and Nicholas defeating Lopez and Bradley, 2 and 1, there wasn’t much on blue on the board over the course of the event. With only one session each day, a team needed to get to 8 ½ points to win the Cup.

“It was a total annihilation,” said Johnson, “apart from a few players.”

Johnson lost her singles match, 8 and 7, against Bradley in an hour and a half after the American played the first 11 holes in 8 under.

“I always remember thinking she wouldn’t have done that against someone better,” Johnson said. “She’s looking at me thinking, ‘Well, who are you?’ … She wouldn’t have done that against Laura.”

Gerring went up to Whitworth at the player meeting on Saturday night and asked whether she could go off first.

“I said I’ve got a 2-year-old and I’m up at 6 a.m.,” said Gerring. “I’m already up, I’m already nervous. The less time I have to pass, the better.”

Whitworth honored the request, and Gerring dispensed of Alfredsson, 4 and 3.

“I breathed a sigh of relief that I wasn’t playing Laura Davies,” Gerring admits. “Not disrespecting Alfie … I was not familiar with her.”

Reid was the only player who earned a full point in singles, defeating Sheehan, 2 and 1. It looked liked Wright might add a second point after King started pulling shots left down the stretch. Theirs was the only match all week to get to the 18th, and there was a gasp from the gallery after King sent her second shot screaming toward the water.

King took her visor off and kicked it all the way down the fairway, only to discover that a skinny palm tree had put her ball back in play.

“That was not the reaction you’d expect from Betsy King,” said Wright, “that was not the way she behaved.”

After the match was halved, King threw both their balls into the nearby lake.

1990 Solheim Cup
The victorious USA team with the Solheim family after the Solheim Cup in 1990 at the Lake Nona Golf Club in Florida, USA. (Photo By Stephen Munday/Getty Images)

The final tally was as lopsided as expected, with the U.S. winning 11 ½ to 4 ½. There were concerns that continued domination would keep the event from taking flight, but those fears quickly subsided when Europe shocked all of golf at Dalmahoy Country Club in Scotland two years later, trouncing Team USA by five points.

The Solheim Cup had entered another stratosphere.

At the Greenbrier in 1994, fans lined the fairways from tee to green. Higgs, who at this point was hired to run the Cup, said for three competition days at the Greenbrier, there were 22,000 fans.

At the 2021 Solheim Cup at the Inverness Club in Ohio, officials reported 130,000 attendees across all activities both on and off the course for the week. Ticket revenue for 2024 has already significantly exceeded that of the 2021 event.

At the Greenbrier, Karsten wanted to make certain the event was broadcast on network television. The Solheims bought the air time, and then sold it to additional advertisers. This year’s event will be broadcast on NBC for three hours each day over the weekend.

“We’re extremely proud of the event,” said John, who created the Ping Junior Solheim Cup in 2002.  “It’s part of us.”

The iconic Solheim Cup trophy was made by Waterford Crystal and members of the inaugural teams and captains received a smaller replica. Players were told Waterford broke the mold after making those replicas.

“Laura Davies said if her house ever caught on fire, that would be the only thing she’d try to save,” said Daniel, who didn’t want to reveal where she keeps hers.

Pepper actually had her replica appraised several years ago on the television program “Antiques Roadshow” and was told by the host that she’d insure it for $35,000.

When Gerring’s family basement flooded some time ago, her first thought was “Oh my God, my Solheim Cup bag.”

Fortunately, the bag stayed dry in the wine room with the trophy still in its original box. As she and husband Jim prepared to downsize, Gerring took stock of her trophies and memorabilia and shared the list with her two children.

“The only trophy they both want is the Solheim Cup,” she said.

A priceless piece of family history.

(Editor’s note: This story has corrected the name of Tina Barnes-Budd.)