
via Imago
10/12/2015. Ladies European Tour 2015. Omega Dubai Ladies Masters, Majilis Course, Emirates Golf Club, Dubai, UAE. December 9-12. Paige Spiranac of the USA lines up a putt on the 15th hole during the second round. Credit: Tristan Jones

via Imago
10/12/2015. Ladies European Tour 2015. Omega Dubai Ladies Masters, Majilis Course, Emirates Golf Club, Dubai, UAE. December 9-12. Paige Spiranac of the USA lines up a putt on the 15th hole during the second round. Credit: Tristan Jones
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Sometimes life’s biggest curveballs come from the most unexpected places. What started as a painful injury in gymnastics for Paige Spiranac eventually led her to the path to where she is today. But how exactly did she make a switch from flipping through the air to swinging a club and being one of golf’s most recognizable faces today? The answer is as surprising as it is inspiring.
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“I was actually a competitive gymnast for most of my life. And then I fractured my kneecap twice. Same one, actually. They told me I was so young that my muscles were stronger than my bones. So while doing a vault, the muscle literally pulled a piece of the bone off my kneecap. I was trying to go to the Olympics, but by the time I was 10 or 11, my parents said, ‘This is too much. You’re in the gym nine hours a day, almost every single day,” she told Aaron Chewning on a recent episode of the St. Andre Golf podcast while taking on the brutal Bethpage Black course.
This sounds awfully painful, but this wasn’t just an injury for Spiranac; it was a turning point. What came next was a quest to find a sport that would challenge her competitive spirit without wrecking her body. Coming from an incredibly athletic family — her mom a professional ballet dancer, dad a national champion football player at Pitt, sister a heptathlete at Stanford, and aunt a pro tennis player — Spiranac was born to compete. She tried tennis first, but it felt too similar to gymnastics and was still tough on her body, and then her dad’s suggestion came in handy.
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“My dad said, ‘Let’s try golf’. I didn’t come from a golf family… but after hitting my first ball, I loved it. Obsessed with it, really,” she quipped. That obsession quickly blossomed. Paige Spiranac took to junior golf, breaking into the top 25 rankings, before heading to collegiate golf—first at the University of Arizona and then San Diego State University (SDSU).
It was at SDSU where her golf journey truly took flight. She earned the All-Mountain West Conference honors and led the Aztecs to their first-ever Mountain West Conference Championship in 2015. She even initially planned to become an assistant coach at SDSU after graduation, but fate had other plans. Spiranac did play professionally, but never secured a full card on the LPGA. The mental pressure of the game eventually got to her, and she had to make a choice.
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“I felt like a loser and a quitter at the time,” she confessed recently.
It’s @rydercup week! Watch @PaigeSpiranac and Aaron take on Bethpage Black from the tips in the new episode of BLOODBATH, on YouTube now 📷https://t.co/xcQhM3e9zX pic.twitter.com/1qTaSGgYqB
— St. André Golf (@StAndreGolf) September 22, 2025
But after 2016, Spiranac’s world changed, and she became an overnight sensation in the golfing community. With her unique blend of athletic prowess and approachable personality, she quickly amassed millions of followers, becoming a major influencer in golf culture and beyond. She’s one of the most recognizable figures today, boasting over 4 million Instagram followers and over 460K YouTube subscribers. More recently, Paige Spiranac has added another feather to her cap by joining the new Grass League, blending her love for golf with media and entertainment, proving she’s as versatile as she is talented.
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How Paige Spiranac’s Tumultuous Path to Golf Led Her to the Frontlines
Now, Paige Spiranac is finding herself in what she calls a “full circle moment”—but this time, she’s holding the mic, not the club. At the 2025 Grass League event, which was hosted last week, she told Todd Dobson on the Golf Channel that she “wouldn’t want to be anywhere else.” Since joining the Grass League’s front office in May 2025, Paige Spiranac has taken on multiple roles — shaping content strategy, driving brand growth, and getting her hands dirty in business development. Oh, and she’s also roaming the fairways as an on-course reporter, because of course she is.
What makes it all click is how naturally the broadcasting side of things seems to come to her. “I was born to do this tbh lol,” she joked recently, and honestly, it shows. During the Grass League’s Summer Grind event at Goat Hill Park, she stepped in front of the camera with ease, but also with something deeper to say. “Golf is such an interesting sport,” she shared. “But competitive golf is a completely different animal,” she added. Coming from someone who lived that grind, the words hit harder. And for Paige Spiranac, the Grass League isn’t just another gig—it’s a chance to reimagine golf as something more accessible, more fun, and something that can drive the change.
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