07/01/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/01/2026 11:40
Read more BART Connects stories at bart.gov/bartconnects.
When Natasha Oon practices at the Lake Merced Golf Club, it's a treat to see her old pal the BART train glide by the course.
"It's like a nice little friend or companion at my practices. I always like seeing it pass by," said Oon, who made her highly anticipated debut on the LPGA Tour this past March.
BART has played an integral part in her journey to the LPGA, so much so that Oon's earned the nickname "BART Girl" among friends and colleagues.
Oon moved from Malaysia to the Bay Area after earning an athletic scholarship at San Jose State University (SJSU). Far from home and living in the U.S. for the first time, Oon sought an elite coach that could train her to compete at the highest level. She settled on Erik Stone, who coached Yealimi Noh, an LPGA standout from Concord.
The issue was Stone coached out of Alameda, and Oon was in San Jose.
"I didn't really know what to do. I didn't know how to get anywhere," she said. "I found out that to get to him, I had to take BART or it would be super expensive, and I wouldn't be able to see him as much. So BART helped me lower my costs and made it accessible for me to get top tour-level instruction. And now I'm a tour golfer on the LPGA Tour!"
Oon went on to become one of the most accomplished and decorated golfers in SJSU history.
Today, Oon's homebase is still the Bay Area, and when she's not touring, she still takes BART all over the place.
"I don't like parking in the city. I don't like driving in the city," she said. "For me as a city girl, I take BART."
BART, she added, is "such a celebrated thing because it helps people get so many places. And I think that's beautiful. I have a special place in my heart for BART."
Tens of millions of people ride BART every year -- to work, dates, practice, friends, and fun. BART Connects tells their stories.
In June, BART Communications launched the second edition of BART Connects, a storytelling series that features real BART riders who span generations, neighborhoods, and walks of life. You can read their stories below.
In the coming months, the stars of BART Connects will take us for a ride in a series of video featurettes that will be regularly posted on BART social media.
You will also see the faces of BART Connects riders in advertising spaces in the BART System and across the region.
BART Connects grew out of a call for rider stories BART Communications launched in 2023 to learn how our transit system impacts people's lives. The initial response made clear that BART means something to those who ride it.
Have a cool BART story to share? Submit a short summary at bart.gov/story. You may be the next BART Connects feature!