Fred Couples
U.S. Captain
Frederick
Stephen Couples
(born October 3,
1959) is an
American
professional
golfer who
competes on the
PGA Tour. A
former
World No. 1,
he has won
numerous events,
most notably the
Masters
Tournament
in
1992.
Couples was born
in
Seattle,
Washington,
to Tom and
Violet (Sobich)
Couples. Fred's
paternal
grandparents had
immigrated from
Italy, and
changed the
family name from
"Copolla" to
"Couples" to
make it sound
less Italian.
[1]His
mother is of
Croatian
descent.[2]
His father was a
groundskeeper
for the Seattle
Parks Department
and the family,
which included
brother Tom,
Jr., and sister
Cindy, lived in
a modest house
on Beacon Hill.
Nearby was the
city's Jefferson
Park golf
course; here
Fred developed
his signature
loose, rhythmic
swing in order
to gain enough
distance to keep
up with the
older kids.
Couples attended
O'Dea High
School in
Seattle and the
University of
Houston,
where, as a
member of the
Houston Cougars
men's golf
team, he roomed
with
Blaine
McCallister,
another future
PGA Tour player,
and future
CBS
television
broadcaster
Jim Nantz.
His first PGA
Tour victory
came at the 1983
Kemper Open.
He has amassed
15 total PGA
Tour victories,
including the
The Players
Championship
twice (in 1984
and 1996) and
one
major
victory,
The Masters
Tournament
in
1992.
Couples has been
named the
PGA Tour Player
of the Year
twice, in 1991
and 1992. He
also won the
Vardon Trophy
for lowest
scoring average
each of those
years. He has
been named to
the
United States
Ryder Cup
team five times
(1989, 1991,
1993, 1995 and
1997).
In 1992, Couples
spent 16 weeks
at the number
one spot in the
Official World
Golf Rankings,
after one of the
hottest starts
to a season by a
PGA Tour player
ever. Starting
with the
Nissan Los
Angeles Open
(where he
defeated
Davis Love III
in a playoff),
Fred won two
tournaments and
finished second
in two others
(plus broke the
course record at
the
TPC at Sawgrass
with a
third-round 63
in
The Players
Championship)
in the five
weeks leading up
to The Masters.
At
Augusta,
Couples carried
over his
momentum,
shooting in the
60s in each of
the first three
rounds to hold
second place
heading into
Sunday. After a
shaky start to
his final round
that allowed
49-year-old
Raymond Floyd
to claim the
lead, Fred took
it back with 18-
and 20-foot
birdie putts at
the 8th and 9th
holes,
respectively,
then saved par
on a slick
6-footer at 10.
At 12 (perhaps
the scariest
par-3 in the
world), Couples
barely cleared
Rae's Creek
in front of the
green, but his
ball stuck in
the rough
instead of
rolling
backwards into
the hazard.
Sensing that
destiny was on
his side,
Couples held off
Floyd the rest
of the way,
completing
Augusta's
treacherous back
nine with eight
pars and one
birdie to win
his first Major.
The win pushed
Couples past the
$1 million mark
in earnings on
the season as
well, by far the
fastest any
player had
reached that
plateau.
Couples is
sometimes called
"Mr. Skins"
because of his
dominance in the
Skins Game.
He has won the
event five times
(in 1995, 1996,
1999, 2003 and
2004),
accumulating
US$3,515,000
and 77 skins in
11 appearances.
Because of his
dominance at the
Skins and other
off-season
events like the
Johnnie Walker
World Golf
Championship,
Couples is also
known as the
"King of the
Silly Season,"
referring to the
exotic
made-for-TV
events staged in
the winter that
are better known
as the "silly
season". Couples
was frequently
accused of "choking"
in his early
career, with
mistakes in the
1989
Ryder Cup
and the 1990
PGA Championship
at
Shoal Creek
often mentioned.
However, he
became the first
American player
to reach the
number one
position in the
official World
Rankings in 1992
(other Americans
had, of course,
previously been
the world's
number one
player, from
Walter Hagen and
Bobby Jones to
Ben Hogan and
Jack Nicklaus;
but the
"official" World
Ranking points
system was only
instituted long
after the peak
of their careers
and
simultaneously
with the rise in
worldwide golf
beyond the U.S.,
Great Britain
and Ireland).
His only major,
at The Masters
that year, came
with a stroke of
good fortune at
the 12th hole.
Hitting an
8-iron, Couples'
tee shot landed
on the rough at
the edge of
Rae's Creek;
although his
ball rolled back
towards the
water, it
incredibly
remained on the
bank.
Couples is a
frequent visitor
to
Great Britain,
and has an
excellent record
in the Open
Championship,
where he has
finished several
times in the top
ten. His best
places are tied
3rd in 1991 at
Royal Birkdale
-shooting a last
round 64, and
tied 3rd in 2005
at
St Andrews.
He completed his
first visit to
St Andrews
in 1984 on a
spectacular high
by holing his
approach at 18
for an eagle on
the final day.
Back
problems have,
at least in
part, truncated
Couples' career.
His swing
features an
extreme shoulder
turn at the top,
which, combined
with the fact
that he keeps
his left foot
flat on the
ground
throughout the
backswing, puts
a lot of
pressure on his
lower back.
However, with an
abbreviated
schedule and a
little help from
swing coach
Butch Harmon,
Couples is still
one of the best
players on Tour.
In 2003, at age
44, Couples
finished 34th on
the PGA Tour
money list. That
year he also won
the
Shell Houston
Open, his
first win in
five years;
Couples wept
with joy after
the win, but
quickly
explained the
tears: "I'm
always emotional
when nice things
happen to nice
people," he
quipped.
In April
2006,
Couples
challenged at
Augusta,
making a Sunday
run at what
would have been
his second green
jacket before
finally bowing
out to eventual
winner
Phil Mickelson,
with whom he was
paired in the
final round. Had
Couples won, he
would have been
the oldest
player ever to
win the
Masters at
46 years, 6
months, and 6
days
old—supplanting
Jack Nicklaus,
who,
coincidentally,
won his final
Masters 20 years
earlier and also
at the age of
46. His
competitiveness
in the
tournament was
an encouraging
sign for his
career. "I
didn't hit the
ball like I was
46," Couples
said.
Couples' part in
the USA 1993
Dunhill Cup
win included
victory in all
five of his
matches, and his
overall record
reads: played
16, won 12, lost
4. In 2004,
Couples won the
Dunhill Links
Championship
Team Event at St
Andrews,
partnered by
New Zealand
amateur
Craig Heatley.
In 2005 Couples
sank a crucial
putt in the
Presidents Cup,
securing an
unlikely 1-up
victory over the
International
team's best
player,
Vijay Singh.
This match
proved to be
pivotal in the
contest. Couples
has now played
Singh three
times in
Presidents Cup
match play,
and has yet to
lose.
Couples was
sidelined for
virtually the
entire 2007
season because
of health
problems.
However, he did
compete in the
2007 Masters,
making the cut
for the 23rd
consecutive
time, tying the
record held by
Gary Player.
Couples missed
the cut in 2008
and 2009.
In 2009, Couples
has limited his
play but
performed
impressively at
the
Northern Trust
Open. If it
wasn't for
Phil Mickelson
shooting a 62 on
that Saturday,
Couples may have
won instead of
finishing third.
He nearly won
the
Shell Houston
Open but
bogeyed the last
three holes and
finished third
behind
Paul Casey.
He also played
well at the
HP Byron Nelson
Championship
(T8) and the
AT&T National
(T11)
tournaments. He
hurt his back
practicing for
the
RBC Canadian
Open and had
to withdraw. But
he rested and
recovered and
made the cut for
the
2009 PGA
Championship
(T36) and
performed
successfully in
the
Wyndham
Championship
(T5) which put
him past the
$1,000,000 mark
on the money
list for the 7th
time in his
career.
Couples was
named as 2009
Presidents Cup
captain for the
United States
team on February
26, 2008. The
tournament will
take place on
October 9, 2009.
He currently
resides in
Palm Springs,
California.
Because of his
long drives, he
has been given
the
nickname
"Boom Boom".
Couples
co-designed the
Lost Canyon Golf
Course in
Simi Valley,
California.
He can be
regularly found
practicing at
Lost Canyons on
days when he has
missed the cut
or during the
weeks in between
the off season
and the
Bob Hope
Chrysler Classic
in Palm Springs.
|
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Gregory John
Norman
AO
(born 10
February
1955) is an
Australian
professional
golfer
and
entrepreneur
who spent
331 weeks as
the world's
number one
ranked
golfer in
the 1980s
and 1990s.
He is
nicknamed,
The Great
White Shark
or sometimes
simply
The Shark
— a
reference to
Norman's
blond hair,
size and
aggressive
golf style
and the
shark
inhabiting
Australian
waters.
Norman was
born in
Mount Isa,
Queensland,
Australia to
Merv and
Toini
Norman. His
mother was
of Finnish
descent. As
a youth, he
played rugby
and cricket
and was a
keen surfer.
His mother
was a fine
golfer with
a
single-figure
handicap.
Norman began
playing golf
at 16 and
within a
year was
playing to a
scratch
handicap.
Norman
attended
Aspley State
High School
on the north
side of
Brisbane,
Queensland.[1]
At the age
of 20,
Norman
served as
assistant
professional
under Billy
McWilliam
OAM at
Beverley
Park
Golf Club in
Sydney,
New South
Wales
Marriage
He married
Laura
Andrassy, an
American
flight
attendant,
on 1 July
1981.[2]
They have
two
children:
Morgan
Leigh, and
Gregory.
Gregory is a
business
management &
organization
major
student at
the
University
of Miami.
Gregory also
played with
his father
in a
father-son
team at the
2008 ADT
Skills
Championship
in
Aventura,
Florida.
The family
lived in
Hobe Sound,
Florida.
In May 2006,
Norman
announced he
and his wife
would
divorce.[3][4]
He refused
to comment
on the
reasons for
this, other
than to say
there was no
third party
involved.
In September
2007, Norman
announced he
and former
tennis
champion
Chris Evert
would be
married.[5]
Evert was
married
twice, to
British
tennis
player
John Lloyd
(1979-87)
and former
American
ski racer
Andy Mill
(1988–2006),
with whom
she has
three sons.
She was
engaged to
American
tennis
player
Jimmy
Connors,
but it was
called off.
The couple
became
engaged on 9
December
2007 and on
28 June 2008
were married
in The
Bahamas.
Professional
career:
1976-1990
His
professional
career began
as Charlie
Earp's
trainee in
the Royal
Queensland
Golf Club
pro shop,
earning $A28
a week.[6]
In 1976,
Norman
turned pro
and that
year earned
his first
victory at
the West
Lakes
Classic at
The Grange
in Adelaide,
South
Australia.
He joined
the
European
Tour in
1977 and in
1982 he was
the tour's
leading
money
winner. He
won his
first
Australian
Open (golf)
in 1980, his
first of 5
wins. The
following
year, he
joined the
U.S. PGA
Tour.[7]
In 1984
Norman won
his maiden
PGA Tour
victory at
the
Kemper Open.
Norman first
came to
worldwide
prominence a
week later
at the
1984 U.S.
Open.
Norman holed
a dramatic
putt on the
72nd hole to
force a
playoff with
former
Masters
champion
Fuzzy
Zoeller.
The next
day's
playoff was
a blowout,
with Zoeller
beating
Norman
67-75.[8]
This was the
first of
what would
be numerous
narrow
defeats,
unlucky
breaks and
unfortunate
collapses
throughout
his career.
He was able
to put the
defeat
behind him
and win the
Canadian
Open in
July for his
second win
to finish
off a great
year.
In 1986
Norman won
two regular
PGA Tour
events; the
Panasonic
Las Vegas
Invitational
and the
Kemper Open
(for the
second
time), but
1986 is
remembered
for the
Norman Slam
or the
Saturday
Slam.
Norman held
the lead for
all four
majors
through 54
holes. This
meant he
played in
the final
group for
every major
and had
perhaps the
best chance
in history
of winning
the
Grand Slam.
Unfortunately
for Norman
he was only
able to win
the
Open
Championship
at
Turnberry.
At the
Masters
Norman held
the lead
with
Seve
Ballesteros
through 9
holes on
Sunday.
Norman
double-bogeyed
the par 4
10th and
fell out of
the lead.
With Norman
seemingly
out of the
contention
the focus
moved
towards
Jack
Nicklaus,
Tom Kite
and
Ballesteros.
By playing
behind the
leaders,
Norman was
able to
rejoin the
pack and
eventually
tie for the
lead with
Jack
Nicklaus by
birdieing
the 17th. He
nailed his
tee shot on
the 18th,
but pushed
his approach
shot to the
green into
the
spectators
and made
bogey when a
par would
have gotten
him into a
playoff. At
the U.S.
Open he also
faltered,
shooting a
75 on the
final day at
Shinnecock
Hills.
He finally
broke
through at
the Open
Championship
for his
first major
title.
Norman shot
a brilliant
63 on Friday
and survived
the
weekend's
brutal
conditions
to win by 5
shots. He
was again in
contention
at the
PGA
Championship
showing
amazing
consistency
never before
seen during
all four
majors. Once
more Norman
found
himself in
the lead at
Inverness
until he
stumbled on
Sunday
again. A
clear
favourite
for the
title, he
shot a 76.
The
tournament
is famous
for
Bob Tway's
hole-out
from the
greenside
bunker on
the 72nd
hole. Tway
eventually
won by two
strokes over
Norman. 1986
established
Norman as
one of, if
not the,
best player
in the
world; he
topped the
Australian
Order of
Merit for
the fifth
time and the
PGA Tour
money list
for the
first time.
Norman ended
the year
officially
ranked
number 1 in
the brand
new
Official
World Golf
Rankings.
The
following
year Norman
once again
found
himself tied
for the lead
at the
Masters.
After an
even-par 72
he found
himself in a
playoff with
Larry Mize.
On the
second extra
playoff
hole, Norman
hit his
approach on
the green
with a
chance at
birdie, Mize
on the other
hand bailed
out right of
the green.
Facing one
of the most
difficult
chips on the
course, Mize
miraculously
holed the
45-yard
chip. Norman
missed his
birdie
effort and
came up
short for
the second
year in a
row. Norman
had a rough
1987 which
featured no
wins on
either the
PGA or
European
tours. He
enjoyed mild
success
between 1987
and 1989
including
four wins in
Australia in
1988. He won
the
MCI Heritage
Golf Classic
at
Hilton Head
Island,
South
Carolina
in April
1988,
inspired by
a
leukemia-stricken
teenager
named Jamie
Hutton who
got his wish
to meet
Norman and
watch him
play (he was
only
supposed to
watch him
for two
rounds, but
Norman
arranged for
him to stay
until the
tournament's
completion,
after which
Norman gave
Jamie the
winner's
trophy).[9]
At the
1989 Masters
Tournament,
he came to
the 72nd
hole
ultimately
needing a
par to make
a playoff or
a birdie to
win, but he
bogeyed the
hole to miss
a playoff,
after
unconventionally
teeing off
with a
one-iron. He
had another
great chance
at a major
in 1989 this
time at the
Open
Championship.
He played
brilliantly
in a
final-round
64 to force
his way into
a playoff
with Mark
Calcavecchia.
The two
players came
to the home
hole, the
fourth in a
four hole
playoff,
with Norman
level with
Calcavecchia.
Calcavecchia
sliced his
drive badly
to the right
and Norman
hit a
tremendous
drive down
the middle
of the
fairway.
Unlucky for
Norman his
drive
bounced to
the right
and bounded
into a
fairway
bunker 310
yards from
the tee.
Once more
Norman went
for broke
from the
bunker and
the ball
smashed into
the bunker's
face and
limped into
another.
Norman
thinned his
next shot
and the ball
careered out
of bounds.
That was the
end as
Calcavecchia
took home
the title.[10]
In 1990
Norman would
miss the cut
at the
Masters for
the first
time in his
career, but
he did win
the
Doral-Ryder
Open in
March and
Jack
Nicklaus's
Memorial
Tournament
for the
first time
(Norman was
the 54 hole
leader and
the final
round was
cancelled
due to rain,
giving him
the
victory). He
also lost
two
tournaments
in ways
which
directly
echoed his
losses to
Mize and
Tway and
further
enhanced his
reputation
of being
unlucky at
winning golf
tournaments.
He was
leading the
Nestle
Invitational
in
Orlando,
Florida
by one shot
until
Robert Gamez
holed out a
170+ yard
shot over
water on the
72nd hole to
defeat
Norman.
Within a few
weeks,
Norman was
tied for the
lead at the
USF&G
Classic
in Louisiana
when
David Frost
holed out a
greenside
sand shot on
the 72nd
hole, to
beat Norman
by one. It
might have
not been the
strongest
year in the
majors
for Norman
but he
finished
atop the
PGA Tour
money list
for the
second time
in his
career along
with winning
the
Vardon
Trophy
and
Byron Nelson
Award.
Later that
year he won
the
Australian
Masters
in his home
country of
Australia
for a final
and record
sixth time.
Professional
career:
1991-2009
After a
career slump
in the early
1990s,
Norman
turned to
Butch Harmon
for help.
Together,
the two
rebuilt
Norman's
game to top
form by
solving
mechanical
problems
that had
crept into
Norman's
swing. The
new swing
brought him
great
results
including
his second
major at
Royal St
George's. In
ideal
conditions,
Norman
defeated a
star studded
leader board
including
Nick Faldo,
Bernhard
Langer
and
Corey Pavin.
Norman
returned a
64, the
lowest final
round in
Open
history.
Gene Sarazen,
who stood at
the 18th
Green of St
Georges
later said
of Norman's
achievement:
"I never
thought I
would live
to see golf
played like
this."
Norman's
playing
partner
Langer also
commented,
calling it
the finest
round he had
ever
witnessed.
The year's
PGA
Championship
was again
staged at
Inverness.
He had a
final green
putt of
around
twelve feet
for victory
that lipped
right around
the hole and
failed to
drop, and
lost the
subsequent
playoff to
Paul Azinger.
At the PGA
Championship,
he became
one of only
two players
to have
competed in
- and, like
Craig Wood,
to have lost
- playoffs
in all four
of the major
championships.
The next
year at the
Players
Championship,
Norman
obliterated
the records
for the
lowest 18,
54 and
72-hole
scores.
After
opening with
a
course-record-tying
63, he
followed
with three
67s to give
him a
24-under 264
total - six
strokes
better than
any previous
winner.[11]
Norman
started 1995
with a third
place finish
at the
Masters and
again found
himself with
the 54 hole
lead at the
U.S. Open.
Even though
he held the
lead for
most of the
day he was
over taken
by
Corey Pavin
on the back
nine. In
June, Norman
won his
second
Memorial
Tournament,
a victory
that marked
the
beginning of
one of his
best years
on the PGA
Tour. After
his win at
the
Canon
Greater
Hartford
Open,
aided by a
chip-in in
for eagle on
#14 in the
final round,
Norman
overtook
Nick Price
as the
number one
golfer in
the world.
Later, he
won the
NEC World
Series of
Golf,
holing a 70
foot birdie
chip shot to
defeat Price
in a playoff
on the first
hole. He
ultimately
held the #1
ranking for
331 weeks in
his career.
He also
topped the
money list
for the
third time
and was
named
PGA Player
of the Year.
1995 is
arguable
Norman's
greatest
year even
without
winning a
major title.
The
following
year, Norman
came into
the
1996 Masters
Tournament
having
already won
at the
Doral-Ryder
Open (though
he also
missed the
cut at the
Players
Championship
and the
Bayhill
Invitational
beforehand).
He opened
his
championship
with a
course
record 63
which
propelled
him to the
top of the
leaderboard.
He held the
lead through
three days
for play.
With 5
previous top
five
finishes at
Augusta, and
a 6 shot
lead.
Norman's
long awaited
Masters
victory seem
to be
evident. In
one of the
worst
meltdowns in
major
championship
history
(along with
Ken Venturi
shooting a
final round
80 in 1956
Masters to
lose by one
shot), he
took a
six-stroke
lead into
the final
round and
lost the
tournament
to
Nick Faldo
by five
strokes,
shooting a
Sunday 78 to
Faldo's 67.
Norman's 6
shot lead
evaporated
quickly with
4 straight
bogeys on
holes 9-12,
and after
Norman found
water on the
12th hole,
playing
companion
Faldo had
taken the
lead. Norman
tried to
give himself
a chance
down the
stretch
including an
eagle chip
on the 15th
which lipped
out of the
hole
dropping
Norman to
his knees.
Maybe the
most
infamous
shot of his
career was
on the very
next hole; a
hooked tee
shot into
the water
ending any
chance at
victory.
ESPN, as
part of
their "ESPN25"
25th-anniversary
celebration,
ranked
Norman's
1996 Masters
disaster as
the
third-biggest
sports choke
of the last
25 years.
Despite the
losses,
though,
Norman still
has 30
top-ten
finishes in
the majors.
And,
amazingly,
he came back
to lead the
very next
major, the
1996 U.S.
Open at
Oakland
Hills, after
36 holes,
though he
faded on the
weekend.
In January
1997, Norman
won his
largest
winner's
check to
date, 1
million
dollars,
when he won
the
Andersen
Consulting
World
Championship
of Golf
(the
precursor to
the
WGC-Andersen
Consulting
Match Play
Championship),
making
birdie on
the last
hole to
defeat
Scott Hoch
in the 36
hole final.
Then Norman
won twice in
1997,
but they
were his
last. Norman
did make one
more run at
the Masters
in 1999,
battling
José María
Olazábal
on the final
day, and
even briefly
leading the
tournament
after an
eagle on 13,
before
fading to
finish 3rd
behind the
winner
Olazabal and
Davis Love
III.
After this,
Norman's
name
virtually
disappeared
from golf
leaderboards
and Norman
only showed
an
occasional
flash of his
previous
brilliance,
perhaps due
to age,
shaken
confidence,
the new
technology,
the
emergence of
Tiger Woods
and other
young
golfers,
and/or
Norman's
increasing
involvement
in business
ventures.
In July
2008,
despite not
playing in a
major for
three years,
Norman
finished
nine over
par in a tie
for third at
The Open
Championship
after being
the 54 hole
leader by
two strokes.
He set the
record in
becoming the
oldest
54-hole
leader in a
major
championship
and earned
an automatic
bid to the
2009 Masters
. His trip
to the
Masters was
his first
since 2002.
Though he
missed the
cut, he said
he was happy
to give his
wife and
tennis
legend Chris
Evert an
opportunity
to
experience
"golf's
Wimbledon"
firsthand.
Norman
played his
warm up to
the
2009 Masters
Tournament
at the
Shell
Houston Open
on the
PGA Tour
at the
Redstone
Golf Club
where he
made the
half-way
cut. It was
only the
fourth cut
he has made
on the PGA
Tour since
2004.
Though
neither was
in a major
or PGA Tour
event,
Norman had
two notable
faceoffs
with
Tiger Woods.
At the
1998
Presidents
Cup at
Royal
Melbourne
Golf Club in
Australia,
Norman and
Woods played
a close
match, with
Woods
winning
1-up. Under
different
circumstances,
this could
have been a
very
significant
match beyond
the star
power
involved,
but since
the
International
Team
(Norman) won
by a
lopsided
margin over
the U.S.
Team
(Woods),
this match
had little
effect on
the final
result,
though it
was a
riveting
match
between the
former and
current #1
players in
the world.
(Besides the
Woods match,
the
International
Team's
victory over
the U.S.
Team in
Norman's
home country
was one of
the great
moments of
Norman's
career, and
to date
still the
only win for
the
International
Team in
Presidents
Cup
matches;
Norman is
slated to
captain the
International
Team in the
2009
matches).
Norman got
payback of a
sort in the
2001
Skins Game,
in which he
not only
defeated
Woods (as
well as
Colin
Montgomerie
and
Jesper
Parnevik),
he also was
the only
person in
Skins Game
history to
sweep all
the prize
money (1
million
dollars) and
leave the
other
players,
including
Woods, empty
handed. This
was the only
year that
the Skins
Game was
contended
under the
controversial
validation
format.
Champions
Tour
Norman
turned 50 in
February
2005, but
has kept his
distance
from the
senior golf
circuit.
Partly this
is because
of his other
interests,
but also
because of
back and
knee
injuries. He
had knee
surgery in
October 2005
and February
2006.[12]
Norman
believes his
back
injuries
could have
been averted
had he been
introduced
to the
concept of
golf fitness
early in his
career.[13]
In May 2008,
Norman
played in
only his
third
Champion's
Tour event
since
turning 50,
the 69th
Senior PGA
Championship
at Oak Hill
Country
Club.
Norman,
having not
played
competitive
golf
regularly in
the last
several
years,
stayed in
contention
all week and
wound up
three shots
behind
eventual
winner Jay
Haas (+7),
tying for
sixth place.
His new
wife, tennis
legend
Chris Evert,
has been a
large part
of Norman's
consideration
to enter
events on
the PGA and
Champions
Tours. "I
would doubt
he'd go back
full time,"
Evert said.
"But for him
to keep it
up, one or
two
tournaments
a month or
whatever,
would be
great. I
would 100
per cent
support him
if that's
what he
wanted to
do."
After
Norman's
surprise
success at
the
Open
Championship,
he continued
his strong
play,
finishing in
a tie for
fifth at the
Senior
British Open
Championship
and fourth
in the
U.S. Senior
Open
after being
the only
player to
shoot 72 or
lower all
four days.
He finished
2008 playing
in four
majors and
finishing in
the top ten
in all of
them.
In the 2009
Senior
British Open
Championship,
he held the
54-hole lead
after
playing
three
consistent
rounds, but
faltered on
Sunday to
finish tied
for sixth, 3
shots behind
eventual
winner
Loren
Roberts.
Career
achievements
and legacy
Norman has
earned more
than $1
million five
times on the
U.S. PGA
Tour,
including
three Arnold
Palmer
Awards as
the Tour's
leading
money winner
in 1986, '89
and '95. He
was also the
first person
in Tour
history to
surpass $10
million in
career
earnings. He
has 30 top
10 finishes
in Majors,
or more than
38 percent
of those he
has entered.[14]
Norman tees off at Royal Birkdale
Even with
two Open
Championships
and a
Players
Championship,
Norman is
regarded as
an
underachiever
(given his
talents), a
characterization
fueled by
his myriad
near-misses
in
The Masters,
the
U.S. Open,
and the
PGA
Championship.
He was
equally a
victim of
his own bad
luck and
good luck on
the part of
his fellow
golfers in
major
championships.
Norman won
the
PGA Tour of
Australia's
Order of
Merit six
times: 1978,
1980, 1983,
1984, 1986,
and 1988. He
won the
European
Tour's Order
of Merit in
1982, and
topped the
PGA Tour's
Money List
in 1986,
1990, and
1995. He won
the
Vardon
Trophy
for lowest
scoring
average on
the
PGA Tour
three times:
1989, 1990,
and 1994;
and was
inducted
into the
World Golf
Hall of Fame
in 2001. His
dominance
over his
peers
(despite his
comparative
lack of
success in
the majors)
was probably
best
expressed in
the
Official
World Golf
Rankings:
Norman
finished the
season on
top of the
ranking list
on seven
occasions,
in 1986,
1987, 1989,
1990, 1995,
1996 and
1997, and
was second
at the end
of 1988,
1993 and
1994.
In 1986,
Norman was
awarded the
BBC Sports
Personality
of the Year
Overseas
Personality
Award, a
feat he
replicated
in 1993 to
join
Muhammad Ali
and
Björn Borg
as multiple
winners
(They have
since been
joined by
Roger
Federer).
He received
the 2008
Old Tom
Morris Award
from the
Golf Course
Superintendents
Association
of America,
GCSAA's
highest
honor, at
the 2008
Golf
Industry
Show in
Orlando.
Norman is a
member of
The
Environmental
Institute
for Golf's
board of
trustees and
also chairs
The
Institute's
advisory
council. He
was the also
the
recipient of
the Golf
Writers
Association
of America's
2008 Charlie
Bartlett
Award.
Articulate
and with a
friendly
image,
Norman has
for years
been a
spokesman
for
companies
including
General
Motors-Holden,
which
developed a
Commodore
model named
after him.
His own
businesses
interests
include
MacGregor
Golf and
Greg Norman
Golf Course
Design. He
continues to
play
tournaments,
his growing
business
interests
take up an
increasing
amount of
his time.
His personal
wealth is
estimated to
be in the
hundreds of
millions of
U.S.
dollars.
Playing
style
Norman will
always be
remembered
for his
style of
play. Norman
had one of
the best
swings of
his
generation
with one of
the fastest
tempos. He
had
incredibly
high ball
flight which
enabled him
to carry the
ball very
long
distances.
He
demonstrated
the best
technique
around the
greens and
was strong
in all
aspects.
In Norman's
heyday,
driving long
and
incredibly
straight off
the tee
similar to
that of
Nick Price
his
contemporary
with a
persimmon
(wood)
clubhead, he
intimidated
most of his
fellow
professionals.
However,
with the
advent of
the
"metal-wood"
by
TaylorMade
and other
subsequent
advances in
golf ball
and golf
club
technology
(especially
the variable
face depth
driver), his
dominance
was
significantly
diminished,
as the "new
technology"
enabled less
precise
ball-strikers
to achieve
equal or
better
accuracy and
distance.
Norman is
regarded,
aside from
Jack
Nicklaus, as
being the
greatest
driver of
the
golf ball
in
golf
history.
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