- David Duval
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David Duval Personal information Full name David Robert Duval Nickname Double D, DD Born November 9, 1971
Jacksonville, FloridaHeight 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) Weight 180 lb (82 kg; 13 st) Nationality United States Residence Cherry Hills Village, Colorado Spouse Susan Persichitte Duval Children Brayden & Sienna Duval
Deano, Nick & Shalene KaravitesCareer College Georgia Tech Turned professional 1993 Current tour(s) PGA Tour (joined 1995) Professional wins 19 Number of wins by tour PGA Tour 13 Japan Golf Tour 1 Nationwide Tour 2 Other 3 Best results in Major Championships
(Wins: 1)Masters Tournament 2nd/T2: 1998, 2001 U.S. Open T2: 2009 The Open Championship Won: 2001 PGA Championship T10: 1999, 2001 Achievements and awards PGA Tour
leading money winner1998 Vardon Trophy 1998 Byron Nelson Award 1998 David Robert Duval (born November 9, 1971) is an American professional golfer and former World No. 1 who competes on the PGA Tour.
Contents
Background and career
Early years
Duval was born in Jacksonville, Florida, the son of golf instructor and club professional Bob Duval and Diane Poole Duval, a member of the FSU Flying High Circus during college.[1] His brother Brent was two years older, and sister Diedre was five years younger.[2] During his early years, his father was club professional at Timuquana Country Club, where he learned to play golf under his father's guidance.
When David was nine, his brother Brent developed aplastic anemia. The family sought treatment at Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio, where David underwent surgery to donate bone marrow. Unfortunately, the transplant was not successful, and Brent died as a result of blood poisoning on May 17, 1981 at age 12.[3]
Bob Duval was unable to cope, and moved out of the family home for a year. Counseling enabled him to reunite with his wife and children in 1982, and David continued to receive golf instruction from his father.
Amateur career
He graduated from the Episcopal High School of Jacksonville in 1989, the same year he was the U.S. Junior Amateur champion. He continued his amateur career at Georgia Tech, where he was a four-time first-team All-American, two-time ACC Player of the Year, and 1993 National Player of the Year. While in college, he led an official PGA Tour event, the BellSouth Classic (which he would win as a professional), after three rounds.
Professional career
In 1993, just as Duval was starting his professional golf career, his father again moved out of the family home, this time permanently.[3] After two years on the Nike Tour where he won twice, he earned his PGA Tour card in 1995. Success came quickly, as Duval posted seven second place finishes on the PGA Tour from 1995 to 1997, qualifying for the 1996 Presidents Cup and posting a 4–0–0 record for the victorious American team. But a PGA Tour victory eluded him until he won the Michelob Championship at Kingsmill in October 1997, and winning his next two tournaments in the same month, including the 1997 Tour Championship. Altogether, from 1997 to 2001, he won 13 PGA Tour tournaments, including the 1997 Tour Championship, the 1999 Players Championship, and the 2001 Open Championship, as well as the 2001 Dunlop Phoenix and the 2000 World Cup (with Tiger Woods) internationally. He also tied for second in both the 1998 and 2001 Masters.
Duval's winning speech at the 2001 Open was welcomed by British commentators as "delightfully modest and heartfelt".[4]
Other career highlights include achieving the number one spot in the Official World Golf Rankings in April 1999 and shooting a 59 in the final round of the 1999 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic on the Palmer Course at PGA West in La Quinta, California (doing so in dramatic fashion by making an eagle on the final hole to win the tournament by one shot). When he won the Players Championship he became the first player in history to win on the same day as his father, Bob Duval, who won a Champions Tour event that same day. Before 1999, only two other golfers in PGA Tour history, Al Geiberger and Chip Beck, had posted a 59 in competition and no one had ever done so in a final round. He also played on the victorious 1999 Ryder Cup team, as well as the 2002 team.
After his Open Championship win, Duval entered a downward spiral in form that saw him drop to 80th on the money list in 2002, and 211th in 2003, prompting an extended break from the game. Numerous reasons have been postulated for the decline, including back, wrist, and shoulder problems; private difficulties; and a form of vertigo. Duval has not won a tournament since his 2001 Open Championship victory on the PGA Tour. His last worldwide win was the Dunlop Phoenix Tournament in November 2001, on his 30th birthday. His 30s have proved much less lucrative on the golf course.
Many commentators believed Duval's career to be over, but he returned to golf in 2004 at the U.S. Open, where he shot 25 over par and missed the cut. Duval has struggled since his return with his best results a T-13 at the 2004 Deutsche Bank Championship and a T-16 at the 2006 U.S. Open. He made the cut in only one PGA Tour event in 2005, but did finish in the top ten at the Dunlop Phoenix tournament in Japan. While Duval at his peak was viewed as aloof and distant and was not a fan favorite, now galleries sympathize with his plight and root for him to overcome his issues and to enjoy playing golf.
Duval had a successful start to the 2006 PGA Tour season, making the cut in his first two tournaments, as well as a very respectable finish of T-16 at the U.S. Open Championship at Winged Foot Golf Club, where his second round 68 was good enough for a tie as the best round of the tournament. Despite not reaching the same heights in the remaining two majors of the year, his performances continued a general upward trend, with none of the rounds of 80+ that had become so familiar in the previous years.
After a steady start to 2007 during the West Coast Swing, Duval once again disappeared from the tour. His mother died on July 17, 2007,[1] and he later revealed that his wife was going through a difficult pregnancy. This prompted the PGA Tour to amend its medical exemption policies – and Duval was granted twenty starts for the next season.
After a lackluster first half of the year, Duval inexplicably reappeared on the leaderboard of The Open Championship, rekindling memories of his major victory. He shot 73–69–83–71 for the week and finished T-39.
In 2009, Duval used his final career money exemption on the PGA Tour. He made his first cut of 2009 at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am in February. However, he stormed back onto the golf scene with a T-2 finish at the 2009 U.S. Open at Bethpage Black. After going through sectional qualifying, Duval made the most of his first appearance in the U.S. Open since 2006. Going into the final round, Duval was four shots behind eventual winner Lucas Glover. Duval made a triple bogey at the par three 3rd hole, but rebounded with three straight birdies from 14 to 16. He stood on the tee of the 71st hole in a tie for the lead, but his par putt lipped out on the hole, and he finished tied for second, two shots behind Glover. It was his best finish on tour since the 2002 Memorial Tournament. After the Open, Duval jumped 740 spots in the Official World Golf Rankings from 882 to 142.[5]
Duval failed to earn his PGA Tour card for the 2010 season, so he had to play on sponsor's exemptions. He showed more signs of a come-back by shooting a final round 69 to finish 2nd to defending champion Dustin Johnson at the 2010 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Duval had a good 2010 season and retained his tour card at the end of the year.
Personal life
Duval split with his girlfriend Julie McArthur in early 2002 after being together for eight years.[6][7]
He met Susan Persichitte in August, 2003 at a Denver restaurant while in town for The International tournament. They got engaged in November[7] and married in 2004. They have two children together: Brady, born in 2005; and Sienna, born in 2008. Wife Susie has custody of three older children from a prior marriage: Deano, Nick, and Shalene Karavites. Their home is in Cherry Hills Village, an upscale suburb south of Denver.[2]
Amateur wins
this list may be incomplete
- 1989 U.S. Junior Amateur
- 1992 Northeast Amateur, Porter Cup
Professional wins (19)
PGA Tour wins (13)
Legend Major championships (1) Other PGA Tour (12) No. Date Tournament Winning Score Margin of Victory Runner(s)-up 1 Oct 12, 1997 Michelob Championship at Kingsmill -13 (67–66–71–67=271) Playoff Grant Waite, Duffy Waldorf 2 Oct 19, 1997 Walt Disney World/Oldsmobile Classic -18 (65–70–65–70=270) Playoff Dan Forsman 3 Nov 2, 1997 The Tour Championship -11 (66–69–70–68=273) 1 stroke Jim Furyk 4 Feb 22, 1998 Tucson Chrysler Classic -19 (66–62–68–73=269) 4 strokes Justin Leonard, David Toms 5 May 3, 1998 Shell Houston Open -12 (69–70–73–64=276) 1 stroke Jeff Maggert 6 Aug 30, 1998 NEC World Series of Golf -11 (69–66–66–68=269) 2 strokes Phil Mickelson 7 Oct 11, 1998 Michelob Championship at Kingsmill -16 (65–67–68–68=268) 3 strokes Phil Tataurangi 8 Jan 10, 1999 Mercedes Championships -26 (67–63–68–68=266) 9 strokes Mark O'Meara 9 Jan 24, 1999 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic -26 (70–71–64–70–59=334) 1 stroke Steve Pate 10 Mar 28, 1999 The Players Championship -3 (69–69–74–73=285) 2 strokes Scott Gump 11 Apr 4, 1999 BellSouth Classic -18 (66–69–68–67=270) 2 strokes Stewart Cink 12 Oct 1, 2000 Buick Challenge -19 (68–69–67–65=269) 2 strokes Jeff Maggert, Nick Price 13 Jul 22, 2001 The Open Championship -10 (69–73–65–67=274) 3 strokes Niclas Fasth PGA Tour playoff record (2-2)
No. Year Tournament Opponent(s) Result 1 1997 Michelob Championship at Kingsmill Grant Waite, Duffy Waldorf Won with birdie on first extra hole 2 1997 Walt Disney World/Oldsmobile Classic Dan Forsman Won with par on first extra hole 3 2000 Buick Classic Dennis Paulson Lost to par on fourth extra hole 4 2001 Buick Challenge Chris DiMarco Lost to par on first extra hole Nationwide Tour wins (2)
No. Date Tournament Winning Score Margin of Victory Runner(s)-up 1. Aug 22, 1993 NIKE Wichita Open -17 (62–70–69–70=271) 1 stroke Jeff Lee, John Morse 2. Oct 17, 1993 NIKE Tour Championship -7 (69–68–72–68=277) 1 stroke Danny Briggs Japan Golf Tour wins (1)
No. Date Tournament Winning Score Margin of Victory Runner-up 1 Nov 11, 2001 Dunlop Phoenix Tournament -15 (65–67–68–69=269) Playoff 1 Taichi Teshima 1 Defeated Teshima with birdie on first extra hole
Other wins (3)
- 1998 Fred Meyer Challenge (with Jim Furyk – unofficial event)
- 1999 Franklin Templeton Shark Shootout (with Fred Couples – unofficial event)
- 2000 WGC-World Cup (with Tiger Woods – unofficial money)
Major championships
Wins (1)
Year Championship 54 Holes Winning Score Margin Runner-up 2001 The Open Championship Tied for lead −10 (69–73–65–67=274) 3 strokes Niclas Fasth Results timeline
Tournament 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 The Masters DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP T18 CUT T2 T6 U.S. Open T56 DNP CUT DNP DNP T28 T67 T48 T7 T7 The Open Championship DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP T20 T14 T33 T11 T62 PGA Championship DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP CUT T41 T13 CUT T10 Tournament 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 The Masters T3 2 CUT CUT DNP CUT CUT DNP DNP DNP U.S. Open T8 T16 CUT CUT CUT CUT T16 DNP DNP T2 The Open Championship T11 1 T22 CUT DNP CUT T56 DNP T39 CUT PGA Championship DNP T10 T34 WD CUT CUT CUT DNP DNP DNP Tournament 2010 2011 The Masters CUT DNP U.S. Open T70 DNP The Open Championship CUT CUT PGA Championship DNP DNP DNP = Did not play
WD = Withdrew
CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" indicates a tie for a place
Green background for wins. Yellow background for top-10.Results in World Golf Championship events
Tournament 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 Accenture Match Play Championship R32 3 DNP R64 R64 CA Championship DNP DNP NT1 T46 DNP Bridgestone Invitational T27 DNP 27 T28 DNP 1Cancelled due to 9/11
DNP = Did not play
QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play
"T" = tied
NT = No Tournament
Green background for wins. Yellow background for top-10.PGA Tour career summary
Year Wins (Majors) Earnings ($) Rank 1990 0 0 N/A 1991 – – – 1992 0 0 N/A 1993 0 $27,181 201 1994 0 $44,006 195 1995 0 $881,436 11 1996 0 $977,079 10 1997 3 $1,885,308 2 1998 4 $2,591,031 1 1999 4 $3,641,906 2 2000 1 $2,462,846 7 2001 1 (1) $2,801,760 8 2002 0 $838,045 80 2003 0 $84,708 211 2004 0 $121,044 210 2005 0 $7,630 260 2006 0 $318,276 172 2007 0 $71,945 222 2008 0 $114,974 219 2009 0 $623,824 130 2010 0 $919,584 106 2011 0 $400,654 152 Career* 13 (1) $18,813,237 37 * As of the 2011 season.
U.S. national team appearances
Amateur
- Eisenhower Trophy: 1990, 1992
- Walker Cup: 1991 (winners)
Professional
- Presidents Cup: 1996 (winners), 1998, 2000 (winners)
- Ryder Cup: 1999 (winners), 2002
- World Cup: 2000 (winners), 2001
See also
- Golfers with most PGA Tour wins
- List of World Number One male golfers
- Longest PGA Tour win streaks
- Monday Night Golf
References
- ^ a b "Ms. Duval" Florida Times-Union, July 20, 2007
- ^ a b Brown, Chip: "What the Hell Happened to David Duval? And Why is He So Happy?" Men's Journal, June 16, 2010
- ^ a b "Drive for Excellence" Florida Times-Union, March 21, 1999
- ^ Woods finds answers to all course's questions
- ^ The Foursome, Quick 18, Stock up/down and more – No Quit in Duval
- ^ Spander, Art: "Duval the fallen champion stuck in a private torment" Daily Telegraph, July 18, 2002
- ^ a b Diaz, Jaime: "What now for David Duval?" Golf Digest, March 2004
External links
- David Duval at the PGA Tour official site
- David Duval at the Japan Golf Tour official site
- David Duval at the Official World Golf Ranking official site
- David Duval on About.com
- Unofficial David Duval Website
World Number ones since 1986 Seve Ballesteros | Fred Couples | Luke Donald* | David Duval | Ernie Els | Nick Faldo | Martin Kaymer | Bernhard Langer | Tom Lehman | Greg Norman | Nick Price | Vijay Singh | Lee Westwood | Tiger Woods | Ian Woosnam
The Open Championship champions 1860 Willie Park, Sr. · 1861 Tom Morris, Sr. · 1862 Tom Morris, Sr. · 1863 Willie Park, Sr. · 1864 Tom Morris, Sr. · 1865 Andrew Strath · 1866 Willie Park, Sr. · 1867 Tom Morris, Sr. · 1868 Tom Morris, Jr. · 1869 Tom Morris, Jr. · 1870 Tom Morris, Jr. · 1871 No championship · 1872 Tom Morris, Jr. · 1873 Tom Kidd · 1874 Mungo Park · 1875 Willie Park, Sr. · 1876 Bob Martin · 1877 Jamie Anderson · 1878 Jamie Anderson · 1879 Jamie Anderson · 1880 Bob Ferguson · 1881 Bob Ferguson · 1882 Bob Ferguson · 1883 Willie Fernie† · 1884 Jack Simpson · 1885 Bob Martin · 1886 David Brown · 1887 Willie Park, Jr. · 1888 Jack Burns · 1889 Willie Park, Jr.† · 1890 John Ball# · 1891 Hugh Kirkaldy · 1892 Harold Hilton# · 1893 William Auchterlonie · 1894 John Henry Taylor · 1895 John Henry Taylor · 1896 Harry Vardon · 1897 Harold Hilton# · 1898 Harry Vardon · 1899 Harry Vardon · 1900 John Henry Taylor · 1901 James Braid · 1902 Sandy Herd · 1903 Harry Vardon · 1904 Jack White · 1905 James Braid · 1906 James Braid · 1907 Arnaud Massy · 1908 James Braid · 1909 John Henry Taylor · 1910 James Braid · 1911 Harry Vardon† · 1912‡ Edward Ray · 1913 John Henry Taylor · 1914 Harry Vardon · 1915-19 No Championships due to World War I · 1920 George Duncan · 1921 Jock Hutchison† · 1922 Walter Hagen · 1923 Arthur Havers · 1924 Walter Hagen · 1925 Jim Barnes · 1926 Bobby Jones# · 1927‡ Bobby Jones# · 1928 Walter Hagen · 1929 Walter Hagen · 1930 Bobby Jones#· 1931 Tommy Armour · 1932‡ Gene Sarazen · 1933 Denny Shute† · 1934‡ Henry Cotton · 1935 Alf Perry · 1936 Alf Padgham · 1937 Henry Cotton · 1938 Reg Whitcombe · 1939 Dick Burton · 1940-45 No Championships due to World War II · 1946 Sam Snead · 1947 Fred Daly · 1948 Henry Cotton · 1949 Bobby Locke† · 1950 Bobby Locke · 1951 Max Faulkner · 1952 Bobby Locke · 1953 Ben Hogan · 1954 Peter Thomson · 1955 Peter Thomson · 1956 Peter Thomson · 1957 Bobby Locke · 1958 Peter Thomson† · 1959 Gary Player · 1960 Kel Nagle · 1961 Arnold Palmer · 1962 Arnold Palmer · 1963 Bob Charles† · 1964 Tony Lema · 1965 Peter Thomson · 1966 Jack Nicklaus · 1967 Roberto De Vicenzo · 1968 Gary Player · 1969 Tony Jacklin · 1970 Jack Nicklaus† · 1971 Lee Trevino · 1972 Lee Trevino · 1973‡ Tom Weiskopf · 1974 Gary Player · 1975 Tom Watson† · 1976 Johnny Miller · 1977 Tom Watson · 1978 Jack Nicklaus · 1979 Seve Ballesteros · 1980 Tom Watson · 1981 Bill Rogers · 1982 Tom Watson · 1983 Tom Watson · 1984 Seve Ballesteros · 1985 Sandy Lyle · 1986 Greg Norman · 1987 Nick Faldo · 1988 Seve Ballesteros · 1989 Mark Calcavecchia† · 1990 Nick Faldo · 1991 Ian Baker-Finch · 1992 Nick Faldo · 1993 Greg Norman · 1994 Nick Price · 1995 John Daly† · 1996 Tom Lehman · 1997 Justin Leonard · 1998 Mark O'Meara† · 1999 Paul Lawrie† · 2000 Tiger Woods · 2001 David Duval · 2002 Ernie Els† · 2003 Ben Curtis · 2004 Todd Hamilton† · 2005‡ Tiger Woods · 2006 Tiger Woods · 2007 Pádraig Harrington† · 2008 Pádraig Harrington · 2009 Stewart Cink† · 2010 Louis Oosthuizen · 2011 Darren Clarke
† indicates the event was won in a playoff ‡ indicates the event was won wire-to-wire in 72-holes # indicates the event was won by an amateurDavid Duval in the Ryder Cup United States Ryder Cup team – 1999 David Duval · Jim Furyk · Tom Lehman · Justin Leonard · Davis Love III · Jeff Maggert · Phil Mickelson · Mark O'Meara · Steve Pate · Payne Stewart · Hal Sutton · Tiger Woods
Ben Crenshaw (non-playing captain)
Won: 14.5 – 13.5United States Ryder Cup team – 2002 Paul Azinger · Mark Calcavecchia · Stewart Cink · David Duval · Jim Furyk · Scott Hoch · Davis Love III · Phil Mickelson · Hal Sutton · David Toms · Scott Verplank · Tiger Woods
Curtis Strange (non-playing captain)
Lost: 12.5 – 15.5David Duval in the Presidents Cup United States Presidents Cup team – 1996 Mark Brooks • Fred Couples • David Duval • Scott Hoch • Tom Lehman • Justin Leonard • Davis Love III • Mark O'Meara • Phil Mickelson • Corey Pavin • Kenny Perry • Steve Stricker
Arnold Palmer (non-playing captain)
Won: 16.5 – 15.5United States Presidents Cup team – 1998 Mark Calcavecchia • Fred Couples • David Duval • Jim Furyk • Scott Hoch • John Huston • Lee Janzen • Justin Leonard • Davis Love III • Phil Mickelson • Mark O'Meara • Tiger Woods
Jack Nicklaus (non-playing captain)
Lost: 11.5 – 20.5United States Presidents Cup team – 2000 Paul Azinger • Notah Begay III • Stewart Cink • David Duval • Jim Furyk • Tom Lehman • Davis Love III • Phil Mickelson • Loren Roberts • Hal Sutton • Kirk Triplett • Tiger Woods
Ken Venturi (non-playing captain)
Won: 21.5 – 10.5Players Championship champions 1974 Jack Nicklaus · 1975 Al Geiberger · 1976 Jack Nicklaus · 1977 Mark Hayes · 1978 Jack Nicklaus · 1979 Lanny Wadkins · 1980 Lee Trevino · 1981 Raymond Floyd† · 1982 Jerry Pate · 1983 Hal Sutton · 1984 Fred Couples · 1985 Calvin Peete · 1986 John Mahaffey · 1987 Sandy Lyle† · 1988 Mark McCumber · 1989 Tom Kite · 1990 Jodie Mudd · 1991 Steve Elkington · 1992 Davis Love III · 1993 Nick Price · 1994 Greg Norman · 1995 Lee Janzen · 1996 Fred Couples · 1997 Steve Elkington · 1998 Justin Leonard · 1999 David Duval · 2000 Hal Sutton · 2001 Tiger Woods · 2002 Craig Perks · 2003 Davis Love III · 2004 Adam Scott · 2005 Fred Funk · 2006 Stephen Ames · 2007 Phil Mickelson · 2008 Sergio García† · 2009 Henrik Stenson · 2010 Tim Clark · 2011 K.J. Choi†
† indicates the event was won in a playoffCategories:- American golfers
- Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's golfers
- PGA Tour golfers
- Winners of men's major golf championships
- American people of French descent
- People from Jacksonville, Florida
- People from Arapahoe County, Colorado
- 1971 births
- Living people
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