- Nick Price
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For other people named Nick Price, see Nick Price (disambiguation).
Nick Price Personal information Full name Nicholas Raymond Leige Price Born 28 January 1957
Durban, Natal Province, Union of South AfricaHeight 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) Weight 190 lb (86 kg; 14 st) Nationality Zimbabwe Residence Jupiter, Florida, U.S. Career Turned professional 1977 Current tour(s) Champions Tour Professional wins 50 Number of wins by tour PGA Tour 18 European Tour 5 Japan Golf Tour 1 Sunshine Tour 10 Champions Tour 4 Other 15 Best results in Major Championships
(Wins: 3)Masters Tournament 5th: 1986 U.S. Open 4th/T4: 1992, 1998 The Open Championship Won: 1994 PGA Championship Won: 1992, 1994 Achievements and awards World Golf Hall of Fame 2003 (member page) Sunshine Tour
Order of Merit winner1982/83 PGA Player of the Year 1993, 1994 PGA Tour
Player of the Year1993, 1994 PGA Tour
leading money winner1993, 1994 Vardon Trophy 1993, 1997 Byron Nelson Award 1997 Payne Stewart Award 2002 Bob Jones Award 2005 Old Tom Morris Award 2011 Nicholas Raymond Leige Price (born 28 January 1957) is a South African-Zimbabwean Professional golfer and an inductee in the World Golf Hall of Fame. In the mid-1990s, Price reached number one in the Official World Golf Rankings.
Contents
Background
Price is a citizen of Zimbabwe, but was born in Durban, Union of South Africa. His parents were originally English and his early life was spent in Zimbabwe (then called Rhodesia). He attended Prince Edward School in Salisbury, where he captained the golf team. After his schooling he spent some time in the army during that country's civil war. He began his professional golf career in 1977 on the Southern Africa Tour, before moving to the European Tour and finally the PGA Tour in 1983. Price now lives in Hobe Sound, Florida. Price's nephew Ray Price is a national cricketer for Zimbabwe.[1]
Early professional years
Price won his first tournament outside of South Africa at the 1980 Swiss Open. He was still relatively unknown when he finished tied for second with Peter Oosterhuis one shot behind Tom Watson at the 1982 Open Championship after having a two-shot lead with six holes to go.[2] The next year, was when Price won his first PGA Tour event. A wire to wire four-shot triumph over Jack Nicklaus at the World Series of Golf.[3]
After that win, it would be another eight years almost before Price won again on the PGA Tour. In the interim, Price shot a Augusta National Golf Club course record 63 at the 1986 Masters Tournament and finished second at the 1988 Open Championship to Seve Ballesteros.
Career peak
By the mid-nineties, Price was regarded as the best player in the world, and in 1994 he won two majors back-to-back, The Open and the PGA Championship, adding to his first major, the 1992 PGA Championship. He topped the PGA Tour money list in 1993 and 1994, setting a new earnings record each time, and spent 43 weeks at number one in the Official World Golf Rankings. Price was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2003.
Price won the Sunshine Tour Order of Merit for the 1982/83 season and would have won again in 1996/97 if he had met the minimum number of tournaments. In 1993 and 1997, Price was awarded the Vardon Trophy; which is given annually by the PGA of America to the player with the lowest adjusted scoring average with a minimum of 60 rounds. In 2005, he was voted the Bob Jones Award, the highest honor given by the USGA in recognition of distinguished sportsmanship in golf. Price received the 2011 Old Tom Morris Award, the highest honor given by the GCSAA to an individual who "through a continuing lifetime commitment to the game of golf has helped to mold the welfare of the game in a manner and style exemplified by Old Tom Morris."
Like fellow African Gary Player, Price has expressed his distaste for the Ryder Cup, saying of the event, "If you like root canals and hemorrhoids, you'd love it there."[4]
Although Price continues to play professionally, he has expanded into golf design with his own company operating out of Florida, and he has his own line of signature golf apparel. He is widely regarded by fans, media and his fellow players as one of the most personable golfers on the PGA Tour. He won his first Champions Tour event at the 2009 Outback Steakhouse Pro-Am where he had three double bogeys in his final round, but he hung on to win by one stroke over Larry Nelson.
Price would write three words in his diary before each season: "Persistence, persistence, persistence".
Professional wins (50)
PGA Tour wins (18)
Legend Major championships (3) Regular PGA Tour (15) No. Date Tournament Winning Score Margin of Victory Runner(s)-up 1 28 Aug 1983 World Series of Golf -10 (66–68–69–67=270) 4 strokes Jack Nicklaus 2 5 May 1991 GTE Byron Nelson Classic -18 (68–64–70–68=270) 1 stroke Craig Stadler 3 8 Sep 1991 Canadian Open -15 (69–68–65–69=273) 2 strokes Greg Norman 4 16 Aug 1992 PGA Championship -6 (70–70–68–70=278) 3 strokes John Cook, Nick Faldo,
Jim Gallagher, Jr., Gene Sauers5 25 Oct 1992 H.E.B. Texas Open -25 (67–62–66–68=263) Playoff Steve Elkington 6 28 Mar 1993 The Players Championship -18 (64–68–71–67=270) 5 strokes Bernhard Langer 7 27 Jun 1993 Canon Greater Hartford Open -17 (65–70–69–65=271) 1 stroke Roger Maltbie, Dan Forsman 8 4 Jul 1993 Sprint Western Open -19 (66–71–67–67=269) 5 strokes Greg Norman 9 1 Aug 1993 Federal Express St. Jude Classic -22 (69–65–66–66=266) 3 strokes Jeff Maggert, Rick Fehr 10 13 Mar 1994 Honda Classic -12 (70–67–73–66=276) 1 stroke Craig Parry 11 29 May 1994 Southwestern Bell Colonial -14 (65–70–67–64=266) Playoff Scott Simpson 12 1 Jul 1994 Motorola Western Open -11 (67–67–72–71=277) 1 stroke Greg Kraft 13 17 Jul 1994 The Open Championship -16 (69–66–67–66=268) 1 stroke Jesper Parnevik 14 14 Aug 1994 PGA Championship -19 (67–65–70–67=269) 6 strokes Corey Pavin 15 11 Sep 1994 Bell Canadian Open -13 (67–72–68–68=275) 1 stroke Mark Calcavecchia 16 20 Apr 1997 MCI Classic -19 (65–69–69–66=269) 6 strokes Jesper Parnevik 17 2 Aug 1998 FedEx St. Jude Classic -20 (65–67–70–66=268) Playoff Jeff Sluman 18 19 May 2002 MasterCard Colonial -13 (69–65–66–67=267) 5 strokes Kenny Perry, David Toms PGA Tour playoff record (3-3)
No. Year Tournament Opponent(s) Result 1 1986 Western Open Fred Couples, David Frost, Tom Kite Kite won with birdie on first extra hole 2 1992 H.E.B. Texas Open Steve Elkington Won with par on second extra hole 3 1994 Southwestern Bell Colonial Scott Simpson Won with birdie on first extra hole 4 1995 NEC World Series of Golf Billy Mayfair, Greg Norman Norman won with birdie on first extra hole 5 1998 FedEx St. Jude Classic Jeff Sluman Won with birdie on second extra hole 6 2000 Advil Western Open Robert Allenby Lost to par on first extra hole European Tour wins (5)
- 1980 Swiss Open
- 1985 Lancome Trophy
- 1994 The Open Championship
- 1997 Dimension Data Pro-Am, Alfred Dunhill South African PGA Championship (both co-sanctioned with the Sunshine Tour)
Major championships are shown in bold.
Japan Golf Tour wins (1)
- 1999 Suntory Open
Sunshine Tour wins (10)
- 1979 Asseng TV Challenge Series
- 1981 SAB South African Masters
- 1982 Sigma Vaals Reef Open
- 1985 ICL International
- 1993 ICL International
- 1994 ICL International
- 1995 Alfred Dunhill Challenge
- 1997 Dimension Data Pro-Am, Alfred Dunhill South African PGA Championship (both co-sanctioned with the European Tour)
- 1998 Dimension Data Pro-Am
Other wins (15)
- 1981 San Remo Masters (Italy – not a European Tour event)
- 1989 West End South Australian Open
- 1992 Air New Zealand/Shell Open, PGA Grand Slam of Golf
- 1993 Nedbank Golf Challenge
- 1995 Hassan II Golf Trophy (Morocco), Zimbabwe Open
- 1997 Zimbabwe Open, Nedbank Golf Challenge, Gillette Tour Challenge Championship (with Jim Colbert and Kelly Robbins)
- 1998 Zimbabwe Open, Nedbank Golf Challenge
- 2001 CVS Charity Classic (with Mark Calcavecchia)
- 2006 CVS/pharmacy Charity Classic (with Tim Clark; unofficial event)
- 2009 CVS Caremark Charity Classic (with David Toms; unofficial event)
Champions Tour wins (4)
No. Date Tournament Winning Score Margin of Victory Runner(s)-up 1 19 Apr 2009 Outback Steakhouse Pro-Am -9 (66–67–71=204) 2 strokes Larry Nelson 2 25 Apr 2010 Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf
(with Mark O'Meara)-28 (62–64–62=188) Playoff John Cook & Joey Sindelar 3 6 Jun 2010 Principal Charity Classic -14 (67–65–67=199) 4 strokes Tommy Armour III 4 13 Mar 2011 Toshiba Classic -17 (60–68–68=196) 1 stroke Mark Wiebe Major championships
Wins (3)
Year Championship 54 Holes Winning Score Margin Runner(s)-up 1992 PGA Championship 2 shot deficit −6 (70–70–68–70=278) 3 strokes John Cook, Nick Faldo,
Jim Gallagher, Jr., Gene Sauers1994 The Open Championship 1 shot deficit −12 (69–66–67–66=268) 1 stroke Jesper Parnevik 1994 PGA Championship (2) 3 shot lead −11 (67–65–70–67=269) 6 strokes Corey Pavin Results timeline
Tournament 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 Masters Tournament DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP U.S. Open DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP The Open Championship CUT DNP DNP T39 DNP PGA Championship DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP Tournament 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 Masters Tournament DNP DNP DNP DNP CUT DNP 5 T22 T14 CUT U.S. Open DNP DNP DNP T48 DNP CUT DNP T17 T40 CUT The Open Championship T27 T23 T2 CUT T44 CUT DNP T8 2 CUT PGA Championship DNP DNP DNP T67 T54 5 CUT T10 T17 T46 Tournament 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Masters Tournament DNP T49 T6 CUT T35 CUT T18 T24 CUT T6 U.S. Open DNP T19 T4 T11 CUT T13 DNP T19 4 T23 The Open Championship T25 T44 T51 T6 1 T40 T45 CUT T29 T37 PGA Championship T63 DNP 1 T31 1 T39 T8 T13 T4 5 Tournament 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Masters Tournament T11 CUT T20 T23 T6 CUT DNP U.S. Open T27 CUT T8 T5 T24 T9 CUT The Open Championship CUT T27 T14 T28 T30 CUT DNP PGA Championship CUT T21 CUT DNP DNP DNP CUT DNP = did not play
CUT = missed the half way cut
"T" indicates a tie for a place.
Green background for wins. Yellow background for top-10.Team appearances
Amateur
- Eisenhower Trophy (representing Zimbabwe): 1976
Professional
- Alfred Dunhill Cup (representing Zimbabwe): 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000
- World Cup of Golf: 1978 (representing South Africa), 1993 (representing Zimbabwe)
- Presidents Cup (International Team): 1994, 1996, 1998 (winners), 2000, 2003 (tie)
See also
- Golfers with most PGA Tour wins
- List of World Number One male golfers
- Golfers with most Sunshine Tour wins
- List of men's major championships winning golfers
References
- ^ Williams, Jeff, "Gentleman Nick", Cigar Aficionado, June 2011, pp. 80–88.
- ^ "Watson Wins Open by One Shot". http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=8egTAAAAIBAJ&sjid=2gUEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6911,1444942&dq=nick+price+peter+oosterhuis&hl=en.
- ^ "Price is right in golf World Series". http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=kE4xAAAAIBAJ&sjid=h0UDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3563,4508822&dq=nick+price+world+series+of+golf&hl=en.
- ^ The Gigantic Book of Golf Quotations, ed. Jim Apfelbaum. 2007.
External links
- Official website
- Nick Price at the European Tour official site
- Nick Price at the Sunshine Tour official site
- Nick Price at the PGA Tour official site
- Nick Price at the Japan Golf Tour official site
- Nick Price Profile and stats from About.com
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
Nick Price in the major championships 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 amateurMale golfers who have won 2 or more major championships in one year 1922 Gene Sarazen (2) · 1924 Walter Hagen (2) · 1926 Bobby Jones† (2) · 1927 Bobby Jones† (2) · 1930 Bobby Jones †‡# (4) · 1932 Gene Sarazen (2) · 1941 Craig Wood (2) · 1948 Ben Hogan (2) · 1949 Sam Snead (2) · 1951 Ben Hogan (2) · 1953 Ben Hogan ‡ (3) · 1960 Arnold Palmer (2) · 1962 Arnold Palmer (2) · 1963 Jack Nicklaus (2) · 1966 Jack Nicklaus ‡ (2) · 1971 Lee Trevino (2) · 1972 Jack Nicklaus (2) · 1974 Gary Player (2) · 1975 Jack Nicklaus (2) · 1977 Tom Watson (2) · 1980 Jack Nicklaus (2) · 1982 Tom Watson (2) · 1990 Nick Faldo (2) · 1994 Nick Price (2) · 1998 Mark O'Meara (2) · 2000 Tiger Woods ‡ (3) · 2002 Tiger Woods (2) · 2005 Tiger Woods ‡ (2) · 2006 Tiger Woods ‡ (2) · 2008 Pádraig Harrington (2)† indicates amateur golfer ‡ indicates golfer won a career grand slam in the year winning two majors
# indicates won grand slam in calendar yearPGA and PGA Tour Players of the Year PGA Players of the Year
1948 Ben Hogan‡ · 1949 Sam Snead‡ · 1950 Ben Hogan† · 1951 Ben Hogan‡ · 1952 Julius Boros · 1953 Ben Hogan#∞ · 1954 Ed Furgol† · 1955 Doug Ford† · 1956 Jack Burke, Jr.‡ · 1957 Dick Mayer† · 1958 Dow Finsterwald† · 1959 Art Wall, Jr.† · 1960 Arnold Palmer‡ · 1961 Jerry Barber† · 1962 Arnold Palmer‡ · 1963 Julius Boros† · 1964 Ken Venturi† · 1965 Dave Marr †· 1966 Billy Casper† · 1967 Jack Nicklaus† · 1968 No award · 1969 Orville Moody† · 1970 Billy Casper† · 1971 Lee Trevino ‡· 1972 Jack Nicklaus‡∞∞ · 1973 Jack Nicklaus† · 1974 Johnny Miller† · 1975 Jack Nicklaus‡ · 1976 Jack Nicklaus · 1977 Tom Watson‡ · 1978 Tom Watson · 1979 Tom Watson · 1980 Tom Watson† · 1981 Bill Rogers† · 1982 Tom Watson‡ · 1983 Hal Sutton† · 1984 Tom Watson · 1985 Lanny Wadkins · 1986 Bob Tway† · 1987 Paul Azinger · 1988 Curtis Strange† · 1989 Tom Kite · 1990 Nick Faldo‡ · 1991 Corey Pavin · 1992 Fred Couples† · 1993 Nick Price · 1994 Nick Price‡ · 1995 Greg Norman · 1996 Tom Lehman† · 1997 Tiger Woods† · 1998 Mark O'Meara‡ · 1999 Tiger Woods† · 2000 Tiger Woods#∞ · 2001 Tiger Woods† · 2002 Tiger Woods‡ · 2003 Tiger Woods · 2004 Vijay Singh† · 2005 Tiger Woods‡∞∞ · 2006 Tiger Woods‡ · 2007 Tiger Woods† · 2008 Pádraig Harrington‡ · 2009 Tiger Woods · 2010 Jim FurykPGA Tour Players of the Year
1990 Wayne Levi · 1991 Fred Couples · 1992 Fred Couples† · 1993 Nick Price · 1994 Nick Price‡ · 1995 Greg Norman · 1996 Tom Lehman† · 1997 Tiger Woods† · 1998 Mark O'Meara‡ · 1999 Tiger Woods† · 2000 Tiger Woods#∞ · 2001 Tiger Woods† · 2002 Tiger Woods‡ · 2003 Tiger Woods · 2004 Vijay Singh† · 2005 Tiger Woods‡∞∞ · 2006 Tiger Woods‡ · 2007 Tiger Woods† · 2008 Pádraig Harrington‡ · 2009 Tiger Woods · 2010 Jim Furyk† One major ‡ Two majors # Three majors ∞ One career grand slam ∞∞ Two career grand slams
All of these are in the year of the awardNick Price in the Presidents Cup International Presidents Cup team – 1994 Fulton Allem • Robert Allenby • Steve Elkington • David Frost • Bradley Hughes • Mark McNulty • Frank Nobilo • Craig Parry • Nick Price • Peter Senior • Vijay Singh • Tsukasa Watanabe
David Graham (non-playing captain)Lost: 12 – 20International Presidents Cup team – 1996 Robert Allenby • Steve Elkington • Ernie Els • David Frost • Mark McNulty • Frank Nobilo • Greg Norman • Masashi Ozaki • Craig Parry • Nick Price • Peter Senior • Vijay Singh
Peter Thomson (non-playing captain)Lost: 15.5 – 16.5International Presidents Cup team – 1998 Stuart Appleby • Steve Elkington • Ernie Els • Carlos Franco • Shigeki Maruyama • Frank Nobilo • Greg Norman • Naomichi Ozaki • Craig Parry • Nick Price • Vijay Singh • Greg Turner
Peter Thomson (non-playing captain)Won: 20.5 – 11.5International Presidents Cup team – 2000 Robert Allenby • Stuart Appleby • Michael Campbell • Steve Elkington • Ernie Els • Carlos Franco • Retief Goosen • Shigeki Maruyama • Greg Norman • Nick Price • Vijay Singh • Mike Weir
Peter Thomson (non-playing captain)Lost: 10.5 – 21.5International Presidents Cup team – 2003 Robert Allenby • Stuart Appleby • Choi Kyung-Ju • Tim Clark • Ernie Els • Retief Goosen • Stephen Leaney • Peter Lonard • Adam Scott • Nick Price • Vijay Singh • Mike Weir
Gary Player (non-playing captain)Tied: 17 – 17Players 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:- Zimbabwean golfers
- Sunshine Tour golfers
- European Tour golfers
- PGA Tour golfers
- Champions Tour golfers
- Winners of men's major golf championships
- World Golf Hall of Fame inductees
- White Zimbabwean sportspeople
- Anglo-African people
- South African emigrants to Rhodesia
- Zimbabwean expatriates in the United States
- Zimbabwean people of English descent
- Alumni of Prince Edward School
- People from Durban
- 1957 births
- Living people
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