Fuzzy Zoeller

Fuzzy Zoeller in 1986 at Augusta National

Fuzzy Zoeller in 1986 at Augusta National

(Image credit: Getty Images)

He put this victory down to his Augusta National caddie Jerry Beard: “I never had one thought all week. I figured my local caddy knew this course a whole lot better than me, so I just put my hand out and played whatever club he put in it. I’d say how hard do I hit it, he’d tell me and I’d swing.”

Bobby Jones.

He won the US Amateur twice and also the British Amateur. He played in nine Walker Cups, serving as playing captain in two of those appearances. He was the Low Amateur at the 1980 Open, the 1984 US Open, and the 1980, 1981 and 1988 Masters.

He had intended a career as a pro golfer after university, but put his hand through a glass door pane and his hand required 70 stitches. He embarked on a successful career in insurance instead. “I always thought things happen for a reason. The hand injury was the best thing to happen to me,” he said later in life.

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He turned pro aged 50 to play on the Senior PGA Tour, on which he won eight tournaments.

Silver Medal at The Open Championships of 1978 and 1979 for Low Amateur and, in 1978, became the first British amateur to make the cut at the Masters.

He admitted he did think of turning pro in 1979: “I was back-to-back Amateur Champion, low amateur in The Open and made the cut at the Masters.

“I had just qualified as a solicitor, though, and I didn’t want to give that up so keeping my amateur status was the right thing to do for me.” He also worked as a golf administrator, writer and course designer.

He played five Walker Cups for GB & Ireland, and then captained the victorious sides of 1999 and 2001 which was the first time GB&I had won back-to-back Walker Cups.

United States Golf Association and the first woman to hold this position. A member of the World Golf Hall of Fame, she also won the USGA’s highest accolade, the Bob Jones Award.

She was an entrepreneur, who owned clothing businesses and food outlets. She was also a fine amateur golfer. She twice represented the United States in the Curtis Cup, in the wins of 1960 and 1962, and captained the teams of 1986 and 1988.

In 1964 she shot 67 in the third round of the US Women’s Open, a record which stood for 14 years until Sally Little carded a 65 in her final round in 1978.

Sam Snead, Jesse Carlyle Snead won eight times on the PGA Tour and won a Senior Major. Golf however had not been his first sporting love: he had been a professional baseball player before he became a pro golfer.

He was twice a runner-up in a Major, coming second in the Masters of 1973 and tied second in the 1978 US Open. But he did win a Senior Major when, in 1995 he overcame Jack Nicklaus in a playoff at the Ford Senior Players Championship.

He played in the Ryder Cups of 1971, 1973 and 1975.

Ryder Cup through his 7th place position on the relevant European Tour money list, when the top 12 qualified.

Born in 1940, he turned pro aged 17, but worked mainly as a club pro for the first 20 years. But in late 1970s he expanded his tournament schedule and won five times on the Safari Tour and twice on the European Tour.

It could have been four European wins but he lost two play-offs, one on the fourth extra hole and the other on the sixth extra hole. He also won four times on the European Senior Tour.