Southern Indiana golf champion Frank “Fuzzy” Zoeller Jr. has died. He was 74.Zoeller’s agent announced his passing on Thursday.Zoeller was born and raised in New Albany and started his golf journey at New Albany High School. Zoeller sported 10 PGA Tour wins, including two Champions Tour wins. He won the 2002 Senior PGA Championship and the 2004 MasterCard Championship. He was the only first-time starter to ever win a Master Tournament in 1979. He also won the 1984 U.S. Open, which is considered to be the Hardest tournament to win in the world.Zoeller did it that way with humor, raising a white towel in the final round of the U.S. Open, signaling a surrender to a playoff with Greg Norman.Norman returned the favor, surrendering when Zoeller was the best the next day.His actions and words were not always taken well, including by Tiger Woods. In 2007, Zoeller issued a public apology after he called Woods “that little boy” and urged him not to request fried chicken or collard greens for the Champions dinner. Later, Zoeller said, “It’s not a perfect world we live in, I’m gonna make mistakes, made more than the one that knocked my legs out from under me, water under the dam, gotta get back up, go fire at them.”One way Zoeller did that was the Wolf Challenge, a celebrity event with high-profile guests like actor and comedian Bill Murray and Kevin Costner.The Wolf Challenge benefited charities for kids. Zoeller loved giving back to this community.The crowning moment for Zoeller was his U.S. Open win, which put him in an elite category in the game.

NEW ALBANY, Ind. —

Southern Indiana golf champion Frank “Fuzzy” Zoeller Jr. has died. He was 74.

Zoeller’s agent announced his passing on Thursday.

Zoeller was born and raised in New Albany and started his golf journey at New Albany High School.

Zoeller sported 10 PGA Tour wins, including two Champions Tour wins. He won the 2002 Senior PGA Championship and the 2004 MasterCard Championship.

He was the only first-time starter to ever win a Master Tournament in 1979.

He also won the 1984 U.S. Open, which is considered to be the Hardest tournament to win in the world.

Zoeller did it that way with humor, raising a white towel in the final round of the U.S. Open, signaling a surrender to a playoff with Greg Norman.

Norman returned the favor, surrendering when Zoeller was the best the next day.

His actions and words were not always taken well, including by Tiger Woods. In 2007, Zoeller issued a public apology after he called Woods “that little boy” and urged him not to request fried chicken or collard greens for the Champions dinner.

Later, Zoeller said, “It’s not a perfect world we live in, I’m gonna make mistakes, made more than the one that knocked my legs out from under me, water under the dam, gotta get back up, go fire at them.”

One way Zoeller did that was the Wolf Challenge, a celebrity event with high-profile guests like actor and comedian Bill Murray and Kevin Costner.

The Wolf Challenge benefited charities for kids. Zoeller loved giving back to this community.

The crowning moment for Zoeller was his U.S. Open win, which put him in an elite category in the game.