peoplepill id: arjun-atwal
AA
India
1 views today
1 views this week
Arjun Atwal
Profewsional golfer

Arjun Atwal

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Profewsional golfer
From
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Asansol, Bardhaman district, West Bengal, India
Age
51 years
Arjun Atwal
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Arjun Singh Atwal (born 20 March 1973) is an Indian professional golfer who has played on the Asian Tour and the European Tour and is the first player born in India to become a member of, and later win a tournament on the U.S.-based PGA Tour.

Early life

Born in a Sikh family to Harminder Singh Atwal (a well known industrialist) of Asansol and Kolkata, West Bengal, India, Atwal took up golf at the age of fourteen, playing at the Royal Calcutta Golf Club and Tollygunge Club. He also spent two years at school in the United States, attending W. Tresper Clarke High School, in Westbury, New York. His elder brother Govind Singh Atwal is also a keen golfer.

Career

After turning professional in 1995 he became one of the leading players on the Asian Tour, topping the order of merit in 2003 and becoming the first man to win a million U.S. dollars on the tour by winning the Hero Honda Masters on home soil in the same year. Atwal was the second Indian golfer to earn membership of the European Tour after Jeev Milkha Singh and the first to win on a European Tour event when he notched up a five stroke victory in the 2002 Caltex Singapore Masters, which was co-sanctioned by the Asian and European Tours. A second European Tour win followed at the Carlsberg Malaysian Open in 2003. Late in the same year Atwal finished seventh at the PGA Tour's qualifying school in the U.S., earning a PGA Tour card for 2004, making him the first native East Indian golfer to do so. (The most famous golfer of Indian origin, longtime PGA Tour mainstay and multiple major winner Vijay Singh, is a native of Fiji.) In his 2004 rookie season on the PGA Tour, he finished 142nd on the money list.

In 2005, Atwal came close to winning on the PGA Tour numerous times, most notably at the BellSouth Classic in April. After posting a 64 (the low round for any golfer in the tournament) in the final round of the rain-shortened event, he wound up in a five-man sudden death playoff along with Rich Beem, José María Olazábal, Brandt Jobe and Phil Mickelson. On the first hole of the playoff, the par-5 18th, Atwal's second shot went into the water, yet he almost holed his fourth shot. If he had done so, he would have made birdie and won (Mickelson, Beem and Olazabal made pars, while Jobe bogeyed.) After two-putting the green, Atwal made bogey, and he and Jobe were eliminated. Mickelson went on to win the tournament. Atwal finished 82nd on the money list in 2005 to secure his spot on Tour for 2006.

Atwal was involved in a crash possibly associated with street racing on SR 535, in Windermere, Florida, (near Kissimmee) on 10 March 2007, according to the Florida Highway Patrol. Atwal was not injured, and after a year of investigation, the case was closed with no charges filed. A second driver, John Noah Park, 48, was killed in the incident.

After the 2010 RBC Canadian Open, Atwal lost his PGA Tour card after his medical exemption, received due to a shoulder injury, ran out and he had failed to earn enough money. He later regained his playing privileges on the PGA Tour through 2012 and obtained an invitation into the 2011 Masters Tournament by Monday qualifying for and later recording his maiden victory on the PGA Tour at the Wyndham Championship, the final tournament of the regular season. He became the first Indian-born player to ever win on the PGA Tour, and was the first Monday qualifier to win a PGA Tour event since Fred Wadsworth won the 1986 Southern Open. Because he had lost his tour card, he received no FedEx Cup points for his victory and had not earned enough points previously to make the playoffs. He has been a neighbour and practice partner of Tiger Woods for five years at home in Florida.

After failing to qualify for the FedEx Cup in 2010, Atwal entered the 2011 playoff series 123rd. Atwal had only two top-10 finishes in the two years after his win and lost his Tour card after the 2012 season. In 2014, Atwal had his first win in four years at the Dubai Open on the Asian Tour. The win earned Atwal a two-year exemption on the Asian Tour.

Professional wins (12)

PGA Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner-up
122 Aug 2010Wyndham Championship−20 (61-67-65-67=260)1 strokeUnited States David Toms

PGA Tour playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentsResult
12005BellSouth ClassicUnited States Rich Beem, United States Brandt Jobe,
United States Phil Mickelson, Spain José María Olazábal
Mickelson won with birdie on fourth extra hole
Olazábal eliminated with par on third hole
Atwal and Jobe eliminated with par on first hole

European Tour wins (3)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
124 Feb 2002Caltex Singapore Masters−14 (70-69-67-68=274)5 strokesAustralia Richard Green
223 Feb 2003Carlsberg Malaysian Open−24 (62-65-67-66=260)4 strokesSouth Africa Retief Goosen, Australia Brad Kennedy
39 Mar 2008Maybank Malaysian Open−18 (70-68-68-64=270)PlayoffSweden Peter Hedblom

(all co-sanctioned by Asian Tour)

European Tour playoff record (1–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12008Maybank Malaysian OpenSweden Peter HedblomWon with par on second extra hole

Asian Tour wins (8)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
114 Mar 1999Wills Indian Open−12 (72-68-66-70=276)4 strokesIndia Shiv Chowrasia, South Korea Kang Wook-soon,
Thailand Prayad Marksaeng
25 Nov 2000Hero Honda Masters−18 (68-68-68-66=270)2 strokesEngland Simon Dyson
312 Nov 2000Star Alliance Open−12 (65-63-68-72=268)2 strokesTaiwan Yeh Wei-tze
424 Feb 2002Caltex Singapore Masters
(co-sanctioned by the European Tour)
−14 (70-69-67-68=274)5 strokesAustralia Richard Green
523 Feb 2003Carlsberg Malaysian Open
(co-sanctioned with the European Tour)
−24 (62-65-67-66=260)4 strokesSouth Africa Retief Goosen, Australia Brad Kennedy
611 Nov 2003Hero Honda Masters−7 (69-71-70-71=281)1 strokeMexico Pablo del Olmo, India Jyoti Randhawa,
United States Gary Rusnak
79 Mar 2008Maybank Malaysian Open
(co-sanctioned with the European Tour)
−18 (70-68-68-64=270)PlayoffSweden Peter Hedblom
821 Dec 2014Dubai Open−16 (73-65-68-66=272)1 strokeSouth Korea Wang Jeung-hun

Nationwide Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning ScoreMargin of VictoryRunner-up
119 Oct 2008Chattanooga Classic−24 (66-60-66-72=264)PlayoffUnited States Webb Simpson

Other wins (2)

  • 1995 DCM Open
  • 1997 Classic Southern India Open

Results in major championships

Tournament20042005200620072008200920102011
Masters TournamentDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPCUT
U.S. OpenDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPCUTDNP
The Open ChampionshipCUTDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNP
PGA ChampionshipDNPCUTDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPCUT

DNP = Did not play
CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" = tied
Yellow background for top-10.

Team appearances

  • World Cup (representing India): 2005
  • Royal Trophy (representing Asia): 2006
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Arjun Atwal is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Arjun Atwal
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes