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Ernie Els
Professional golfer

Ernie Els

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Professional golfer
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Johannesburg
Age
54 years
Ernie Els
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Theodore Ernest "Ernie" Els (/ˈɛls/; born 17 October 1969) is a South African professional golfer. A former World No. 1, he is known as "The Big Easy" due to his imposing physical stature (he stands 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)) along with his fluid golf swing. Among his 71 career victories are four major championships: the U.S. Open in 1994 at Oakmont and in 1997 at Congressional, and The Open Championship in 2002 at Muirfield and in 2012 at Royal Lytham & St Annes. He is one of six golfers to twice win both the U.S. Open and The Open Championship.
Other highlights in Els' career include topping the 2003 and 2004 European Tour Order of Merit (money list), and winning the World Match Play Championship a record seven times. He was the leading career money winner on the European Tour until overtaken by Lee Westwood in 2011, and was the first member of the tour to earn over 25 million Euros from European Tour events. He has held the number one spot in the Official World Golf Ranking and until 2013 held the record for weeks ranked in the top ten with 788. Els rose to 15th in the world rankings after winning the 2012 Open Championship. He was elected to the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2010, on his first time on the ballot, and was inducted in May 2011.
When not playing, Els has a golf course design business, a charitable foundation which supports golf among underprivileged youngsters in South Africa, and a highly regarded wine-making business. He has written a popular golf instructional column in Golf Digest magazine for several years.

Background and family

Growing up just east of Johannesburg in Kempton Park, South Africa, he played rugby union, cricket, tennis, and, starting at age 8, golf. He was a skilled junior tennis player and won the Eastern Transvaal Junior Championships at age 13. Els first learned the game of golf from his father Neels, a trucking executive, at the Kempton Park Country Club. He was soon playing better than his father (and his older brother, Dirk), and by the age of 14 he was a scratch handicap. It was around this time that he decided to focus exclusively on golf.

Els first achieved prominence in 1984, when he won the Junior World Golf Championship in the Boys 13–14 category. Phil Mickelson was second to Els that year. Els won the South African Amateur Championship a few months after his 17th birthday, becoming the youngest-ever winner of that event, breaking the record which had been held by Gary Player.

Els married his wife Liezl in 1998 in Cape Town and they have two children, Samantha and Ben. In 2008 after Els started to display an "Autism Speaks" logo on his golf bag it was announced that their then five-year-old son was autistic. Their main residence is at the Wentworth Estate near Wentworth Golf Club in the south of England. However, they also split time between South Africa and their family home in Jupiter, Florida, in order to get better treatment for Ben's autism.

Professional career

1989–1996: Early years and first major win

In 1989, Els won the South African Amateur Stroke Play Championship and turned professional the same year. Els won his first professional tournament in 1991 on the Southern Africa Tour (today the Sunshine Tour). He won the Sunshine Tour Order of Merit in the 1991/92 and 1994/95 seasons. In 1993, Els won his first tournament outside of South Africa at the Dunlop Phoenix in Japan. In 1994 Els won his first major championship at the U.S. Open. Els was tied with Colin Montgomerie and Loren Roberts after 72 holes and they went to an 18-hole playoff the next day. In spite of starting the playoff bogey-triple bogey, Els was able to match Roberts' score of 74. Els birdied the second hole of sudden death to win his first U.S. Open title.

Els shares a laugh during the practice round for the 2004 Buick Classic

Els brought his game all around the world in his young career winning the Dubai Desert Classic on the European Tour, and the Toyota World Match Play Championship defeating once again Colin Montgomerie 4 & 2. The following year, Els defended his World Match Play Championship, defeating Steve Elkington 3 & 1. Els won the GTE Byron Nelson Classic in the United States then headed back home to South Africa and won twice more. In 1996, Els won his third straight World Match Play Championship at Wentworth, defeating Vijay Singh in the final 3 & 2. No player in history had ever managed to win three successive titles in the one-on-one tournament. Els finished the year with a win at his home tournament at the South African Open.

1997–2002: Career years and multi-major championships

1997 was a career year for Els first winning his second U.S. Open (once again over Colin Montgomerie) this time at Congressional Country Club, making him the first foreign player since Alex Smith (1906, 1910) to win the U.S. Open twice. He defended his Buick Classic title and added the Johnnie Walker Classic to his list of victories. Els nearly won the World Match Play Championship for a fourth consecutive year, but lost to Vijay Singh in the final. 1998 and 1999 continued to be successful years for Els with 4 wins on both the PGA and European tours.

2000 started in historic fashion for Els being given a special honour by the Board of Directors of the European Tour awarding him with honorary life membership of the European Tour because of his two U.S. Opens and three World Match Play titles. 2000 was the year of runners-up for Els; with three runner-up finishes in the Majors (Masters, U.S. Open and The Open Championship) and seven second-place finishes in tournaments worldwide. Els had a disappointing 2001 season, failing to win a US PGA tour event for the first time since 1994 although he ended the year with nine second-place finishes.

2002 was arguably Els's best year, which started with a win at the Heineken Classic at the Royal Melbourne Golf Club. Then went to America and outplayed World Number one Tiger Woods to lift the Genuity Championship title. The premier moment of the season was surely his Open Championship triumph in very tough conditions at Muirfield. Els overcame a four-man playoff to take home the famous Claret Jug trophy for the first time, also quieting his critics about his mental toughness. The South African also won his fourth World Match Play title, along with his third Nedbank Challenge in the last four years, dominating a world-class field and winning by 8 shots.

Els at Westchester in 2004

2003–2005: The Big Five

2003 gave Els his first European Tour Order of Merit. Although playing fewer events than his competitors Els won four times and had three runners-up. He also performed well in the United States with back to back victories at the Mercedes Championship – where he set the all-time PGA Tour 72-hole record for most strokes under par at 31 under – and Sony Open and achieved top-20 spots in all four majors, including a fifth-place finish at the U.S Open and sixth-place finishes at both the Masters and PGA Championship. To top off the season Els won the World Match Play title for a record-tying fifth time. In 2003 he was voted 37th on the SABC3's Great South Africans.

2004 was another successful year as Els won 6 times on both tours, including big wins at Memorial, WGC-American Express Championship and his sixth World Match Play Championship, a new record. His success did not stop there. Els showed remarkable consistency in the Majors but lost to Phil Mickelson in the Masters when Mickelson birdied the 18th for the title, finished ninth in the U.S. Open after playing in the final group with friend and fellow countryman Retief Goosen and surprisingly lost in a playoff in the Open to the then unknown Todd Hamilton. Els had a 14-foot (4.3 m) putt for birdie on the final hole of regulation for the Open at Royal Troon, but he missed the putt and lost in the playoff. Els ended the major season with a fourth-place finish in the PGA Championship, where a three-putt on the 72nd hole would cost him a place in the playoff. In total, Els had 16 top-10 finishes, a second European Order of Merit title in succession and a second-place finish on the United States money list.

2004 was the start of the "Big Five Era", which is used in describing the era in golf where Tiger Woods, Vijay Singh, Ernie Els, Retief Goosen and Phil Mickelson dominated the game of golf. The five switched up and down the top five positions in the World Golf Ranking; most notably Vijay Singh's derailment of Tiger Woods as the best golfer in the world. The five stayed, for the most part, in the top five spots from 2004 until the start of 2007. Nine majors were won between them, many fighting against each other head to head.

In July 2005, Els injured his left knee while sailing with his family in the Mediterranean. Despite missing several months of the 2005 season due to the injury, Els won the second event on his return, the Dunhill Championship.

2006–2011: Gradual recovery and comeback

At the start of the 2007 season Ernie Els laid out a three-year battle plan to challenge Tiger Woods as world number one. "I see 2007 as the start of a three-year plan where I totally re-dedicate myself to the game," Els told his official website.

When he missed the cut by two strokes at the 2007 Masters Tournament, Els ended tour-leading consecutive cut streaks on both the PGA Tour and the European Tour. On the PGA Tour, his streak began at the 2004 The Players Championship (46 events) and on the European Tour it began at the 2000 Johnnie Walker Classic (82 events)

Els at Torrey Pines for the 2008 U.S. Open

Els has often been compared to Greg Norman in the sense that both men’s careers could be looked back on and think what could have been. Although the two of them are multiple major championship winners they have both shared disappointment in majors. Their disappointments have ranged from nerves, bad luck and simply being outplayed. 1996 was the year where Norman collapsed in the Masters and Els in the PGA Championship. Els has finished runner-up in six majors. He has finished runner-up to Tiger Woods more than any other golfer and has often been described as having the right game to finally be the golfer to beat Woods in a major.

On 2 March 2008, Els won the Honda Classic contested at PGA National's Championship Course in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. Els shot a final round 67 in tough windy conditions, which was enough to give him the win by one stroke over Luke Donald. The win marked the end of a three and a half-year-long stretch without a win on the PGA Tour for Els. The win was also his 16th victory on the PGA Tour.

On 8 April 2008, Els officially announced that he was switching swing coaches from David Leadbetter (whom Els had worked with since 1990) to noted swing coach Butch Harmon. During Els 2008 Masters press conference Els said the change is in an effort to tighten his swing, shorten his swing, and get a fresh perspective.

On 8 November 2009, Els almost ended his year-long slump by shooting a course-tying record 9-under 63 in the final round of the WGC-HSBC Champions to finish at 16-under par 272, a stroke back of Phil Mickelson who finished with a 17-under 271 total, including a final round of 3-under 69.

Els finally did break his winless streak by capturing the WGC-CA Championship at Doral in 2010, winning by four strokes over fellow countryman Charl Schwartzel. It was Els's second WGC tournament title. The victory also saw Els overtake Colin Montgomerie to become the career money leader on the European Tour. Els then won the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill two weeks later. It was his 18th PGA Tour victory, and his second in as many starts. The win at Bay Hill also vaulted Els to the top of the FedEx Cup standings. He held the top spot for 22 consecutive weeks.

In June, Els almost captured his third U.S. Open title at Pebble Beach. Els briefly held a share of the lead after birding the sixth hole, but was derailed by a stretch of bogey, double bogey, bogey on 9,10, and 11. Els finished the tournament in solo 3rd.

Els capped his year by winning the PGA Grand Slam of Golf in October, with a one stroke victory over David Toms, and also capturing the South African Open title by beating Retief Goosen by one shot.

After his successful 2010 season, Els struggled to find his form in 2011. He ultimately dropped out of the top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking for the first time since 1993.

2012–present: fourth major championship and career volatility

Els started the 2012 season in his home country at the Volvo Golf Champions where he finished in a tie for second place after he and Retief Goosen lost out in a playoff to Branden Grace. Els was next in contention at the Transitions Championship, where he needed a win to qualify for the 2012 Masters. Els led the tournament for most of the final round and had the lead outright until the 16th hole. However, he finished the tournament bogey-bogey missing a short three footer on the last hole to make a playoff. The tournament was eventually won by Luke Donald. In April, Els failed to qualify for the Masters for the first time since 1993. He was ranked 58th in the world prior to the tournament (the top 50 are given automatic invitations). Ultimately, Els' unsuccessful bids to qualify for the Masters was viewed as the likely end of his competitiveness on the PGA Tour.

Els surprised the golfing world by winning the 2012 Open Championship in July by birding the 72nd hole. Adam Scott led by four shots after a birdie at the 14th hole, but bogeyed the final four holes to miss a playoff with Els by one stroke. Els' win rejuvenated his career and earned him 5 year exemptions to the other 3 majors. Els became the eighth player to win major tournaments in three different decades, joining his countryman Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Billy Casper, Raymond Floyd, John Henry Taylor and Harry Vardon. Els' win also marked the third major champion out of the previous four major championships to be won with a type of long putter. His win reignited the controversy over the legality of long or anchored putters in golf.

In June 2013, Els won for the first time since the 2012 Open Championship at the BMW International Open in Munich, Germany. He claimed a wire-to-wire victory with a one-stroke win over Thomas Bjørn for his 28th European Tour title. Els moved up to 14th from 20th in the world rankings after the win.

Els struggled to find his form throughout the 2014 season. He finished 4th at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship in February, 5th at The Barclays and 7th at the PGA Championship, but struggled with missed cuts, including a missed cut at the Masters in April. Els' struggles continued into 2015 when he made only 10 cuts on the PGA Tour. He finished a 173rd in the FedEx Cup and failed to qualify for the playoffs. In preparation for the anchored putter ban in 2016, Els switched back to the short putter in late 2015. Els' struggles with short putts, or the "yips," became the draw of much media attention in early 2016. At the 2016 Masters Tournament, Els' putting was again the source of negative publicity when he six-putted from 3 feet on his opening hole. Els recorded a 9 on the hole and ended up shooting 80–73 and missing the cut. After the Masters, Els thanked his fans on his website for their support and was admittedly embarrassed by his putting performance.

Other ventures

Els-designed golf courses

  • Anahita Golf Course – Beau Champ, Mauritius
  • Mission Hills Golf Club (The Savannah Course) – Shenzhen, China
  • Whiskey Creek – Ijamsville, Maryland, USA
  • Oubaai – Garden Route, South Africa
  • The Els Club – Dubai, UAE

Els is also responsible for the refinement and modernisation of the West Course, Wentworth-Virginia Water, England, which took place in 2006.

Courses under construction include:

  • Datai Bay Golf Club - Langkawi, Malaysia
  • Hoakalei Country Club at Hoakalei Resort – Ewa Beach, Hawaii
  • Gardener Ross Golf and Country Estate – Gauteng, South Africa
  • Albany – New Providence, The Bahamas
  • Durrat Al Bahrain Golf Course – Durrat Al Bahrain, Bahrain

Internationalisation of golf

Unlike most of his contemporaries, Els is known for his willingness to participate in tournaments all around the world, having played regularly in European Tour-sanctioned events in Asia, Australasia, and his native country of South Africa. He says that his globe-trotting schedule is in recognition of the global nature of golf. This has caused some friction with the PGA Tour, an organisation that would prefer Els to play more tournaments in the United States. In late 2004, Tim Finchem, the director of the PGA Tour, wrote quite a firm letter to Els asking him to do so, but Els publicised and rejected this request. The PGA Tour's attitude caused considerable offence in the golfing world outside of North America.

Foundation

The Ernie Els and Fancourt Foundation was established in 1999. It has the objective of identifying youths from under-privileged backgrounds who show talent and potential in the game of golf. It provides educational assistance amongst other moral and financial help in order for these youths to reach their full potential.

The first Friendship Cup was played in 2006 which is a match play competition, played in a Ryder Cup type format. In the cup, Els's foundation plays against the foundation of Tiger Woods. Els's foundation won 12.5 points to 3.5 points.

Els has also participated several times in the Gary Player Invitational series of charity golf events, to assist Player raise significant funds for underprivileged children around the world.

Autism-related activities

Since his son's autism diagnosis, Els and his wife have been active in charities devoted to that condition. This involvement has increased as Ben has reached school age. In 2009, Els launched an annual charity golf event, the Els for Autism Pro-Am, held at the PGA National Resort & Spa in Palm Beach Gardens near his South Florida residence during the PGA Tour's March swing into the area. The first event, which featured many PGA Tour and Champions Tour golfers, raised $725,000 for The Renaissance Learning Center, a nonprofit charter school in the area for autistic children. The couple has also established the Els Center of Excellence, which began as a drive to build a new campus for the aforementioned school but has since mushroomed into a $30 million plan to combine the school with a research facility.

Quotes

On his technique:

—Els on his son's autism:

Amateur wins (4)

  • 1984 World Junior Golf Championships (Boys 13–14 division)
  • 1986 South African Boys Championship, South African Amateur Championship
  • 1989 South African Amateur Stroke Play Championship

Professional wins (71)

PGA Tour wins (19)

Legend
Major championships (4)
World Golf Championships (2)
Other PGA Tour (13)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
120 Jun 1994U.S. Open−5 (69-71-66-73=279)PlayoffScotland Colin Montgomerie, United States Loren Roberts
214 May 1995GTE Byron Nelson Classic−17 (69-61-65-68=263)3 strokesUnited States Robin Freeman, United States Mike Heinen,
United States D. A. Weibring
39 Jun 1996Buick Classic−13 (65-66-69-71=271)8 strokesAustralia Steve Elkington, United States Tom Lehman,
United States Jeff Maggert, Australia Craig Parry
415 Jun 1997U.S. Open−4 (71-67-69-69=276)1 strokeScotland Colin Montgomerie
522 Jun 1997Buick Classic−16 (64-68-67-69=268)2 strokesUnited States Jeff Maggert
622 Mar 1998Bay Hill Invitational−14 (67-69-65-73=274)4 strokesUnited States Bob Estes, United States Jeff Maggert
721 Feb 1999Nissan Open−14 (68-66-68-68=270)2 strokesUnited States Davis Love III, United States Ted Tryba,
United States Tiger Woods
86 Aug 2000The International48 points (15-19-6-8=48)4 pointsUnited States Phil Mickelson
93 Mar 2002Genuity Championship−17 (66-67-66-72=271)2 strokesUnited States Tiger Woods
1021 Jul 2002The Open Championship−6 (70-66-72-70=278)PlayoffAustralia Stuart Appleby, Australia Steve Elkington,
France Thomas Levet
1112 Jan 2003Mercedes Championships−31 (64-65-65-67=261)8 strokesSouth Korea K. J. Choi, United States Rocco Mediate
1219 Jan 2003Sony Open in Hawaii−16 (66-65-66-67=264)PlayoffAustralia Aaron Baddeley
1318 Jan 2004Sony Open in Hawaii−18 (67-64-66-65=262)PlayoffUnited States Harrison Frazar
146 Jun 2004Memorial Tournament−18 (68-70-66-66=270)4 strokesUnited States Fred Couples
153 Oct 2004American Express Championship−18 (69-64-68-69=270)1 strokeDenmark Thomas Bjørn
162 Mar 2008Honda Classic−6 (67-70-70-67=274)1 strokeEngland Luke Donald
1714 Mar 2010WGC-CA Championship−18 (68-66-70-66=270)4 strokesSouth Africa Charl Schwartzel
1829 Mar 2010Arnold Palmer Invitational−11 (68-69-69-71=277)2 strokesItaly Edoardo Molinari, South KoreaUnited States Kevin Na
1922 Jul 2012The Open Championship−7 (67-70-68-68=273)1 strokeAustralia Adam Scott

PGA Tour playoff record (4–4)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
11994U.S. OpenScotland Colin Montgomerie, United States Loren RobertsWon with par on second extra hole after 18-hole playoff:
(Els:74, Roberts:74, Montgomerie:78)
22000Mercedes ChampionshipsUnited States Tiger WoodsLost to birdie on second extra hole
32001The Tour ChampionshipSpain Sergio García, United States David Toms,
Canada Mike Weir
Weir won with birdie on first extra hole
42002The Open ChampionshipAustralia Stuart Appleby, Australia Steve Elkington,
France Thomas Levet
Won with par on first extra hole after four-hole aggregate playoff:
Els 4-3-5-4=16 (E), Levet 4-2-5-5=16 (E), Appleby 4-3-5-5=17 (+1), Elkington 5-3-4-5=17 (+1)
52003Sony Open in HawaiiAustralia Aaron BaddeleyWon with birdie on second extra hole
62004Sony Open in HawaiiUnited States Harrison FrazarWon with birdie on third extra hole
72004The Open ChampionshipUnited States Todd HamiltonLost four-hole aggregate playoff:
Hamilton 4-4-3-4=15 (E), Els 4-4-4-4=16 (+1)
82012Zurich Classic of New OrleansUnited States Jason DufnerLost to birdie on second extra hole

European Tour wins (28)

Legend
Major championships (4)
World Golf Championships (2)
Other European Tour (22)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
130 Jan 1994Dubai Desert Classic−20 (61-69-67-71=268)6 strokesAustralia Greg Norman
220 Jun 1994U.S. Open−5 (69-71-66-73=279)PlayoffScotland Colin Montgomerie, United States Loren Roberts
319 Feb 1995Lexington South African PGA Championship1−9 (65-71-71-64=271)2 strokesSouth Africa Roger Wessels
426 Jan 1997Johnnie Walker Classic−10 (70-68-71-69=278)1 strokeAustralia Peter Lonard, New Zealand Michael Long
515 Jun 1997U.S. Open−4 (71-67-69-69=276)1 strokeScotland Colin Montgomerie
68 Feb 1998South African Open1−15 (64-72-68-69=273)3 strokesSouth Africa David Frost
724 Jan 1999Alfred Dunhill South African PGA Championship1−15 (67-69-69-68=273)4 strokesSouth Africa Richard Kaplan
815 Jul 2000Standard Life Loch Lomond−11 (69-67-68-69=273)1 strokeUnited States Tom Lehman
93 Feb 2002Heineken Classic−17 (64-69-69-69=271)5 strokesAustralia Peter Fowler, England David Howell,
Australia Peter O'Malley
102002Dubai Desert Classic−16 (68-68-67-69=272)4 strokesSweden Niclas Fasth
1121 Jul 2002The Open Championship−6 (70-66-72-70=278)PlayoffAustralia Stuart Appleby, Australia Steve Elkington,
France Thomas Levet
122 Feb 2003Heineken Classic−15 (70-72-66-65=273)1 strokeEngland Nick Faldo, Australia Peter Lonard
1316 Feb 2003Johnnie Walker Classic−29 (64-65-64-66=259)10 strokesAustralia Stephen Leaney, Australia Andre Stolz
1413 Jul 2003Barclays Scottish Open−17 (64-67-67-69=267)5 strokesNorthern Ireland Darren Clarke, Wales Phillip Price
157 Sep 2003Omega European Masters−17 (65-69-68-65=267)6 strokesNew Zealand Michael Campbell
168 Feb 2004Heineken Classic−20 (60-66-68-74=268)1 strokeAustralia Adam Scott
173 Oct 2004WGC-American Express Championship−18 (69-64-68-69=270)1 strokeDenmark Thomas Bjørn
1817 Oct 2004HSBC World Match Play Championship2&1England Lee Westwood
196 Mar 2005Dubai Desert Classic−19 (66-68-67-68=269)1 strokeWales Stephen Dodd,
Spain Miguel Ángel Jiménez
2013 Mar 2005Qatar Masters2−12 (73-69-69-65=276)1 strokeSweden Henrik Stenson
211 May 2005BMW Asian Open2−26 (67-62-68-65=262)13 strokesEngland Simon Wakefield
2211 Dec 2005
(2006 season)
Dunhill Championship1−14 (71-67-68-68=274)3 strokesSouth Africa Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa Charl Schwartzel
2317 Dec 2006
(2007 season)
South African Airways Open1−24 (67-66-66-65=264)3 strokesSouth Africa Trevor Immelman
2414 Oct 2007HSBC World Match Play Championship6&4Argentina Ángel Cabrera
2514 Mar 2010WGC-CA Championship−18 (68-66-70-66=270)4 strokesSouth Africa Charl Schwartzel
2619 Dec 2010
(2011 season)
South African Open1−25 (65-65-67-66=263)1 strokeSouth Africa Retief Goosen
2722 Jul 2012The Open Championship−7 (67-70-68-68=273)1 strokeAustralia Adam Scott
2823 Jun 2013BMW International Open−18 (63-69-69-69=270)1 strokeDenmark Thomas Bjørn

1 Co-sanctioned by the Sunshine Tour
2 Co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour
3 Els's victories in the majors and WGC events count as wins on both the PGA Tour and the European Tour.

European Tour playoff record (2–5)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
11994Mercedes German MastersSpain Seve Ballesteros, Spain José María OlazábalBallesteros won with birdie on first extra hole
21994U.S. OpenScotland Colin Montgomerie, United States Loren RobertsWon with par on second extra hole after 18-hole playoff:
(Els:74, Roberts:74, Montgomerie:78)
31998Johnnie Walker ClassicUnited States Tiger WoodsLost to birdie on second extra hole
42002The Open ChampionshipAustralia Stuart Appleby, Australia Steve Elkington,
France Thomas Levet
Won with par on first extra hole after four-hole aggregate playoff:
Els 4-3-5-4=16 (E), Levet 4-2-5-5=16 (E), Appleby 4-3-5-5=17 (+1), Elkington 5-3-4-5=17 (+1)
52004The Open ChampionshipUnited States Todd HamiltonLost four-hole aggregate playoff:
Hamilton 4-4-3-4=15 (E), Els 4-4-4-4=16 (+1)
62006Dubai Desert ClassicUnited States Tiger WoodsLost to par on first extra hole
72012Volvo Golf ChampionsSouth Africa Retief Goosen, South Africa Branden GraceGrace won with birdie on first extra hole

Sunshine Tour wins (16)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
123 Jun 1991Amatola Sun ClassicSouth Africa Peter van der Riet
219 Jan 1992Protea Assurance South African Open−15 (65-69-69-70=273)3 strokesSouth Africa Derek James
325 Jan 1992Lexington South African PGA Championship−9 (69-66-65-71=271)1 strokeSouth Africa Ian Palmer, South Africa Kevin Stone,
South Africa Wayne Westner
415 Feb 1992South African Masters−13 (67-70-71-67=275)1 strokeEngland Chris Williams
528 Feb 1992Hollard Royal Swazi Sun Classic−19 (74-67-64-64=269)1 strokeSouth Africa Chris Davison
622 Nov 1992FNB Players Championship−18 (68-68-65-69=270)4 strokesZimbabwe Mark McNulty
720 Dec 1992Goodyear Classic−12 (71-69-69-67=276)2 strokesSouth Africa Retief Goosen
88 Jan 1995Bell's Cup−13 (69-67-69-70=275)5 strokesSouth Africa Hendrik Buhrmann, United States Pat Horgan
919 Feb 1995Lexington South African PGA Championship1−9 (65-71-71-64=271)2 strokesSouth Africa Roger Wessels
1021 Jan 1996Philips South African Open−13 (65-70-74-66=275)1 strokeSouth Africa Brenden Pappas
118 Feb 1998South African Open1−15 (64-72-68-69=273)3 strokesSouth Africa David Frost
1217 Jan 1999Alfred Dunhill South African PGA Championship1−15 67-69-69-68=273)4 strokesSouth Africa Richard Kaplan
139 Dec 2001Vodacom Players Championship−15 (70-68-70-65=273)1 strokeSouth Africa Retief Goosen, South Africa Trevor Immelman,
Scotland Alan McLean, South Africa Martin Maritz
1411 Dec 2005Dunhill Championship1−14 (71-67-68-68=274)3 strokesSouth Africa Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa Charl Schwartzel
1517 Dec 2006South African Airways Open1−24 (67-66-66-65=264)3 strokesSouth Africa Trevor Immelman
1619 Dec 2010South African Open1−25 (65-65-67-66=263)1 strokeSouth Africa Retief Goosen

1 Co-sanctioned by the European Tour

Japan Golf Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
121 Nov 1993Dunlop Phoenix−17 (68-69-65-69=271)4 strokesUnited States Fred Couples, England Barry Lane, Japan Tommy Nakajima,
Japan Masashi Ozaki, Fiji Vijay Singh

Other wins (19)

  • 1990 (1) Spoornet SA Classic
  • 1994 (3) Toyota World Match Play Championship (unofficial money event), Sarazen World Open, Johnnie Walker World Golf Championship
  • 1995 (1) Toyota World Match Play Championship (unofficial money event)
  • 1996 (4) Toyota World Match Play Championship (unofficial money event), World Cup of Golf (individual title and team with Wayne Westner), Johnnie Walker Super Tour Event
  • 1997 (1) PGA Grand Slam of Golf (unofficial money event)
  • 1999 (1) Nedbank Million Dollar Challenge (unofficial money event)
  • 2000 (1) Nedbank Golf Challenge (unofficial money event)
  • 2001 (1) World Cup of Golf
  • 2002 (2) Nedbank Golf Challenge (unofficial money event), Cisco World Match Play Championship (unofficial money European Tour event)
  • 2003 (1) HSBC World Match Play Championship (unofficial money European Tour event)
  • 2004 (1) Nelson Mandela Invitational (unofficial money Sunshine Tour event; with Vincent Tshabalala)
  • 2008 (1) Hassan II Golf Trophy
  • 2010 (1) PGA Grand Slam of Golf (unofficial money event)

Major championships

Wins (4)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunner(s)-up
1994U.S. Open2 shot lead−5 (69-71-66-73=279)Playoff 1Scotland Colin Montgomerie, United States Loren Roberts
1997U.S. Open (2)2 shot deficit−4 (71-67-69-69=276)1 strokeScotland Colin Montgomerie
2002The Open Championship2 shot lead−6 (70-66-72-70=278)Playoff 2Australia Stuart Appleby, Australia Steve Elkington, France Thomas Levet
2012The Open Championship (2)6 shot deficit−7 (67-70-68-68=273)1 strokeAustralia Adam Scott

1 Defeated Montgomerie in 18-hole playoff and Roberts in sudden-death: Els (74-4-4), Roberts (74-4-5), Montgomerie (78)
2 Defeated Appleby and Elkington in 4-hole playoff and Levet in sudden-death: Els (4-3-5-4-par), Appleby (4-3-5-5), Elkington (5-3-4-5), Levet (4-2-5-5-bogey)

Results timeline

Tournament19891990199119921993199419951996199719981999
Masters TournamentDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPT8CUTT12T17T16T27
U.S. OpenDNPDNPDNPDNPT71CUTT51T49CUT
The Open ChampionshipCUTDNPDNPT5T6T24T11T2T10T29T24
PGA ChampionshipDNPDNPDNPCUTCUTT25T3T61T53T21CUT
Tournament2000200120022003200420052006200720082009
Masters Tournament2T6T5T6247T27CUTCUTCUT
U.S. OpenT2T66T24T5T9T15T26T51T14CUT
The Open ChampionshipT2T31T182T343T4T7T8
PGA ChampionshipT34T13T34T5T4DNPT163T31T6
Tournament2010201120122013201420152016
Masters TournamentT18T47DNPT13CUTT22CUT
U.S. Open3CUT9T4T35T54CUT
The Open ChampionshipCUTCUT1T26CUTT65CUT
PGA ChampionshipT18CUTT48CUTT7T25T66

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

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts made
Masters Tournament02036122216
U.S. Open211710132419
The Open Championship232913172621
PGA Championship00246122419
Totals4652335549675
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 27 (2000 Masters – 2006 PGA)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 5 (2003 PGA – 2004 PGA)

World Golf Championships

Wins (2)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMargin of victoryRunner-up
2004WGC-American Express Championship2 strokes−18 (69-64-68-69=270)1 strokeDenmark Thomas Bjørn
2010WGC-CA Championship (2)Tied for lead−18 (68-66-70-66=270)4 strokesSouth Africa Charl Schwartzel

Results timeline

Tournament1999200020012002200320042005200620072008
Accenture Match Play ChampionshipR64R324R32R64DNPDNPR64R64R64
Cadillac ChampionshipT40WDNT1T23T121DNP5T1175
Bridgestone Invitational5T12T8T15T17T65DNPT31T22T27
Tournament200920102011201220132014
Accenture Match Play ChampionshipQFR32R32R32R644
Cadillac ChampionshipT201T15DNPT28T52
Bridgestone InvitationalT29T22T37T45T48T26
HSBC Champions2T6T33T2T11T46

1Cancelled due to 9/11
DNP = Did not play
QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play
"T" = tied
WD = withdrew
NT = No tournament
Green background for wins. Yellow background for top-10.
Note that the HSBC Champions did not become a WGC event until 2009.

PGA and European Tour career summary

PGA TourEuropean Tour
SeasonWins (Majors)Earnings (US$)RankWins (Majors)EarningsRank
199102,6472740£2,357
1992018,4202130£66,62675
1993038,1851900£162,82734
19941 (1)684,440192 (1)£311,85010
19951842,590141£82,459
19961906,944140£209,148
19972 (1)1,243,00892 (1)£359,421
19981763,783361£433,8848
199911,710,756151€588,36012
200013,469,40531€2,017,2483
200102,336,456150€1,716,2874
20022 (1)3,291,89553 (1)€2,251,7083
200323,371,23794€2,975,3741
200435,787,22523€4,061,9051
200501,627,184473€1,012,68318
200602,326,220281€1,716,2085
200702,705,715202€2,496,2372
200812,537,290200€674,09842
200902,147,157360€1,571,50111
201024,558,86131€2,261,6077
20110948,872931€591,50851
20121 (1)3,453,118161 (1)€2,077,533
201301,173,761741€1,166,71220
201401,799,569551€986,23037
20150453,5791590€340,254
Career*19 (4)48,198,319528 (4)€28,375,8542

* As of 22 November 2015.

These figures are from the respective tour's official sites. Note that there is double counting of money earned (and wins) in the majors and World Golf Championships since they became official events on both tours.

Team appearances

Professional

  • Alfred Dunhill Cup (representing South Africa): 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997 (winners), 1998 (winners), 1999, 2000
  • World Cup (representing South Africa): 1992, 1993, 1996 (Individual and team winners), 1997, 2001 (winners)
  • Presidents Cup (International team): 1996, 1998 (winners), 2000, 2003 (tie), 2007, 2009, 2011, 2013
  • Alfred Dunhill Challenge (representing Southern Africa): 1995 (winners)

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