Brian Waites

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Brian Waites
Personal information
Full nameBrian J. Waites
Born (1940-03-01) 1 March 1940 (age 83)
Bolton, Lancashire, England
Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Sporting nationalityFlag of England.svg  England
Residence Minehead, Somerset, England
Career
Turned professional1957
Former tour(s) European Tour
European Seniors Tour
Professional wins41
Number of wins by tour
European Tour2
European Senior Tour4
Other33 (regular)
2 (senior)
Best results in major championships
Masters Tournament DNP
PGA Championship DNP
U.S. Open DNP
The Open Championship T19: 1983

Brian J. Waites (born 1 March 1940) is an English professional golfer. Although he turned professional in 1957, he played little top-level golf for the next 20 years, but then has considerable success, winning twice on the European Tour, five times on the Safari Circuit and playing in the 1983 Ryder Cup. After reaching 50 he had further success as a senior, winning the PGA Seniors Championship twice, and winning four times on the European Senior Tour.

Contents

Professional career

Waites turned professional in 1957. He was an assistant professional at Hesketh Golf Club in Southport, becoming the professional at Saltburn Golf Club in Saltburn-by-the-Sea from 1961, before moving to Brough Golf Club on Humberside in 1965. [1] [2] [3] In early 1969 Waites became the professional at Hollinwell (Notts Golf Club), replacing David Talbot. He stayed at Hollinwell until 1998. [4] Before moving to Hollinwell, Waites played relatively few national events and had limited success. While at Saltburn, he qualified for the 1964 Open Championship at St Andrews but missed the cut. [5] After moving to Brough, he won the Yorkshire Open Championship in 1966 and was tied for third place in the 1968 Bowmaker Tournament, a 36-hole event at Sunningdale Golf Club. [3] [6]

In 1969 Waites qualified for the Open Championship at Royal Lytham and played all four rounds, finishing tied for 34th place. [7] In the News of the World Matchplay in September, just his third national event of the year, he qualified in second place and reached the quarter-finals before losing to the eventual winner, Maurice Bembridge. [8] [9] Waites continue to play few national events in the early 1970s but had success locally. He won the Midland Open Championship in 1971 and the Midland Professional Championship in 1972. [10] [11] He played in the inaugural PGA Club Professionals' Championship in 1973 at Calcot Park Golf Club. The event was won by Doug Sewell but Waites was in the leading nine finishers that formed the team for the first Diamondhead Cup, played later in 1973. [12] Waites continued to play in the PGA Club Professionals' Championship, finishing tied for fourth place in the 1975 and runner-up in 1976, to get a place each year in the PGA Cup, which replaced the Diamondhead Cup. [13] [14] In late 1976 he reached the quarter-finals of the Sun Alliance Match Play Championship, losing to Brian Barnes. [15]

In the late 1970s Waites gradually extended his schedule. He played on the Safari Tour in 1977 and was a runner-up in the Zambia Open, behind Tommy Horton. [16] In 1977 he had his first top-10 finishes in stroke-play events on the European Tour, finishing 6th in the Benson and Hedges International Open and 5th in the Callers of Newcastle tournament, a stroke from being in a playoff. [17] [18] He was also 5th in the PGA Club Professionals' Championship. [19]

Between 1978 and 1984 Waites was ranked in top 25 of the European Tour Order of Merit in each of those seven years. He won two European Tour events. He had his first win on the European Tour in 1978 at the Tournament Players Championship, finishing a stroke ahead of Neil Coles and taking the first prize of £8,000. [20] Two weeks later he was a runner-up in the Dunlop Masters. a shot behind Tommy Horton. [21] His best performance in 1979 was again late in year, a solo runner-up finish in the TPC behind Michael King. [22] In 1980 Waites lost to Des Smyth at the sixth hole of a sudden-death playoff in the Cold Shield Greater Manchester Open, and was a runner-up in the Bob Hope British Classic. [23] [24] In 1981 he again came close to winning the TPC, but lost at the fourth hole of a playoff to Brian Barnes, who had earlier scored a final round 62 to tie with Waites. [25] Waites second European Tour win came at the 1982 Car Care Plan International, winning by a stroke despite a final round 73 and taking the first prize of £10,000. [26]

Despite his successes, Waites continued to play in the PGA Club Professionals' Championship. He was runner-up in 1978, tied for third place in 1979 and solo third in 1980, to get a place each year in the PGA Cup, although he turned down the place in 1980 because of a clash with the Tournament Players Championship. [27] [28] [29] Later in 1980 the PGA changed the eligibility rules, excluding Waites from the event for a number of years. [30]

Waites was a member of the European 1983 Ryder Cup team. The European team of 12 was chosen entirely from the 1983 European Tour money list as at the conclusion of the St. Mellion Timeshare TPC on September 18. [31] Waites was guaranteed his place before the final event and didn't play in it, finishing 7th in the money list with £40,482 and making his only appearance at the age of 43. [32] He had played in 19 qualifying events and although he had not won, he had made the cut in all 19, with 7 top-10 finishes including runner-up finishes in the Car Care Plan International and the Lawrence Batley International. [18] Europe lost the Ryder Cup by a single point. Waites played in four matches, winning in a four-ball match with Ken Brown on the opening day. Waites and Brown lost both their matches on the second day and Waites lost his singles match on the final day to Calvin Peete by one hole. [33] Waites also represented England three times at the World Cup, in 1980, 1982 and 1983. [34] [35] [36]

Waites has some success on the Safari Circuit, winning five times between 1980 and 1985. His first win was in the Kenya Open in March 1980. [37] [38] His other four wins were in Zambia. He won the Mufulira Open in 1980, a week after his Kenyan win, and he won there again in 1982. He won the Zambia Open the following week and won the Cock o' the North in 1985 at the age of 45. [39] [40] [41] [42]

Waites was runner-up in the 1984 Tunisian Open, the opening event of the European Tour season but had little success on the tour after that. [18] In 1990 he became eligible for seniors events and won the Trusthouse Forte PGA Seniors Championship in 1990 and 1991, with Neil Coles runner-up both times. [43] [44] In 1990 he was a joint runner-up in the Seniors' British Open, a stroke behind Gary Player. In August 1991 Waites was seriously injured in a car accident, spending three months in hospital. [18] He made a full recovery and joined the European Senior Tour in its 1992 debut season, although he missed the opening event of the season. He had a successful career at that level, winning four tournaments and making the top ten on the Order of Merit four times. In 1999 he became the first player to make 100 appearances on the European Senior Tour. [18]

Waites won the Nottinghamshire Open Championship seven times, the Notts Professional Strokeplay Championship seven times and the Notts Professional Matchplay Championship five times. [45]

Professional wins (41)

European Tour wins (2)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
117 Sep 1978 Tournament Players Championship −6 (75-69-73-69=286)1 stroke Flag of England.svg Neil Coles
223 May 1982 Car Care Plan International −8 (68-69-66-73=276)1 stroke Flag of Scotland.svg Brian Barnes, Flag of England.svg Paul Hoad

European Tour playoff record (0–2)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
1 1980 Cold Shield Greater Manchester Open Flag of Ireland.svg Des Smyth Lost to birdie on sixth extra hole
2 1981 Haig Whisky TPC Flag of Scotland.svg Brian Barnes Lost to par on fourth extra hole

Sources: [23] [25] [20] [26]

Safari Circuit wins (5)

Other wins (28)

European Seniors Tour wins (4)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
110 Jun 1994 D Day Seniors Open −10 (69-66-71=206)6 strokes Flag of Spain.svg Antonio Garrido
220 Aug 1995 Northern Electric Seniors −1 (72-70-73=215)2 strokes Flag of Spain.svg Francisco Abreu, Flag of England.svg Peter Butler,
Flag of England.svg Neil Coles, Flag of Australia (converted).svg Noel Ratcliffe,
Flag of South Africa.svg Bobby Verwey
310 Aug 1997 Credit Suisse Private Banking Seniors Open −7 (63-69-71=203)Playoff Flag of England.svg Malcolm Gregson
426 Sep 1998 Elf Seniors Open (2)−12 (66-66-63=195)4 strokes Flag of Ireland.svg Denis O'Sullivan

Source: [47]

European Seniors Tour playoff record (1–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
1 1997 Credit Suisse Private Banking Seniors Open Flag of England.svg Malcolm Gregson Won with birdie on second extra hole

Source: [48]

Other senior wins (2)

DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner-up
17 Jun 1990 Trusthouse Forte PGA Seniors Championship −3 (69-66-68-66=269)4 strokes Flag of England.svg Neil Coles
16 Jun 1991 Trusthouse Forte PGA Seniors Championship −7 (69-69-69-70=277)3 strokes Flag of England.svg Neil Coles

Sources: [43] [44]

Results in major championships

Tournament196419651966196719681969
The Open Championship CUTT34
Tournament1970197119721973197419751976197719781979
The Open Championship T58T51T40CUTT52CUT
Tournament19801981198219831984
The Open Championship T32T50T47T19CUT

Note: Waites only played in The Open Championship.

  Did not play

CUT = missed the half-way cut (3rd round cut in 1976 and 1984 Open Championships)
"T" indicates a tie for a place

Source: [49]

Team appearances

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References

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