Craig Spence | |
---|---|
Personal information | |
Full name | Craig A. Spence |
Born | Colac, Victoria, Australia | 17 September 1974
Height | 1.82 m (6 ft 0 in) |
Weight | 210 lb (95 kg; 15 st) |
Sporting nationality | Australia |
Residence | Melbourne, Australia; Scottsdale, Arizona, U.S. |
Career | |
College | Victorian Institute of Sport |
Turned professional | 1996 |
Current tour(s) | PGA Tour of Australasia |
Former tour(s) | PGA Tour European Tour Gateway Tour |
Professional wins | 3 |
Highest ranking | 100 (5 December 1999) [1] |
Number of wins by tour | |
PGA Tour of Australasia | 1 |
Other | 2 |
Best results in major championships | |
Masters Tournament | DNP |
PGA Championship | DNP |
U.S. Open | CUT: 2000 |
The Open Championship | CUT: 1999 |
Craig A. Spence (born 17 September 1974) is an Australian professional golfer.
Spence was born in Colac, Victoria and first played golf at the age of 10. Around the age of 15 he began competing at an amateur level. He then went on to the Victorian Institute of Sport, winning two Victorian Amateurs back to back. He turned professional in 1996 and joined the PGA Tour of Australasia.
In 1999 Spence made his professional breakthrough with victory in the Ericsson Australian Masters. Having opened up with a 9 under par first round, he finished by hitting a 6 iron to two feet for a birdie on the final hole to win by a single stroke over Australia's most successful golfer, playing partner Greg Norman. Following that win Spence received invites to tournaments around the world, on five of the major tours. He managed to record top 5 finishes in events on all of those tours.
At the end of 1999, Spence earned his PGA Tour card for the 2000 season with a top 10 finish at the tour's Qualifying School. His rookie year on the PGA Tour was a struggle and he missed out on keeping a full card for 2001, finishing 129th on the money list. He made just two cuts the following season to lose all playing rights on the tour. [2] He spent two more years in the United States competing mostly on mini-tours while receiving invites to a limited number of second tier Nationwide Tour events.
He also continued to play on the PGA Tour of Australasia with limited success, though he did have an exceptional round playing the 2003 Johnnie Walker Classic at the Lake Karrinyup Country Club in Perth, Western Australia.
Spence had a spectacular third round in that tournament where he equalled the course record of 63, set the previous year in the same event by Retief Goosen. The round also included eight consecutive birdies between the fourth and eleventh holes that matched the records for both the European and Australasian tours. [3]
Spence then turned his attentions to Europe at the end of 2003, earning a spot on the European Tour for 2004 via the qualifying school.
In his début European season, he made just three cuts as he failed to keep his card for the 2005 season. He then returned to the United States, to play on the Gateway Tour in preparation for another try at qualifying for the PGA Tour. Having missed out on reaching the final qualifying tournament by one shot in 2006, he and his family moved back to Australia. [4]
No. | Date | Tournament | Winning score | Margin of victory | Runner-up |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 14 Feb 1999 | Ericsson Masters | −16 (64-73-69-70=276) | 1 stroke | Greg Norman |
PGA Tour of Australasia playoff record (0–1)
No. | Year | Tournament | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1999 | ANZ Players Championship | Brett Rumford (a) | Lost to birdie on fourth extra hole |
No. | Date | Tournament | Winning score | Margin of victory | Runner-up |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 20 Apr 2006 | Desert Spring B5 | −11 (67-69-69=205) | 2 strokes | John Douma |
Tournament | 1999 | 2000 |
---|---|---|
U.S. Open | CUT | |
The Open Championship | CUT |
Note: Spence never played in the Masters Tournament or the PGA Championship.
CUT = Missed the half-way cut
Tournament | 1999 |
---|---|
Match Play | |
Championship | 58 |
Invitational |
Amateur
Craig William Perks is a professional golfer from New Zealand who won the 2002 Players Championship.
Robert Allenby is an Australian professional golfer.
Nicholas Simon O'Hern is an Australian professional golfer.
Peter Lawrence Lonard is an Australian professional golfer who has played mainly on the U.S.-based PGA Tour.
Michael Shane Campbell is a New Zealand professional golfer who is best known for having won the 2005 U.S. Open and, at the time, the richest prize in golf, the £1,000,000 HSBC World Match Play Championship, in the same year. He played on the European Tour and the PGA Tour of Australasia.
Aaron John Baddeley is an Australian professional golfer. He was born in Lebanon, New Hampshire, U.S. and now plays on the U.S.-based PGA Tour. He has joint U.S. and Australian citizenship and was raised in Australia from the age of two. He represents Australia in golf.
Craig David Parry is an Australian professional golfer. He has been one of Australia's premier golfers since turning professional in 1985, and has 23 career victories, two of those wins being events on the PGA Tour; the 2002 WGC-NEC Invitational and the 2004 Ford Championship at Doral.
Geoff Charles Ogilvy is an Australian professional golfer. He won the 2006 U.S. Open and has also won three World Golf Championships.
Nathan Andrew Green is an Australian professional golfer.
Gregory John Chalmers is an Australian professional golfer. Chalmers has played primarily on the PGA Tour of Australasia and PGA Tour. He is a two-time winner of the Australian Open and late in his career eventually won a PGA Tour event, the 2016 Barracuda Championship.
Peter Albert Charles Senior is an Australian professional golfer who has won more than twenty tournaments around the world.
Marcus Fraser is an Australian professional golfer who currently plays on the PGA Tour of Australasia and Asian Tour.
Mathew Charles Goggin is an Australian professional golfer.
James Evangelo Nitties is an Australian professional golfer who has played on the PGA Tour and now plays on the PGA Tour of Australasia.
Michael Richard Long is a New Zealand professional golfer who has played on a number of tours, including two seasons on the PGA Tour and three seasons on the European Tour. He won four times on the PGA Tour of Australasia between 1996 and 2018 and twice on the Nationwide Tour. He won the 2020 European Senior Tour Q-School.
Alistair Presnell is an Australian professional golfer.
Marc A. Leishman is an Australian professional golfer. He has won six times on the PGA Tour. In 2009 he won the Rookie of the Year award on the PGA Tour, the first Australian to win the award.
Scott Robert Hend is an Australian professional golfer who has played on a number of the world's main tours. He is renowned as a long hitter.
Nathan Holman is an Australian professional golfer from Melbourne, Australia who plays on the PGA Tour of Australasia, the European Tour, and the Asian Tour. In December 2015, he won the Australian PGA Championship for his first professional victory.
Jean-Louis Guépy is a French professional golfer from New Caledonia. Guépy was originally a tennis pro but abruptly quit at the age of 20. Despite having no background in golf he then trained to be a professional golfer. Within years of picking up the game Guépy earned membership on the PGA Tour of Australasia and European Tour. Though he never won on either tour, he recorded runner-up finishes in three prominent international events, including to world #1 Greg Norman at the 1996 Ford South Australian Open.