David Graham (golfer)

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David Graham
David Graham at the 1984 Memorial Tournament pro-am - DPLA - 7afa79d00f6a48beafeb6fbbdf81405a.jpg
Graham in 1984
Personal information
Full nameAnthony David Graham
Born (1946-05-23) 23 May 1946 (age 77)
Melbourne, Australia
Height5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
Weight152 lb (69 kg; 10.9 st)
Sporting nationalityFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia
Career
Turned professional1962
Former tour(s) PGA Tour
PGA Tour of Australia
Champions Tour
Professional wins38
Number of wins by tour
PGA Tour8
European Tour3
Japan Golf Tour1
PGA Tour of Australasia5
PGA Tour Champions5
Other18
Best results in major championships
(wins: 2)
Masters Tournament 5th: 1980
PGA Championship Won: 1979
U.S. Open Won: 1981
The Open Championship T3: 1985
Achievements and awards
World Golf Hall of Fame 2015 (member page)

Anthony David Graham, AM [1] (born 23 May 1946) is a retired professional golfer from Australia. He won eight times on the PGA Tour. He is the only Australian male golfer to win two different men's major golf championships. Graham participated on the Australian teams that won the World Cup in 1970 and the Alfred Dunhill Cup in 1985 and 1986. He is inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame. [2] [3]

Contents

Early life

Graham was born and grew up in Melbourne. At young age he used to pass the Wattle Park nine-hole golf course when cycling to school and one day the local professional John Green offered him a job in the shop during week-ends. Graham started to learn to play and he did it as a left-hander. [4] At age 13, against the strong will of his father, Graham quit school to work in the golf shop and Graham and his father never spoke to each other after that. At age 14 Graham was offered the second-assistant job at Riversdale Golf Club by head professional George Naismith, who convinced Graham to play right-handed. [2] [4] [5] [6]

Shortly thereafter, in late 1962, Naismith retired and Graham instead worked for a short time under Naismith's brother at Waverley Golf Club, south east of Melbourne. Than Graham moved to the north-western part of Tasmania to work as an instructor at Seabrook Golf Club. [5]

In 1967, after playing golf with Eric Cremin, who came to Seabrook for an exhibition to promote Precision Golf Forging golf clubs, Graham got the opportunity to start working at a sporting goods store in Sydney. During this time he honed his golf skills at Royal Sydney Golf Club under the tutelage of Alec Mercer, the club professional. [3]

Professional career

In early 1968, Graham started working full-time as a touring professional. [3]

Australian and Asian circuits 1968–1970

Among the first tournaments Graham received media attention for was the 1968 Brisbane Water Tournament. In difficult conditions in the second round he moved into a tie for third. [7] The third round was cancelled and in the final round Graham shot a 72 to finish solo fourth, four behind champion Bob Shaw. [8]

In February 1969, Graham's finished in a tie for third at the two-round $3,500 Amoco Open at Forbes, New South Wales, four back of champion Tony Mangan. [9]

Shortly thereafter, he moved onto the Asia Golf Circuit. In mid-March he finished joint second at the 1969 Malaysian Open, one behind champion Takaaki Kono. [10] At this point he was in third place on the Asia Golf Circuit's Order of Merit. [11] The following week at the Singapore Open he was one back of leaders Tomio Kamata of Japan and Guy Wolstenholme of England after three rounds. Graham made up one stroke on the leaders during the back nine to enter a playoff with them, but lost to Kamata on the third extra hole. [12]

After these two runner-ups finishes, Graham entered [13] the next tournament, the Hong Kong Open, and shot two rounds of 69 to put him near the lead, [14] but finished in a tie for 14th place. [15] Graham cited his poor putting for his weak play. [3] [15] At that point Graham said his goal was to qualify for the Alcan Open, a limited-field tournament on the PGA Tour to be held in September in the United States. [3] The 1969 Asia Golf Circuit finished in April with Graham tied forth on the Order of Merit. [16] [17]

In June 1969 he played a two-round tournament for a $1,650 purse in Goolwa, South Australia at South Lakes Golf Course. He shot a final round 70 to defeat John Lister by one stroke. [18]

As of August 1969, Graham had qualified for the Alcan Open in Portland, Oregon. [19] [20] He finished 22nd among the 24 players in the field, 23 shots behind champion Billy Casper. [21] [3]

Shortly thereafter, he returned to Australia. In October he played the City of Sydney Open and finished fourth. [22] Later in the month he played the Australian Open. He shot a second round 69 to move into a tie for fifth, behind Guy Wolstenholme, Bruce Devlin, Peter Thomson, and Gary Player. [23] However, he was not near the lead as the tournament concluded. [24] In November he played the North Coast Open in Coffs Harbour, New South Wales. [25] He finished in solo second place, three back of champion Tony Mangan. [26] In December he played the Caltex Tournament at Paraparaumu Links Golf Course in Wellington, New Zealand and finished in a tie for fourteenth. [27]

Early in 1970, Graham won two events in Australia. In February, he played the Tasmanian Open at Kingston Beach Golf Club. With a final round 72, Graham defeated Terry Kendall by one. [28] Right before the tournament began he played the one-round $750 Golden Crumpet Purse, also at Kingston Beach. He shot a 68 (−5) to tie Terry Kendall for second place, two behind champion Tony Mangan. [29]

The next week he won the Victorian Open. [30] Graham defeated Kevin Hartley, Kel Nagle, and Guy Wolstenholme by four shots. His 273 (−19) total broke Yarra Yarra Golf Club's course record, set by Gary Player in 1959, by two shots. [4]

The following week Graham played the New South Wales Open at Pymble Golf Course in Sydney. After three rounds Graham was five behind leader Kel Nagle. In the final round Graham made four birdies on holes 13–17. At the 477-yard par-5 18th hole Graham hit his second shot into a bunker. He hit his sand shot to 18 feet. His "chances of birdie looked remote" but he holed the putt creating a "tremendous roar" from the gallery. He entered an 18-hole playoff with Frank Phillips the following day. [31] Graham was behind for most of the playoff but got tied by the 15th hole. However, Phillips birdied the final two holes to defeat Graham by two strokes. [32]

Back onto the Asia Golf Circuit he played the Thailand Open in March 1970. He came from three strokes behind in the final round to win. [33] The following month he played the Yomiuri International in Japan, also on the Asian circuit. Graham birdied the final two holes to win by three over New Zealander Walter Godfrey and four over pre-tournament favorite Tommy Aaron. With the victory, Graham won A$10,500 and a Japanese car. [34]

As of July 1970, he had qualified for the The Open at St Andrews, Scotland, where he entered The Open Championship for the first time and went on to finished tied 32nd. [35] [36] [37]

In early November 1970, Graham attempted to qualify for the PGA Tour at PGA Tour Qualifying School in Tucson, Arizona. [38] He failed to qualify by one stroke. [39]

In December 1970, two weeks after his appearance at the 1970 World Cup in Argentina, Graham played the Argentine Masters. After the first two rounds, Graham was tied for second, [40] one behind the leader Roberto De Vicenzo, who went on to win the tournament.

Team appearances in the World Cup and the Dunhill Cup

Late in November 1970 it was announced that Graham would represent Australia at the 1970 World Cup with Bruce Devlin. The event would be held at the Jockey Club in Buenos Aires, Argentina. [41] Ahead of the World Cup event, the organizing International Golf Association, preferred the more well-known Bruce Crampton to team for Australia with Bruce Devlin. Crampton, as well as Kel Nagle and Peter Thomson, had declined to play [2] and The Australian PGA threatened not to send a team if Graham was not included.

It took a 54-hour plane trip for both Graham and Devin to reach Argentina and both were "tired" once they started playing the first round. However, both played excellently in the opening round. Graham fired a bogey-free 65 (−7) and Devlin a bogey-free 66 (−6). At 131 (−13), they held a three-stroke lead over Argentina's team. In the individual competition, Graham was in solo second, one behind leader, home legend Roberto De Vicenzo, while Devlin was tied for third. After the round Graham stated, "I don't regard it as my best performance ever, but it is pretty close." [42] In the second round Graham shot a 67 (−5) while Devlin shot a 69 (−3). In the third round Graham shot a back nine 30 (−7), including birdies on the final four holes, to record at 65 (−7). Devlin recorded a third round 66 (−6). They held a 19-stroke lead over Argentina, the second place team. After the round, according to The Canberra Times, "Graham said the three rounds here were the so far were the best he's ever played." [39] Among individuals, Graham held a two-stroke lead over Roberto De Vicenzo. [43] At the beginning of the final round both Graham and his partner Devlin played poorly shooting 35 and 36, respectively, over the course of the par-35 front nine. [44] In addition, Graham lost the solo individual lead to de Vicenzo when Graham bogeyed the par-3 8th hole and the Argentine birdied it. [43] According to the Papua New Guinea Post-Courier, however, at the end of the front nine the Australians "were assured of victory over their nearest rivals Argentina." At his point their team still had an 11 stroke lead over Argentina. [44] Among individuals, "The lead see-sawed back and forth until De Vicenzo took the lead for good with a birdie on the par-5 15th." [43] Graham finished second among individuals. The Australian team won by a record ten shots. At 544, they beat the team record set by Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus at the 1966 Canada Cup by four shots. [43]

Devlin and Graham again represented Australia in the 1971 World Cup, but when Devlin was not selected for the event the year after, Graham refused to play and never again participated in any World Cup events. [45]

Another controversy with Graham involved was reported during the inaugural 1985 Dunhill Cup at the Old Course at St Andrews, Scotland. Australia won the team event, with Graham, Greg Norman and Graham Marsh in the team. Prior to the tournament, Marsh had criticized Graham for accepting appearance money for playing in Australian golf tournaments. At the time, Marsh had recently been made an MBE for services to golf and was for six years chairman of the PGA Tour of Australasia. However, Norman took David Graham's side in the debate and Australia went on to win the tournament despite the conflict. In 1986, Australia successfully defended the title with Graham, Norman and Rodger Davis in their team. [46]

PGA Tour 1971–2004

In late 1971 Graham attempted to qualify for the PGA Tour at PGA Tour Qualifying School. He was successful. [47] In 1976, he won twice on the PGA Tour, and then came from behind to secure a victory over the reigning champion Hale Irwin in the Piccadilly World Match Play Championship at Wentworth Club in England. [48]

Graham won two major championships, the 1979 PGA Championship and the 1981 U.S. Open [49] [50] He also finished third at the 1985 Open Championship, after sharing the third-round lead. He became the fourth Australian major champion (after Jim Ferrier, Peter Thomson and Kel Nagle) and the first to win a U.S. Open. He is the only Australian male golfer to win two different men's major golf championships.

Both of his major victories came in remarkable fashion. In the 1979 PGA Championship, at Oakland Hills, outside Detroit, Michigan, he stood on the last tee at 7 under par for his final round and leading by two, but double-bogeyed the last hole for a 65 to drop back into a playoff with Ben Crenshaw. At each of the first two sudden-death holes he holed long putts to keep the playoff alive and finally won at the third extra hole.

At the 1981 U.S. Open, at Merion, just west of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Graham shot a 67 in the final round to overturn a three-shot deficit to overnight leader George Burns to win by 3 strokes. In the last round he hit every green in regulation and every fairway except one.

On 27 June 2004, during the final round of the Bank of America Championship on the Champions Tour, Graham collapsed over a putt on the eighth green. He was later diagnosed with congestive heart failure, ending his competitive golf career at age 58. [51] He is now retired and resides at Iron Horse Golf Club in Whitefish, Montana.

Graham was interested in club making and was appointed by Jack Nicklaus as a club designer at MacGregor Golf Company in 1982. [52]

Personal life

Graham married with Maureen in late 1968. [3] They formerly lived in Delray Beach Florida and moved to Dallas, Texas. They had two sons, Andrew (born 1974) and Michael (born 1977), and five grandchildren. [2]

Awards and honors

In 1988, Graham was made a Member of the Order of Australia. [1] In 1990, Graham was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame. [53] In 2013, Graham was inducted into the Texas Golf Hall of Fame [54]

It was announced on 16 October 2014 that Graham has been elected into the World Golf Hall of Fame. [55] [56] His nomination was supported by Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus. He was inducted with other nominees Mark O'Meara, course architect A. W. Tillinghast and Laura Davies on 13 July 2015 at the University of St Andrews, during the 2015 Open Championship. [57]

Professional wins (38)

PGA Tour wins (8)

Legend
Major championships (2)
Other PGA Tour (6)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
13 Jul 1972 Cleveland Open 68-73-68-69=278−6Playoff Flag of Australia (converted).svg Bruce Devlin
218 Jul 1976 American Express Westchester Classic 63-68-70-71=272−123 strokes Flag of the United States.svg Ben Crenshaw, Flag of the United States.svg Tom Watson,
Flag of the United States.svg Fuzzy Zoeller
329 Aug 1976 American Golf Classic 69-67-69-69=274−144 strokes Flag of the United States.svg Lou Graham
45 Aug 1979 PGA Championship 69-68-70-65=272−8Playoff Flag of the United States.svg Ben Crenshaw
525 May 1980 Memorial Tournament 73-67-70-70=280−81 stroke Flag of the United States.svg Tom Watson
624 Jan 1981 Phoenix Open 65-68-69-66=268−161 stroke Flag of the United States.svg Lon Hinkle
721 Jun 1981 U.S. Open 68-68-70-67=273−73 strokes Flag of the United States.svg George Burns, Flag of the United States.svg Bill Rogers
88 May 1983 Houston Coca-Cola Open 66-72-73-64=275−95 strokes Flag of the United States.svg Lee Elder, Flag of the United States.svg Jim Thorpe,
Flag of the United States.svg Lee Trevino

PGA Tour playoff record (2–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
1 1972 Cleveland Open Flag of Australia (converted).svg Bruce Devlin Won with birdie on second extra hole
21972 Liggett & Myers Open Flag of the United States.svg Lou Graham, Flag of the United States.svg Hale Irwin,
Flag of the United States.svg Larry Ziegler
L. Graham won with birdie on third extra hole
D. Graham and Ziegler eliminated by par on first hole
3 1979 PGA Championship Flag of the United States.svg Ben Crenshaw Won with birdie on third extra hole

European Tour wins (3)

Legend
Major championships (2)
Other European Tour (1)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
15 Aug 1979 PGA Championship 69-68-70-65=272−8Playoff Flag of the United States.svg Ben Crenshaw
221 Jun 1981 U.S. Open 68-68-70-67=273−73 strokes Flag of the United States.svg George Burns, Flag of the United States.svg Bill Rogers
324 Oct 1982 Trophée Lancôme 66-70-70-70=276−122 strokes Flag of Spain.svg Seve Ballesteros

European Tour playoff record (1–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
1 1979 PGA Championship Flag of the United States.svg Ben Crenshaw Won with birdie on third extra hole

PGA of Japan Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner-up
12 May 1976 Chunichi Crowns 72-68-69-67=276−41 stroke Flag of Japan (1870-1999).svg Yasuhiro Miyamoto

PGA of Japan Tour playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
1 1985 Taiheiyo Club Masters Flag of Japan (1870-1999).svg Tsuneyuki Nakajima Lost to birdie on first extra hole

Asia Golf Circuit wins (2)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner-up
122 Mar 1970 Thailand Open 74-72-71-69=286−21 stroke Flag of the Republic of China.svg Hsieh Min-Nan
219 Apr 1970 Yomiuri International 71-71-75-69=286−23 strokes Flag of New Zealand.svg Walter Godfrey

Asia Golf Circuit playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentsResult
1 1969 Singapore Open Flag of Japan (1870-1999).svg Tomio Kamata, Flag of England.svg Guy Wolstenholme Kamata won with birdie on third extra hole
Wolstenholme eliminated by par on first hole

PGA Tour of Australia wins (5)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
126 Oct 1975 Wills Masters 71-70-69-72=282−82 strokes Flag of Australia (converted).svg Rob McNaughton
220 Nov 1977 Australian Open 74-71-68-71=284−43 strokes Flag of the United States.svg Don January, Flag of the United States.svg Bruce Lietzke,
Flag of New Zealand.svg John Lister
328 Oct 1979 CBA West Lakes Classic 72-70-72-71=285−32 strokes Flag of Australia (converted).svg Bob Shearer, Flag of the United States.svg Gary Vanier
413 Oct 1985 Stefan Queensland Open 66-64-69-70=269−195 strokes Flag of Australia (converted).svg Paul Foley
511 Oct 1987 Konica Queensland Open (2)69-71-69-66=275−137 strokes Flag of Australia (converted).svg Vaughan Somers

PGA Tour of Australia playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
11983 National Panasonic New South Wales Open Flag of Australia (converted).svg Greg Norman Lost to par on second extra hole

New Zealand Golf Circuit wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner-up
12 Dec 1979 Air New Zealand Shell Open 70-67-69-73=279−58 strokes Flag of Australia (converted).svg Rodger Davis

British PGA wins (1)

Caribbean Tour wins (1)

Other Japan wins (2)

Other Australian wins (5)

Other Latin American wins (3)

Other wins (3)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
115 Nov 1970 World Cup
(with Flag of Australia (converted).svg Bruce Devlin)
131-136-131-146=544−3210 strokesFlag of Argentina.svg  ArgentinaRoberto De Vicenzo and Vicente Fernández
29 Oct 1976 Piccadilly World Match Play Championship 38 holes Flag of the United States.svg Hale Irwin
318 Oct 1981 Trophée Lancôme 71-72-67-70=280−85 strokes Flag of Japan (1870-1999).svg Isao Aoki, Flag of Scotland.svg Sandy Lyle

Senior PGA Tour wins (5)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
116 Feb 1997 GTE Classic 71-68-65=204−93 strokes Flag of the United States.svg Bob Dickson
230 Mar 1997 Southwestern Bell Dominion 68-69-69=206−101 stroke Flag of the United States.svg John Jacobs
321 Sep 1997 Comfort Classic 67-68-65=200−161 stroke Flag of the United States.svg Buddy Allin, Flag of the United States.svg Larry Nelson
41 Feb 1998 Royal Caribbean Classic 67-68-67=202−11Playoff Flag of the United States.svg Dave Stockton
517 Oct 1999 Raley's Gold Rush Classic 63-71-65=199−174 strokes Flag of the United States.svg Larry Mowry

Senior PGA Tour playoff record (1–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
1 1996 Emerald Coast Classic Flag of the United States.svg Bob Eastwood, Flag of the United States.svg Mike Hill,
Flag of the United States.svg Dave Stockton, Flag of the United States.svg Lee Trevino
Trevino won with birdie on first extra hole
2 1998 Royal Caribbean Classic Flag of the United States.svg Dave Stockton Won with birdie on tenth extra hole

Major championships

Wins (2)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunner(s)-up
1979 PGA Championship 4 shot deficit−8 (69–68–70–65=272)Playoff1 Flag of the United States.svg Ben Crenshaw
1981 U.S. Open 3 shot deficit−7 (68–68–70–67=273)3 strokes Flag of the United States.svg George Burns, Flag of the United States.svg Bill Rogers

1Defeated Crenshaw with birdie on third extra hole.

Results timeline

Tournament1970197119721973197419751976197719781979
Masters Tournament T36CUTT29T6T9WD
U.S. Open CUTCUTT47T58T18T29CUTCUTCUT7
The Open Championship T32CUTT11T28T21CUTT39
PGA Championship CUTCUT10T4CUTCUT1
Tournament1980198119821983198419851986198719881989
Masters Tournament 571946T6T10T28T27
U.S. Open T471T6T8T21T23T15T51T47T61
The Open Championship T29T14T27T14CUTT3T1134CUTT61
PGA Championship T26T43T49T14T48T32T7CUTT17CUT
Tournament199019911992199319941995
Masters Tournament
U.S. Open 6460
The Open Championship T8CUT
PGA Championship T66T52CUTCUTCUT
  Win
  Top 10
  Did not play

CUT = missed the halfway cut (3rd round cut in 1971, 1977 and 1984 Open Championships)
WD = withdrew
"T" indicates a tie for a place.

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts made
Masters Tournament 0001671412
U.S. Open 1001482217
The Open Championship 0011271914
PGA Championship 1002462213
Totals201516287756

Team appearances

See also

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References

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