Hale Irwin is an American professional golfer. He was one of the world’s leading golfers from the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s. He is one of the few players in history to win three U.S. Opens, becoming the oldest ever the U.S.
Open champion in 1990 at the age of 45. As a senior golfer, Irwin ranks first all-time in PGA Tour Champions victories. He is widely regarded as the greatest player in Champions Tour history.
Along with Gary Player, David Graham, Bernhard Langer, and Justin Rose, Irwin is one of five golfers to win official tournaments on all six continents on which golf is played. He has also developed a career as a golf course architect.
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Hale Irwin was born on June 3, 1945, in Joplin, Missouri United States of America. He was born in Joplin, Missouri, and raised in Baxter Springs, Kansas, and Boulder, Colorado. He is 74 years old as of 2019.
Hale Irwin is an American professional golfer who has an estimated net worth of $ 17 million dollars as of 2019.
Hale Irwin was a star athlete in football, baseball, and golf at Boulder High School and graduated in 1963. He then attended the University of Colorado, where he was a two-time All-Big Eight defensive back, as well as an academic All-American in football.
Hale Irwin is married to wife Sally and has two children. Irwin’s son Steve qualified for the 2011 U.S. Open. Steve Irwin said of his father: “I’m very proud of him. The U.S. Open is what truly defined his career. It’s been my ultimate goal in golf to play in the U.S. Open since I began competing.”
Hale Irwin was born on June 3, 1945, in Joplin, Missouri, to Hale and Mabel Irwin, though he was raised mostly in Kansas and Colorado. Irwin’s father was an excavation contractor who spent his weekends on the golf course.
As a youngster, Irwin learned the game from him and never took a formal golf lesson. Irwin’s first clubs were adult ones cut down to his size and fitted with electrical tape grips. By the age of seven, Irwin could play a nine-hole course.
Hale Irwin had 20 victories on the PGA Tour beginning with the 1971 Sea Pines Heritage Classic and finishing with the 1994 MCI Heritage Golf Classic and won prize money of just under six million dollars. In 1994 he won the Heritage win at the age 49 which made him one of the oldest winners in Tour history.
His tournament victories kept him ranked high among his peers and ranked among the top five McCormack’s World Golf Rankings in every year from 1975 to 1979, inclusive. He ranked in the top-10 of the Official World Golf Rankings for a few weeks in 1991.
Irwin’s first U.S. Open triumph came at Winged Foot in 1974 at the age of 29. In what became known as “The Massacre at Winged Foot”, Irwin won with a score of 7-over par, the second-highest winning score in relation to par of any U.S. Open since 1945.
The course conditions at Winged Foot in 1974 were described as “brutal”. Johnny Miller and several other players suggested that the USGA had intentionally made the Winged Foot course setup particularly treacherous in response to Miller’s record-breaking round of 63 at Oakmont the year before.
Irwin, however, said in 1974: “I’ve always enjoyed playing tough courses. It’s much more of a challenge to me.” Irwin earned $35,000 for his victory at Winged Foot and said that he had a vivid dream three weeks earlier that he won the U.S. Open, which he only told his wife about.
Hale Irwin won the Piccadilly World Match Play Championship at Wentworth Club in 1974 and 1975. He missed out on a record-breaking third straight victory when he was beaten in 1976 final by Australian David Graham on the second sudden-death playoff hole.
Between 1974 and 1977, Irwin had four consecutive top-5 finishes at The Masters. In 1977, Irwin’s three wins on the PGA Tour included a five-shot victory in the Colgate Hall of Fame Classic at Pinehurst Resort.
Irwin shot a second round of 62 at Pinehurst for a 15-under par opening 36-hole total of 127, which was the best in any PGA Tour event for over a decade.
Between January 1975 to the end of the 1978 season, Irwin made the cut in 86 consecutive PGA Tour events. To date, this is the fourth-longest streak of consecutive cuts made on the PGA Tour, behind Tiger Woods (142), Byron Nelson (113) and Jack Nicklaus (105).
Irwin added a second U.S. Open title in 1979 at Inverness Club. With its narrow fairways and heavy rough, the Inverness course was a stern test for the players. Irwin’s final round of 75 tied the post-World War II tournament record for the highest final-round score by the U.S.
Open champion. The next month in The Open Championship at Royal Lytham & St Annes, Irwin came to the final round with a two-shot lead. He was bidding to become only the third golfer since 1945 to win the U.S.
Open and The Open Championship in the same year after Ben Hogan (1953) and Lee Trevino (1971) – a feat later matched by Tom Watson (1982) and Tiger Woods (2000). Irwin said in 1979: “I would dearly love to win the British Open.
It is special.” However, he was thwarted in his attempt at a historic double by the incredible recovery play of Seve Ballesteros.
In 1983, Irwin had another close tilt at The Open Championship but lost by a shot to Tom Watson at Royal Birkdale, after whiffing on a tiny putt of about an inch, during his third round of play.
Hale Irwin said that his mistake, which cost him the chance of a playoff with Watson, was “a mental lapse” and that he learned a lesson from it, later being very careful on short putts.
Irwin said in an interview in 2000 that the greatest disappointment of his career was not at the British Open, but at the 1984 U.S. Open at Winged Foot. Irwin had led the tournament after the first three rounds but shot a final round of 79 to finish 6th.
Reflecting on his final round collapse, Irwin said: “A number of factors were in play and it was very emotional. I thought it would be great to win 10 years later at the same venue and, more than anything else, my father was dying of cancer then and I thought it would be wonderful to give him a victory. I destroyed myself with the pressures I’d built up.”
After his victory in the 1985 Memorial Tournament, Irwin had occasional top-10 finishes in tournaments for the rest of the 1980s, but he did not have a further official PGA Tour win until an incredible year in 1990, which was capped by his third U.S. Open victory.
In a remarkable tournament, Irwin holed an improbable 45-foot (14 m) birdie putt on the 72nd hole to join a playoff against fellow American Mike Donald. In the 18-hole Monday playoff, Donald was two shots ahead of Irwin with three holes to play.
Donald missed a 15-foot par putt on the 18th which would have given him victory. Both men shot rounds of 74 in the playoff and Irwin won the title with a birdie on the first sudden-death playoff hole.
After becoming the oldest ever U.S. Open champion at the age of 45, winning his first PGA Tour event for five years, Irwin was gracious in victory. He said of his playoff opponent Mike Donald: “God bless him. I almost wish he had won.”
During his career, he won professional tournaments on all six continents on which golf is played: Africa, Australia, Asia, Europe, North America, and South America.
He also played on five Ryder Cup teams: 1975, 1977, 1979, 1981, and 1991. He was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1992.
Former U.S. Open champion and television analyst Ken Venturi said of Irwin: “Aesthetically and technically, Hale stands at the ball as well as any player I’ve ever seen.”
Irwin turned 50 in 1995 and joined the Senior Tour, now called the Champions Tour. By 1997, he was on fire. That year, Irwin entered 23 events and ended up with 18 top-ten finishes, including nine victories.
Hale Irwin also became the first Champions Tour player to top $2 million in one season. In 1998, he won seven times and earned nearly $3 million. Those two years, Irwin won more money than anyone else in golf.
This was a phenomenal accomplishment considering the rewards are higher on the PGA Tour. Irwin was named Champions Tour Player of the Year in 1997, 1998, and 2002.
Irwin said the key to his success has been rest and relaxation. He does not practice much during the off-season so that he can return to the sport with renewed vigor. “I start by analyzing my swing,” he told Jerry Potter of USA Today.
“Then I break it down to the basics: grip, grip pressure, stance.” About ten days before the first game, he starts hitting balls, then plays himself back into shape during the competitions.
This technique works. In 2004, Irwin became the winningest player in Champions Tour history when he captured his 40th tournament title.
Most players do not last long on the Champions Tour, which they can enter at 50. Before Irwin, most golfers saw their skills diminish by the time they reached 55 or 56 and quit being serious contenders. Irwin, however, has shown that for some, the game can go on.
Hale Irwin explained that using the scythe was good preparation for a golf career. “It was such a long, difficult tool to use that you had to take up a well-balanced footing and move it very easily and rhythmically with a backswing and through the swing.
Because the golf club is so light and easy to move, by comparison, there is so often a tendency to rush the swing… In no way was that possible with a scythe.
I have always carried that image in my mind … and have added to it over the years because not only is golf a game of smooth rhythm, but also an act of continuous acceleration.”
Irwin qualified to play on the over-50 Senior PGA Tour (now Champions Tour) in 1995 and enjoyed even greater success at this level than he did on the PGA Tour. Through the 2014 season, he is the career leader in wins and earnings with 45 victories and over $26 million.
Irwin won three consecutive PGA Seniors’ Championships between 1996 and 1998, including a 12-stroke victory in the 1997 tournament, which was the largest ever margin of victory in a 72-hole Champions Tour event until Bernhard Langer’s 13-stroke victory in the 2014 Senior Open Championship.
Irwin’s nine victories in 1997 tied the Senior Tour record set by Peter Thomson in 1985. Irwin won the U.S. Senior Open in 1998 and 2000 for a career total of five USGA titles.
Hale Irwin narrowly missed out on a third U.S. Senior Open title in 2004 when he finished one stroke behind Peter Jacobsen.
Irwin is the oldest player to finish in the top five in a senior major, with a third-place finish at the 2012 Senior PGA Championship at the age of 66.
In the 2012 3M Championship, Irwin shot a score under his age for the first time in his career. His round of 65 included an eagle on the 9th hole and six consecutive birdies on the back nine. In 2000, Irwin was ranked as the 19th greatest golfer of all time by Golf Digest magazine.
For 25 years, Hale Irwin helped to raise money for the St. Louis Children’s Hospital, which named a wing in his honor. Irwin also enjoys hunting and fishing and spending time with his grandchildren. He is the uncle of former CU lineman Heath Irwin.
In 2019, in acknowledgment of his character, sportsmanship, and commitment to charity, Hale Irwin received the PGA Tour’s Payne Stewart Award presented by Southern Company.
His father introduced him to the game of golf when he was 4 years old. He broke 70 for the first time at the age of 14. Irwin was a star athlete in football, baseball, and golf at Boulder High School and graduated in 1963.
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