Top Senior Golf Pros
Tommy Bolt also known as "Thunder" or
"Terrible Tommy" got his nicknames because on the green he had
quite a temper. Tommy had fifteen tour wins and one major win
in a championship game back in 1958. Tommy was born in 1918 and
made it into the World Golf Hall of fame and was a member of
the Ryder Cup team twice.
His senior golf years were spent winning the PGA Seniors
Golf Championship in 1969 after which he became a key player in
the creation of the Champion Tour formerly the Senior PGA. He
had a temper and through his clubs, but he knew the game. At
the age of eighty, Bolt was still playing senior golf.
Gene Littler was born in 1930 and became
pro golfer. Gene had twenty-nine tour wins with the PGA and
eight wins with the Senior PGA. In 1961, he gained one win in
the U.S. Open.
He also took a win in the Amateur in 1953. He was a member
of the World Golf Hall of fame, Walker Cup Team as well as
eight Ryder Cup teams. He was voted Comeback Player of the Year
in 1973. After taking a break from senior golf in 1972, Gene
came back and won in Saint Louis. He did have a great career in
the golfing circle.
Cary Middlecoff was born in 1921 and died
in 1998. Cary had forty tour wins and three major wins. He was
a member of the World Hall of Fame, the Tennessee Sports Hall
of Fame and in 1956 he won the Vardon Trophy. Cary was a great
senior golf pro and was dentist before joining the PGA. He
wrote a book called the "Golf Swing" as well as did some
broadcasting before he died. He was known as slow paced senior
golf pro.
Harry Cooper was born in 1904 and died in
2000. He Cooper took thirty-one tour wins, but had no
championship wins in the majors. In 1937, he won the Vardon
trophy and was a leader in money win with the PGA. He was a
member of the World Hall of Fame. Cooper went on to teach
golfing lessons in New York for twenty-six years. He then moved
to the Westchester Country Club were he continued teaching
until he was ninety-three years old.
Ben Hogan was another great senior golf pro
who was born in 1912 and died in 1997. Hogan had sixty-four
tour wins and nine major championship wins. Hogan was also a
member of the World Golf Hall of Fame and won the Vardon Trophy
in 1940, 1948 and 1941. Ben Hogan played his first tour event
in 1932 and won the money purse of $8.50. In 1927, Hogan turned
pro at the age of seventeen. Hogan also had golf clubs that
bore his name and were considered some of the best clubs one
could buy for many years.
This shows you that you can be a senior golfer for as long
as you want.
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