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Hideki Matsuyama

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Nationality
  
Japan

U.S. Open
  
T10: 2013

Weight
  
75 kg

Turned professional
  
2013

Name
  
Hideki Matsuyama


Professional wins
  
7

Role
  
Professional golfer

Parents
  
Mikio Matsuyama

Masters Tournament
  
5th: 2015

Height
  
1.80 m

Hideki Matsuyama iimgurcomkUf0X25jpg

Born
  
25 February 1992 (age 32) Matsuyama, Ehime, Japan (
1992-02-25
)

College
  
Tohoku Fukushi University

Similar People
  
Ryo Ishikawa, Jordan Spieth, Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Adam Scott

Education
  
Tohoku Fukushi University

Current tours
  
Japan Golf Tour, PGA TOUR

Hideki Matsuyama extended highlights | Round 4 | Bridgestone


Hideki Matsuyama (松山 英樹, Matsuyama Hideki, born 25 February 1992) is a Japanese professional golfer. He won the Asian Amateur Championship in 2010 and 2011. He is a five-time PGA Tour winner, and an eight-time Japan Golf Tour winner. On 19 June 2017, Matsuyama became the world No. 2-ranked player on the Official World Golf Ranking after his runner-up finish at the 2017 U.S. Open.

Contents

Hideki Matsuyama Hideki Matsuyama apologizes after Ian Poulter39s Twitter rant

Hideki matsuyama claims his first pga tour victory at the memorial highlights


Early life and amateur career

Hideki Matsuyama GOLFWEEK PGA Tour golfer Hideki Matsuyama signs with IMG

Matsuyama was born in Matsuyama, Ehime, Japan. He was introduced to golf at the age of four, by his father. During his eighth grade, he transferred to Meitoku Gijuku Junior & Senior High School in Kochi Prefecture, in search for a better golf environment.

Hideki Matsuyama hidekimatsuyamasaturdayr640 GolfWRX

He has studied, since 2010, at Tohoku Fukushi University in Sendai. He won the 2010 Asian Amateur Championship with a score of 68-69-65-67=269. This gave him the chance to compete as an amateur in the 2011 Masters Tournament, becoming the first Japanese amateur to do so. At the Masters, Matsuyama was the leading amateur and won the Silver Cup, which is presented to the lowest scoring amateur. He was the only amateur to make the cut. A week after his victory, he finished in a tie for third at the Japan Open Golf Championship which is an event on the Japan Golf Tour.

Hideki Matsuyama Hideki Matsuyama Withdraws from Sony Open Outlook 2014

In 2011, Matsuyama won the gold medal at the 2011 World University Games. He also led the Japan team to the gold medal in the team event. In October 2011, he successfully defended his title at the Asian Amateur Championship. In November, Matsuyama won the Mitsui Sumitomo VISA Taiheiyo Masters on the Japan Golf Tour while still an amateur.

Hideki Matsuyama WAGR Player Hideki Matsuyama Pro

In August 2012, Matsuyama reached number one in the World Amateur Golf Ranking.

2013

Hideki Matsuyama Matsuyama wins Memorial The Japan Times

Matsuyama turned professional in April 2013 and won his second professional tournament, the 2013 Tsuruya Open on the Japan Golf Tour. Five weeks later, Matsuyama won his third title on the Japan Golf Tour at the Diamond Cup Golf tournament. Following a top 10 finish at the 2013 U.S. Open, Matsuyama entered the top 50 of the Official World Golf Ranking. He won his fourth Japan Golf Tour event in September at the Fujisankei Classic. Matsuyama would win his fifth Japan Golf Tour event in December at the Casio World Open. The win also made Matsuyama the first rookie to lead the Japan Tour's money list.

2014

For 2014, Matsuyama qualified for the PGA Tour through non-member earnings. In just seven PGA Tour-sanctioned events, Matsuyama had six top-25 finishes, including a T-6 at the 2013 Open Championship.

Matsuyama earned his first PGA Tour win at the 2014 Memorial Tournament, beating Kevin Na in a playoff and moving to a career-high OWGR ranking of 13th. The win was the first for a Japanese player since Ryuji Imada in 2008. In his first full season as a PGA tour member, he finished 28th in the FedEx Cup standings.

Matsuyama would win his sixth Japan Golf Tour event late in the 2014 season. In November, the victory came at the Dunlop Phoenix in a playoff over Hiroshi Iwata.

2015

Matsuyama finished fifth at the 2015 Masters Tournament, the best major finish of his career. He finished 16th in the FedEx Cup standings. In 8–11 October, he played for the International Team in the 2015 Presidents Cup and went 2–1–1 (win–loss–half).

2016

On 7 February 2016, Matsuyama won the Waste Management Phoenix Open in a playoff with Rickie Fowler. He secured his victory on the fourth hole. The win moved him to 12th in the Official World Golf Ranking, the highest in his career.

On 16 October 2016, Matsuyama captured the Japan Open by three strokes over Yuta Ikeda and Lee Kyoung-hoon. The win was Matsuyama's first title at his country's national open and his seventh victory in Japan. The title gives Matsuyama victories in four of the Japan Golf Tour's five ¥200,000,000 events.

On 30 October 2016, Matsuyama followed up his Japan Open triumph by winning the WGC-HSBC Champions, colloquially known as "Asia's Major", in Shanghai. Matsuyama became the first Asian golfer to claim a World Golf Championship since the series was inaugurated in 1999. With the victory, Matsuyama rose to number 6 in the Official World Golf Ranking, his highest position and the second highest ever by a Japanese player after Masashi Ozaki, who achieved a ranking of fifth. He later moved up to fifth in the world after the Farmers Insurance Open.

On 13 November 2016, Matsuyama won his second Taiheiyo Masters, following his victory as a 19-year-old amateur in 2011. He romped to a seven-shot win over South Korea's Song Young-han.

On 4 December 2016, Matsuyama won the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas.

2017

In Matsuyama's return to the Waste Management Phoenix Open, he again entered a playoff on Sunday to defend his title, this time against Webb Simpson. On the fourth playoff hole, Matsuyama made birdie to win the tournament for the second time in as many years. After finishing second in the 2017 U.S. Open at Erin Hills, while the top three players in the world at the time (Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy and Jason Day) failed to make the cut, Matsuyama reached 2nd in the Official World Golf Ranking, his highest ever, and the highest ever for a male Japanese golfer.

The 2017 season has been a breakthrough year with Matsuyama winning three Tour titles, including his first World Golf Championship, and three second-place finishes in his first 15 events, as well as winning $5,945,990, putting him second on the money list behind Dustin Johnson, before the month of July. He then won the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in August, shooting a course record-tying 61 in the final round to win by five strokes.

At the 2017 PGA Championship, Matsuyama continued his excellent form with opening rounds of 70-64 to share the 36-hold lead, with Kevin Kisner at Quail Hollow.

Amateur wins (5)

  • 2010 Asian Amateur Championship
  • 2011 Japan Collegiate Championship, World University Games, Asian Amateur Championship
  • 2012 Japan Collegiate Championship
  • PGA Tour wins (5)

    PGA Tour playoff record (3–0)

    Other wins (1)

  • 2016 Hero World Challenge
  • Results in major championships

    LA = Low amateur
    CUT = missed the half-way cut
    "T" indicates a tie for a place

    Summary

  • Most consecutive cuts made – 8 (2014 U.S. Open – 2016 Masters)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 2 (2013 U.S. Open – 2013 Open Championship)
  • Results timeline

    Results not in chronological order prior to 2015.

  • DNP = Did not play
  • WD = Withdrew
  • QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play
  • "T" = tied
  • Green background for win, yellow background for top-10.
  • PGA Tour career summary

    * As of 14 August 2017

    Team appearances

    Amateur

  • Eisenhower Trophy (representing Japan): 2008, 2012
  • World University Games (representing Japan): 2011 (winners)
  • Professional

  • Presidents Cup (representing the International team): 2013, 2015, 2017
  • World Cup (representing Japan): 2016
  • References

    Hideki Matsuyama Wikipedia


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