Full name Ian Stanley Masters Tournament DNP Height 1.80 m PGA tour of australasia wins 19 Professional wins 28 Role Golfer European tour 1 | Turned professional 1970 Name Ian Stanley European seniors tour 3 Nationality Australia U.S. Open DNP Residence Melbourne, Australia | |
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Born 14 November 1948 (age 76)
Melbourne, Australia ( 1948-11-14 ) Former tours PGA Tour of Australasia, PGA European Tour, European Senior Tour |
Ian Stanley (born 14 November 1948) is an Australian professional golfer.
Contents
- Amateur wins 3
- PGA Tour of Australia wins 19
- Other wins 5
- Other senior wins 2
- Results in major championships
- Team appearances
- References
Stanley was born in Melbourne. He started playing at the age of 14 at the old Amstel Golf Club which backed onto his parents' home in Notting Hill. In 1966, he won both the Club Championship and Junior Championship and, later in the same year, won the Victorian School Boys at Huntingdale Golf Club. As Amstel was moving to a new site in Cranbourne, Stanley was asked to join Huntingdale, where he honed his game under the watchful eye of club professional Geoff Flanagan. In 1967, he won the Victorian Junior Championship at Huntingdale and in 1969, he went on to win both the Junior and Senior Club Championships (also played at Huntingdale). He followed this up with his second Victorian Junior Championship win all in the same year.
After turning professional in 1970, Ian served a three-year apprenticeship under the guidance of Geoff Flanagan. Stanley was a prolific tournament winner in Australasia from the mid-1970s through the early 1990s. He also spent seven years on the European Tour in the 1970s, where he was joint winner of the 1975 Martini International with Christy O'Connor Jnr, and finished inside the top-60 on the Order of Merit six times with a best end of season ranking of 27th in 1975.
In the early 1990s, Stanley joined Australia's first pay TV sports channel, Premier Sports, commentating on European and American tournaments. This led to the highly rated Golf Show which is still successfully running on Fox Sports today.
From 1977 to 1978, Stanley worked with David Inglis in establishing the Australian Masters and obtaining sponsorships for the first tournament in 1979.
After the tragic accident which injured Jack Newton in July 1983, Stanley, with other businessmen, set up the Jack Newton Trust. Stanley travelled around Australia raising money through exhibitions and guest speaking engagements. This concluded with a sell-out sportsmen's night held at the Southern Cross Hotel in September 1983.
In 1983, Stanley was approached by the PGA to take Newton's position on the board where Stanley tried to establish an Accident & Sickness policy for each player, which was unfortunately voted against in the 1986 PGA annual meeting.
After turning 50, Stanley joined the European Seniors Tour, and in 2001 he won the PGA Seniors Championship, then the Senior British Open on his way to topping the Order of Merit. In total, he has three wins on the European Seniors Tour.
On retiring from the Senior tour in 2004, Stanley joined golf design and architect firm, Thomson Perrett where his principal design stage was golf greens. Stanley also project managed courses in Australia and China. The main golf courses in Australia included Ballarat Golf Club, Sandhurst Golf Club, Silverwoods at Yarawonga, Mandalay Golf Club and Manly Golf Club, Sydney (greens and bunker designs).
Stanley was a director of not-for-profit organisation Tee Up for Kids, which raises money for underprivileged children in Victoria.
Stanley has been married to his wife Pam since 1971. Together they have three daughters.
Amateur wins (3)
PGA Tour of Australia wins (19)
Other wins (5)
Other senior wins (2)
Results in major championships
Note: The Open Championship was the only major Stanley played.
DNP = Did not play
CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" = tied