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Kel Nagle

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Nickname
  
"The Pymble Crusher"

Other
  
18

Weight
  
86 kg

Nationality
  
Australia

Name
  
Kel Nagle

PGA tour wins
  
2

Turned professional
  
1946

Role
  
Golfer

PGA tour of australasia wins
  
61

Professional wins
  
81

Height
  
1.79 m


Kel Nagle RIP Kel Nagle GeoffShackelfordcom With GolfDigest

Full name
  
Kelvin David George Nagle

Born
  
21 December 1920North Sydney, Australia (
1920-12-21
)

Died
  
January 29, 2015, Sydney, Australia

Former tours
  
PGA Tour of Australasia, PGA European Tour, Champions Tour

Australian golfer kel nagle wins the 100th british open golf tournament in st an hd stock footage


Kelvin David George Nagle AM (21 December 1920 – 29 January 2015) was an Australian professional golfer best known for winning The Open Championship in 1960. He won at least one tournament each year from 1949 to 1975.

Contents

Kel Nagle KelNagle1954jpg

Australia s east win in canada cup won by kel nagle and peter thomson 1950 1959


Biography

Kel Nagle Australian former Open Championship winner Kel Nagle dies

Nagle was born in North Sydney. Because of five-and-a-half years of World War II military service (1939–45), Nagle got a late start on pro golf, as he played no golf between ages 19 and 24, and turned pro at age 25 (1946). He made up for lost time by winning at least one tournament each year from 1949 to 1975. During his early career, he had a long swing and was regarded as the longest hitter on the Australasia tour, as evidenced by the Australian press dubbing him as "the Pymble Crusher". By age 39 (in 1960, when he won The Open Championship), Nagle had shortened his swing and become a straight hitter with what Gary Player described as "the best short game out here".

Kel Nagle Golf world mourns Aussie great Kel Nagle SBS News

Although he had won over 30 tournaments in Australia, and had won the Canada Cup for Australia in partnership with five-time Open champion Peter Thomson in 1954 and 1959, Nagle was a shock winner of The Open, as he was 39 years old but had never finished in the top-10 at a major championship before. Thomson told Nagle a few weeks prior to the 1960 Open championship that he "had the game" to win and that "you can beat me". He beat the rising star of American golf Arnold Palmer into second place, and it was Palmer who deprived him of his title in 1961. Although he never regained The Open title, Kel Nagle had six top-five finishes at the Open between 1960 and 1966 (ages 39 to 45). His best result in a United States major was second in the 1965 U.S. Open—the year after he won the Canadian Open—when he and Gary Player finished the 72-hole tournament in a tie. Nagle lost to Player the next day in an 18-hole playoff, during which Nagle hit a female spectator in the forehead on the fifth hole and was visibly affected to the point that he hit another spectator on the same hole. Player won the playoff by 3 strokes.

Kel Nagle Kel Nagle dies at 94 Australian golfer won the British

As late as 1970, the year he turned 50, Nagle was ranked among the top ten players in the world on the McCormack's World Golf Rankings, the forerunner of the modern world ranking system. Nagle won 61 times on the PGA Tour of Australasia, giving him the most wins all-time on that tour, 30 wins ahead of Greg Norman, whose 31 wins sit in second place. Nagle played on the Senior PGA Tour (now Champions Tour) in the U.S. in the 1980s, when he was in his 60s and early 70s. His best finishes were a pair of T-3s: at the 1981 Eureka Federal Savings Classic and the 1982 Peter Jackson Champions. In his final round at the 1982 Charlie Pride Invitational (Four Hills CC Albuquerque, NM), he "shot his age" of 71. In July 2007, Nagle was elected to the World Golf Hall of Fame, and was inducted in November 2007.

Kel Nagle 2smsupernetworkcomwpwpcontentuploads201501

Nagle died in Sydney on 29 January 2015 at the age of 94.

Recognition

  • 1980 – Member of the Order of Australia for the service to the sport of golf.
  • 1986 – Sport Australia Hall of Fame inductee.
  • 2001 – Australian Sports Medal
  • 2005 – Kel Nagle Plate, presented annually to the best performing rookie in the Australian PGA Championship.
  • 2007 – World Golf Hall of Fame inductee.
  • Australasian Tour wins (61)

  • 1949 (1) Australian PGA Championship
  • 1950 (1) WA Open
  • 1951 (4) North Coast Open, New South Wales Open, WA Open, ACT Open
  • 1952 (3) North Coast Open, WA Open, NSW PGA Championship
  • 1953 (3) NSW PGA Championship, Adelaide Advertiser Tournament, McWilliam's Wines Tournament
  • 1954 (4) Australian PGA Championship, North Coast Open, Lakes Open, ACT Open
  • 1955 (2) North Coast Open, NSW PGA Championship
  • 1956 (1) NSW PGA Championship
  • 1957 (4) New South Wales Open, New Zealand Open, New Zealand PGA Championship, Lakes Open
  • 1958 (5) New Zealand Open, New Zealand PGA Championship, Australian PGA Championship, Lakes Open, Adelaide Advertiser Tournament
  • 1959 (5) Australian Open, Australian PGA Championship, Queensland Open, NSW PGA Championship, Ampol Tournament (tie with Gary Player)
  • 1960 (1) New Zealand PGA Championship
  • 1962 (3) New Zealand Open, Victorian PGA Championship, Adelaide Advertiser Tournament
  • 1964 (2) New Zealand Open, Queensland Open
  • 1965 (2) Australian PGA Championship, NSW PGA Championship
  • 1966 (2) Wills Masters, West End Tournament (tie with Murray Crafter)
  • 1967 (3) Victorian Open, New Zealand Open, West End Tournament
  • 1968 (4) New South Wales Open, New Zealand Open, Australian PGA Championship, West End Tournament
  • 1969 (2) New Zealand Open, Victorian Open
  • 1970 (1) New Zealand PGA Championship
  • 1971 (1) NSW PGA Championship
  • 1972 (1) West End Tournament
  • 1973 (1) New Zealand PGA Championship
  • 1974 (2) New Zealand PGA Championship, West End Tournament
  • 1975 (2) New Zealand PGA Championship, South Coast Open
  • 1977 (1) Western Australia PGA Championship
  • PGA Tour wins (2)

    Major championship is shown in bold.

    PGA Tour playoff record (0–1)

    Other wins (14)

  • 1954 Canada Cup (with Peter Thomson), Riverside and Tasmanian Tyre Services £500 Tournament
  • 1959 Canada Cup (with Peter Thomson)
  • 1961 French Open, Hong Kong Open, Swiss Open, Irish Hospitals Tournament, Dunlop Tournament
  • 1962 Bowmaker Tournament
  • 1963 Esso Golden Tournament, Lake Karrinyup Bowl
  • 1965 Bowmaker Tournament
  • 1967 Esso Golden Tournament (tie with Peter Thomson)
  • 1971 Volvo Open
  • Senior wins (5)

    this list may be incomplete

  • 1971 Pringle of Scotland Seniors Championship, World Seniors
  • 1973 Pringle of Scotland Seniors Championship
  • 1975 PGA Seniors Championship, World Seniors
  • Results timeline

    CUT = missed the half-way cut (3rd round cut in 1974 Open Championship)
    "T" = tied

    Summary

  • Most consecutive cuts made – 6 (twice)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 2 (1965 U.S. Open – 1965 Open Championship)
  • Team appearances

  • Canada Cup (representing Australia): 1954 (winners), 1955, 1958, 1959 (winners), 1960, 1961, 1962, 1965, 1966
  • References

    Kel Nagle Wikipedia