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Mark McNulty

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Full name
  
Mark William McNulty

College
  
None

Height
  
5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)

Turned professional
  
1977

Weight
  
160 lb (73 kg; 11 st)

Name
  
Mark McNulty

Nationality
  
Zimbabwe Ireland


Mark McNulty Mark McNulty Stats News Pictures Bio Videos ESPN

Born
  
25 October 1953 (age 70) Bindura, Southern Rhodesia (
1953-10-25
)

Champions tour on the course with mark mcnulty sas championship


Mark William McNulty (born 25 October 1953) is an Irish/Zimbabwean professional golfer currently playing on the Champions Tour. He was one of the leading players on the European Tour from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, and cracked the top 10 of the Official World Golf Ranking for 83 weeks from 1987 to 1992.

Contents

Mark McNulty McNulty blitzes SA Senior Open field on Day 1 Sport24

McNulty was born in Bindura, Southern Rhodesia (now known as Zimbabwe). He was raised on a farm in the Centenary area of Zimbabwe. His step-father was an amateur pilot who had an airstrip on the farm. When his step-father was diagnosed with epilepsy, he was forced to give up flying. He converted the airstrip into a three-hole golf course, where Mark first learned to play golf.

Mark McNulty Mark McNulty Bio Facts Family Famous Birthdays

McNulty became an Irish citizen in 2003 at the age of 50. He was eligible to do so because his maternal grandmother was born in Ballymena in Northern Ireland. He explained that his reason for doing so was his concern that as a non-resident Zimbabwean it could take him up to two years to get his passport renewed if he lost it. Commentators elaborated that the farm that his family had been managing for 40-something years had been confiscated by the Mugabe regime. He currently lives in Sunningdale, England.

Champions tour mark mcnulty using the swingyde training aid


Career

After a successful amateur career, McNulty began his professional career on the Southern African Tour (now the Sunshine Tour) and also played on the European Tour starting in 1978. His first professional win was the 1979 Holiday Inns Royal Swazi Sun Open in South Africa. By 1986 he was a dominant player on the Southern African Tour, picking up seven official wins in that year and also winning South Africa's most lucrative event, the Million Dollar Challenge. In the same year he finished in the top ten on the European Tour's Order of Merit for the first time, placing sixth. He had six top ten European Order of Merit finishes in total, including second places in 1987 and 1990. The last of these was in 1996, when he came fifth. His win tally on the European Tour was sixteen, including the 1996 Volvo Masters, which was the European equivalent of the PGA Tour's Tour Championship. He won the Sunshine Tour Order of Merit nine times: 1980/81, 1981/82, 1984/85, 1985/86, 1986/87, 1992/93, 1996/97, 1997/98, 2000/01.

When McNulty turned fifty and became eligible to play senior golf he chose to take part in the U.S.-based Champions Tour. His first full season in 2004 was highly successful with three wins (including the Charles Schwab Cup Championship) and a seventh-place finish on the money list. In 2007 he won the JELD-WEN Tradition, one of the five major championships on the over-50 tour. It was McNulty's sixth career win on the Champions Tour. His seventh win came in 2009 at the Principal Charity Classic with a playoff win over Nick Price and Fred Funk.

McNulty lists his interests as piano, fine arts and koi fish.

Amateur wins (2)

  • 1974 Rhodesia Amateur Championship
  • 1977 South African Amateur Stroke Play Championship
  • European Tour wins (16)

    European Tour playoff record (2–2)

    Sunshine Tour wins (33)

  • 1979 (1) Holiday Inns Royal Swazi Sun Open
  • 1981 (1) SAB South African Masters
  • 1982 (4) SISA Classic, SAB Masters, Sharp Electronics Classic, Sun City Classic
  • 1984 (1) Pan Am Wild Coast Sun Classic
  • 1985 (3) Palabora Classic, Hollard Royal Swazi Sun Open, Safmarine Masters
  • 1986 (7) Safmarine Masters, Wild Coast Classic, Barclays Bank Classic, Swazi Sun Pro Am, Trustbank Tournament of Champions, Helix Wild Coast Classic, Germiston Centenary Tournament
  • 1987 (4) Southern Suns South African Open, AECI Charity Classic, Royal Swazi Sun Pro-Am, Trustbank Tournament of Champion
  • 1992 (1) Zimbabwe Open (co-sanctioned with the Challenge Tour)
  • 1993 (2) Lexington PGA Championship, FNB Players Championship
  • 1996 (1) Zimbabwe Open
  • 1997 (2) San Lameer SA Masters, Nashua Wild Coast Sun Challenge
  • 1998 (1) Vodacom Players Championship
  • 2000 (1) Stenham Swazi Open
  • 2000–01 (3) CABS Old Mutual Zimbabwe Open, Nashua Nedtel Cellular Masters, Mercedes-Benz South African Open (co-sanctioned with the European Tour)
  • 2002–03 (1) Vodacom Players Championship
  • Other wins (3)

  • 1980 (1) Malaysian Open
  • 1986 (1) Million Dollar Challenge
  • 1988 (1) Benson and Hedges Trophy (with Marie-Laure de Lorenzi) (Spain)
  • Champions Tour wins (8)

    Champions Tour playoff record (3–1)

    Results in major championships

    DNP = Did not play
    WD = Withdrew
    CUT = missed the half-way cut
    "T" indicates a tie for a place
    Yellow background for top-10

    Summary

  • Most consecutive cuts made – 9 (1989 Open Championship – 1993 Open Championship)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 2 (1990 Open Championship – 1990 PGA)
  • Results timeline

    Results not in chronological order before 2017.

    DNP = Did not play
    CUT = missed the halfway cut
    "T" indicates a tie for a place
    Green background for wins. Yellow background for top-10.

    Team appearances

    Amateur

  • Eisenhower Trophy (representing Rhodesia): 1974
  • Professional

  • Alfred Dunhill Cup (representing Zimbabwe): 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000
  • World Cup (representing Zimbabwe): 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001
  • Presidents Cup (International team): 1994, 1996
  • Alfred Dunhill Challenge (representing Southern Africa): 1995 (winners)
  • UBS Cup (representing the Rest of the World): 2004
  • References

    Mark McNulty Wikipedia