Full name Martin A. Fleckman Masters Tournament CUT: 1969 Height 1.78 m PGA tour wins 1 Turned professional 1967 Role Golfer Former tours PGA TOUR | College University of Houston Name Marty Fleckman Education University of Houston U.S. Open T18: 1967 Weight 77 kg Professional wins 1 | |
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Born April 23, 1944 (age 80) Port Arthur, Texas ( 1944-04-23 ) |
Swing perfector marty fleckman former pga player
Martin A. Fleckman (born April 23, 1944) is an American professional golfer who played on the PGA Tour in the 1960s and 1970s.
Contents
- Swing perfector marty fleckman former pga player
- Marty Fleckmans September Golf Tip of the Month
- Amateur wins 4
- PGA Tour wins 1
- Team appearances
- References
Born in Port Arthur, Texas, Fleckman credits Byron Nelson, Carl Lohren, and Jim Hardy with teaching him how to play golf. At the age of 20 in 1964, Fleckman won the individual title at the Texas State Amateur. In 1965, he won the NCAA Championship while at the University of Houston, where he was a three-time All-American member of the golf team: third-team in 1964, first-team in 1965 and 1966. He was a member of the Walker Cup team in 1967.
While still an amateur, Fleckman played in the U.S. Open at Baltusrol in 1967. He led after the first and third rounds, but shot 80 (+10) on Sunday amid a surge by eventual champion Jack Nicklaus. The last amateur to lead the U.S. Open at 54 holes was Johnny Goodman, 34 years earlier in 1933. (Seven years earlier in 1960, Nicklaus led as an amateur during the final round.) Fleckman finished in a tie for 18th place and was the low amateur, a stroke ahead of Bob Murphy, who shot 69 in the final round.
In his first start on the PGA Tour in December 1967, Fleckman won the Cajun Classic Open Invitational in a playoff. At Oakbourne Country Club in Lafayette, Louisiana, he sank a 30-foot (9 m) birdie putt on the first extra hole to defeat Jack Montgomery and take the winner's share of $5,000. It was his third consecutive birdie, finishing regulation play with two. Fleckman is only one of four other players to win his first tour event, and has since been joined by Ben Crenshaw (1973), Robert Gamez (1990), and Garrett Willis (2001). His best finish in a major was a tie for fourth at the PGA Championship in 1968.
Fleckman was inducted into the Texas Golf Hall of Fame in 1986 and the University of Houston Hall of Honor in 2006. He also received the prestigious 2007 Teacher of the Year Award for the Southern Texas Section of the PGA. He currently works as director of golf instruction at Blackhorse Teaching Center in Texas.
Marty Fleckman’s September Golf Tip of the Month
Amateur wins (4)
PGA Tour wins (1)
PGA Tour playoff record (1–0)
Team appearances
Amateur