Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Tony Jacklin

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full name
  
Anthony Jacklin

Name
  
Tony Jacklin

Nationality
  
England

Role
  
Golfer


Turned professional
  
1962

Height
  
1.75 m

Retired
  
2004

Weight
  
82 kg

Tony Jacklin US Open The world is Justin Rose39s oyster Tony Jacklin

Born
  
7 July 1944 (age 79) Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, England (
1944-07-07
)

Residence
  
Bradenton, Florida, U.S.

Former tour(s)
  
European Tour European Seniors Tour PGA Tour Champions Tour

Spouse
  
Astrid Jacklin (m. 1988), Vivien Jacklin (m. 1966–1988)

Children
  
Sean Jacklin, Bradley Jacklin, Warren Jacklin, A J Jacklin, Tina Jacklin, Anna May Jacklin

Parents
  
Arthur David Jacklin, Doris Lillian Jacklin

Books
  
Jacklin: the champion's own story, Jacklin's Golf Secrets

Gw swing thoughts tony jacklin


Anthony Jacklin CBE (born 7 July 1944) is an English golfer, who was the most successful British player of his generation, winning two major championships. He was also the most successful European Ryder Cup captain ever.

Contents

Tony Jacklin Seniors Open Tony Jacklin couldn39t resist final swansong

Gw my best shot tony jacklin


Early life and education

Tony Jacklin wwwjacklindesigngroupcomTonyJacklinfilesP12jpg

Jacklin was born in the North Lincolnshire town of Scunthorpe in 1944, the son of a truck driver. He attended Henderson Avenue Primary School in the town. He turned professional in 1962.

Playing career

Tony Jacklin Tony Jacklin SMC Entertainment

In 1969, Jacklin became the first British player to win The Open Championship in 18 years, winning by two strokes at Royal Lytham & St Annes. The following season he won his second major title, the U.S. Open by seven strokes on a windblown Hazeltine National Golf Club course. It was the only U.S. Open victory by a European player in an 84-year span (1926–2009); Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell ended that streak in 2010.

Tony Jacklin 12 July Golfer Tony Jacklin won The Open Championship 23 July

Jacklin won eight events on the European Tour between its first season in 1972 and 1982. He also won tournaments in Europe prior to the European Tour era, and in the United States, South America, South Africa and Australasia. His 1968 PGA Tour win at the Jacksonville Open Invitational was the first by a European player on the U.S. Tour since the 1920s; Jacklin was the first British player since the 1940s and Henry Cotton to devote much of his effort to American Tour events.

Tony Jacklin Tony Jacklin The RA had no option but to finish the Open on Monday

However, Jacklin may be best remembered for his involvement in the Ryder Cup. He was a playing member of the "Great Britain and Ireland" team in 1967, 1969, 1971, 1973, 1975 and 1977, and of the first European team in 1979. Except for a tie in 1969, all of those teams were defeated. Jacklin was involved in one of the most memorable moments in Ryder Cup history at Royal Birkdale Golf Club in 1969. After his eagle putt on the 17th evened his match with Jack Nicklaus, Nicklaus conceded Jacklin's two-foot putt on the 18th, halving the match, and ending the Ryder Cup with a tied score. "The Concession" ended with the two golfers walking off the course with arms around each other's shoulders. Jacklin and Nicklaus later co-designed a golf course in Florida called "The Concession" to commemorate the moment.

Tony Jacklin My golfing hero isTony Jacklin World of Golf London World of

Jacklin suffered a devastating near-miss in The Open Championship of 1972 at Muirfield. Tied for the lead with playing partner Lee Trevino playing the 71st hole, Jacklin had a straightforward 15-foot birdie putt on the par-5 hole, while Trevino was not yet on the green after four struggling strokes. But Trevino holed a difficult chip shot, and Jacklin took three putts, leaving him one shot behind. Trevino parred the final hole to win, but Jacklin bogeyed, finishing third behind Jack Nicklaus. Jacklin was just 28 years old at the time, but never seriously contended again in a major championship. In 2013, Jacklin said of his experience in the 1972 Open: "I was never the same again after that. I didn't ever get my head around it - it definitely knocked the stuffing out of me somehow."

Tony Jacklin Tony Jacklin shows off his passion for marquetry Golf Channel

Jacklin served as the non-playing captain of Europe in four consecutive Ryder Cups from 1983 to 1989. He had a 2.5–1.5 won-loss record, captaining his men to their first victory in 28 years in 1985, and to their first ever victory in the United States in 1987.

Tony Jacklin Tony Jacklin CBE Career HighlightsBritish Golfer

Jacklin was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2002. He retired from tournament golf in 2004 at the age of sixty, having won a number of events at senior level. Jacklin has developed a golf course design business since his retirement from competition. He has designed numerous courses, including the 9-hole par 3 course of The St. Pierre Park Hotel in Guernsey.

Jacklin has been hearing impaired for over 25 years and wears a hearing aid device on both sides. He is a patron of the English Deaf Golf Association.

He was a subject of the television programme This Is Your Life in February 1970 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews outside Buckingham Palace after receiving his OBE.

Personal life

Jacklin's first wife, Vivien, was from Belfast, Northern Ireland. The couple married in 1966, eleven months after their initial meeting at a Belfast hotel. They had three children together: Bradley, Warren and Tina.

In 1971, Jacklin said that he received death threats from a caller who also threatened to bomb his wife's family home in Belfast. The caller said that Jacklin would be shot if he played in the Ulster Open, because his wife's family supported Ian Paisley.

Vivien Jacklin died suddenly of a brain haemorrhage in April 1988, aged 44. In an interview in 2002, Jacklin said: "You can't understand the anguish of losing a spouse until it happens to you. I lost my will to live after my first wife died. I contemplated doing something very terrible to myself. Eventually I recovered." Six weeks after his first wife's death, Jacklin met a 16-year-old waitress named Donna Methven at a golf tournament in England. Jacklin later said: "I was at my lowest ebb and Donna was a shoulder to cry on." They had a two-month affair which led to front-page headlines in British tabloid newspapers.

In December 1988, Jacklin married his second wife, Astrid Waagen, a Norwegian woman. They have a son called Sean, who is a golfer on the European Challenge Tour. Jacklin is also stepfather to Waagen's two children, daughter Anna May and son A.J., from her previous marriage to former Bee Gees guitarist Alan Kendall.

Jacklin said in an interview in 1989 that he was barely on speaking terms with his mother. "To get along with people I have to like them. My mother and I don't get along. I don't share the belief that blood is thicker than water. She has tried to run my life long enough," Jacklin said.

On 30 August 2013, Jacklin was revealed to be taking part in the eleventh series of the BBC1 Saturday night entertainment competition, Strictly Come Dancing. On 6 October 2013, he was the first celebrity to be eliminated from the show.

European Tour wins (8)

European Tour playoff record (1–1)

PGA Tour wins (4)

^The Open Championship was not a European Tour event because the European Tour was founded in 1972, retroactively classified as PGA Tour win in 2002.
Major championships are shown in bold.

PGA Tour playoff record (1–1)

Other wins (15)

  • 1964 Coombe Hill Assistants' Tournament
  • 1965 Gor-Ray Cup
  • 1966 Kimberley Tournament (South Africa)
  • 1967 Forest Products (New Zealand), New Zealand PGA Championship, British Masters, Pringle of Scotland Tournament
  • 1970 Lancome Trophy (France), W.D. & H.O. Wills Tournament (Europe)
  • 1971 Benson & Hedges Festival (Europe)
  • 1972 Dunlop International
  • 1973 Bogotá Open, Los Lagartos Open
  • 1974 Los Lagartos Open
  • 1979 Venezuela Open
  • Results timeline

    CUT = missed the halfway cut
    "T" indicates a tie for a place.

    Summary

  • Most consecutive cuts made – 7 (1963 Open Championship - 1968 Open Championship)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 2 (1970 US Open – 1970 Open Championship)
  • Team appearances

  • Ryder Cup (representing Great Britain & Ireland/Europe): 1967, 1969, 1971, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1983 (non-playing captain), 1985 (winners, non-playing captain), 1987 (winners, non-playing captain), 1989 (tied, retained Cup, non-playing captain)
  • World Cup (representing England): 1966, 1970, 1971, 1972
  • Double Diamond International (representing England): 1972 (winners), 1973, 1974, 1976 (winners, captain), 1977 (captain)
  • Marlboro Nations' Cup (representing England): 1972, 1973
  • Hennessy Cognac Cup (representing Great Britain and Ireland): 1976 (winners, captain), 1982 (winners, captain)
  • UBS Cup (representing the Rest of the World): 2003 (tie, captain)
  • References

    Tony Jacklin Wikipedia