Ernie Els
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Personal Information | |
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Birth | Johannesburg, South Africa | October 17, 1969
Height | 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) |
Weight | 95 kg (220 lb) |
Nationality | South Africa |
Residence | Wentworth, England George, South Africa |
College | None |
Career | |
Turned Pro | 1989 |
Current Tour | European Tour (joined 1992) PGA Tour (joined 1994) |
Professional wins | 59, PGA Tour: 15 European Tour: 24 (including 2 co-sanctioned with the PGA Tour) Others: 22 |
Best Results in Major Championships Wins: 3 | |
Masters | 2nd: 2000, 2004 |
U.S. Open | Won 1994, 1997 |
The Open Championship | Won 2002 |
PGA Championship | 3rd/T3: 1995, 2007 |
Awards | |
PGA Tour Rookie of the Year |
1994 |
European Tour Order of Merit | 2003, 2004 |
European Tour Golfer of the Year |
1994, 2002, 2003 |
Sunshine Tour Order of Merit | 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995 |
Theodore Ernest "Ernie" Els (born October 17, 1969) is a South African golfer who has been one of the top professional players in the world since the mid-1990s. A former World No. 1, he is known as "The Big Easy", for his imposing physical stature (he stands 1.90 metres) along with his fluid, seemingly effortless golf swing.
Early life
Growing up in South Africa, he played rugby, cricket, tennis, and, starting at age 8, golf. He was a skilled junior tennis player and won the Eastern Transvaal Junior Championships at age 13. But by age 14 Els was a scratch handicap, and from then on decided to focus exclusively on golf.
Els first achieved prominence in 1984, when he won the Junior World Golf Championship in the Boys 13-14 category. Phil Mickelson was second to Ernie that year. (The Boys 9-10 category was won by Tiger Woods.)
Professional career
In 1989 Els won the South African Amateur Stroke Play Championiship and turned professional the same year. Els won his first professional tournament in 1991 on the Southern Africa Tour (today the Sunshine Tour). In 1993 Els won his first tournament outside of South Africa at the Dunlop Phoenix in Japan. Els's 1994 season was highlighted by his first major championship at the U.S. Open. Tied with Colin Montgomerie and Loren Roberts after 72 holes they went to a 18 hole playoff the next day. Els and Roberts tied after the playoff then Els prevaild on the second hole of sudden death capturing the Championship.
Els brought his game all around the world in his young career winning the Dubai Desert Classic on the Eurpean Tour, and the World Match Play Championship defeating once again Colin Montgomerie four-and-two. The following year, Els defended his World Match Play Championship, defeating Steve Elkington three-and-one, won the Byron Nelson Classic in the United States then headed back home to South Africa and won twice more. Els kept his winning habits in 1996 winning the Buick Classic by 8 shots in the United States. For the third year in a row Ernie Els won his third stright World Match Play Championship over Vijay Singh three-and-one. No player in history had ever managed three successive titles in the one-on-one tournament. Els finshed the year with a win at his home tournamnet at the South African Open.
1997 was a career year for the Big Easy first winning his second U.S. Open over Colin Montgomerie once again this time at Congressional Country Club, making him the first foreign player since Alex Smith(1906, 1910) to win the U.S. Open twice. He defended his Buick Classic title and added the Jonnie Walker Classic to his list of victories. Els nearly won the World Match Play Championship for a fourth consectitive year, but lost to Vijay Singh in the final. 1998 and 1999 continued to be successful years for Ernie with 4 wins on both the PGA and Eurpoean tours. 2000 started in historic fashion for Els being given a special honour by the Board of Directors of the European Tour awarding him with Honorary Life Membership of the European Tour because of his two U.S. Opens and three World Matchplay titles. 2000 brought 4 wins. Els wins included The International, and the Scottish Open. 2000 was the year of runner ups for Els finshing second in the Mercedes championship and Memorial and three runner up finishes in the Majors(Masters, U.S. Open and The Open Championship) Jack Nicklaus was the only other to do so. Els ended the year with 10 runner up finishes. Ernie had a disappointing 2001 season, failing to win a US PGA tour event for the first time since 1994. Though Els's limited success was just a case of bad luck with two close playoff loses to Mike Weir and Sergio Garcia he ended the year with nine second place finishes.
2002 was arguably Els's best year which started with a win a the Heineken Classic at the Royal Melbourne Golf Club. Then went to America and outplayed World Number one Tiger Woods to lift the Genuity Championship title. The premier moment of the season was surely his The Open Championship triumph in very tough conditions at Muirfield. Els overcame a four man playoff to take home the famed Claret Jug for the first time, also quieting his critics about his mental toughness. The South African also took home his fourth World Matchplay title, along with his third Nedbank Challenge in the last four years dominating a world class field winning by 8 shots.
2003 gave The Big Easy his first European Tour Order of Merit. Although playing less events then his competitors Els won four times and had three runner ups. He also performed well in the United States with back to back victories at the Mercedes Championship and Sony Open and achieved top 20 spots in all four majors including a fifth place finish at the U.S Open and sixth place finishes at both the Masters and PGA Championship. To top of the season Els won the World Matchplay title for the record tying fifth time. Thinking it couldn't get any better 2004 was a second great consecutive year. Els won 6 times on both tours including big wins at Memorial, WGC-American Express Championship and his sixth World Matchplay Championship, a new record. His success didn't stop there. Els showed amazing consistency in the Majors lost to Phil Mickelson in the Masters when Phil Birdied the 18th for the title, a ninth place finish in the U.S. Open playing in the final group with friend and fellow countryman Retief Goosen. Surprisingly Els lost in a playoff in the Britsh Open, the tournament went to unknown Todd Hamilton. Ernie ended the major season with a fourth place finsh in the PGA Championship. In total the Big Easy had 16 top 10 finshes a second Order of Merit title in secccession and a second place finish on the United States money list. The best year of his career.
Among his numerous victories since are three major championships: Els won the U.S. Open in 1994 at the Oakmont Country Club and 1997 (this time at the Congressional Country Club), and the The Open Championship in 2002.
Other highlights in Els' career include topping the 2003 and 2004 European Tour Order of Merit (money list), and winning the World Match Play Championship a record seven times. He has held the number one spot in the Official World Golf Rankings and has been consistently ranked in the top five. He has been in the top ten for over 670 weeks; nobody has been in the top ten longer. In 2003 he was voted 37th on the SABC3's Great South Africans. He won the Sunshine Tour Order of Merit in the 1991/92 and 1994/95 seasons.
Unlike most of his contemporaries, Els is known for his willingness to participate in tournaments all around the world (he regularly plays in European Tour-sanctioned events in Asia, Australasia, and his native country of South Africa). He says that his globe-trotting schedule is in recognition of the global nature of golf, but it has caused some friction with the U.S. PGA Tour, an organization that would prefer Els to play more tournaments in the United States. In late 2004, Tim Finchem, the director of the PGA Tour, wrote quite a firm letter to Els asking him to do so, but Els publicized and rejected this request. The PGA Tour's attitude caused considerable offense in the golfing world outside of North America.
In July 2005, Els injured his left knee while sailing with his family in the Mediterranean. Despite missing several months of the 2005 season due to the injury, Els won the second event on his return, the Dunhill Championship.
When he missed the cut by two strokes at the 2007 Masters Tournament, Els ended tour-leading consecutive cut streaks on both the PGA Tour and the European Tour. On the PGA Tour, his streak began at the 2004 The Players Championship (46 events) and on the European Tour it began at the 2000 Johnnie Walker Classic (82 events).
Els is represented by International Sports Management. When not playing, he has a golf course design business, a charitable foundation which supports golf among underprivileged youngsters in South Africa, and a highly-regarded wine-making business.
Major championships
Wins (3)
Year | Championship | 54 Holes | Winning Score | Margin | Runners Up |
1994 | U.S. Open | 2 shot lead | -5 (69-71-66-73=279) | Playoff 1 | Colin Montgomerie, Loren Roberts |
1997 | U.S. Open (2) | 2 shot deficit | -4 (71-67-69-69=276) | 1 stroke | Colin Montgomerie |
2002 | The Open Championship | 2 shot lead | -6 (70-66-72-70=278) | Playoff 2 | Stuart Appleby, Steve Elkington, Thomas Levet |
1 Defeated Montgomerie in 18-hole playoff and Roberts in sudden death: Els (74-4-4), Roberts (74-4-5), Montgomerie (78)
2 Defeated Appleby and Elkington in 4-hole playoff and Levet in sudden death: Els (4-3-5-4-par), Appleby (4-3-5-5), Elkington (5-3-4-5), Levet (4-3-5-4-bogey)
Results timeline
Tournament | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Masters | DNP | DNP | DNP | DNP | DNP | T8 | CUT | T12 | T17 | T16 | T27 |
U.S. Open | DNP | DNP | DNP | DNP | T7 | 1 | CUT | T5 | 1 | T49 | CUT |
The Open Championship | CUT | DNP | DNP | T5 | T6 | T24 | T11 | T2 | T10 | T29 | T24 |
PGA Championship | DNP | DNP | DNP | CUT | CUT | T25 | T3 | T61 | T53 | T21 | CUT |
Tournament | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Masters | 2 | T6 | T5 | T6 | 2 | 47 | T27 | CUT |
U.S. Open | T2 | T66 | T24 | T5 | T9 | T15 | T26 | T51 |
The Open Championship | T2 | T3 | 1 | T18 | 2 | T34 | 3 | T4 |
PGA Championship | T34 | T13 | T34 | T5 | T4 | DNP | T16 | 3 |
DNP = did not play
CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" = tied
Green background for wins. Yellow background for top-10.
Summary
- Starts - 60
- Wins - 3
- 2nd place finishes - 6
- 3rd place finishes - 4
- Top 5 finishes - 17
- Top 10 finishes - 26
- Longest streak of top-10s in majors - 5
PGA and European Tour career summary
PGA Tour | European Tour | |||||
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Year | Wins (Majors) | Earnings ($) | Rank | Wins (Majors) | Earnings | Rank |
1991 | 0 | 2,647 | 274 | 0 | £2,357 | - |
1992 | 0 | 18,420 | 213 | 0 | £66,626 | 75 |
1993 | 0 | 38,185 | 190 | 0 | £162,827 | 34 |
1994 | 1 (1) | 684,440 | 19 | 1 | £311,850 | 10 |
1995 | 1 | 842,590 | 14 | 0 | £82,459 | - |
1996 | 1 | 906,944 | 14 | 0 | £209,148 | - |
1997 | 2 (1) | 1,243,008 | 9 | 1 | £359,421 | - |
1998 | 1 | 763,783 | 36 | 1 | £433,884 | 8 |
1999 | 1 | 1,710,756 | 15 | 1 | €588,360 | 12 |
2000 | 1 | 3,469,405 | 3 | 1 | €2,017,248 | 3 |
2001 | 0 | 2,336,456 | 15 | 0 | €1,716,287 | 4 |
2002 | 2 (1) | 3,291,895 | 5 | 3 (1) | €2,251,708 | 3 |
2003 | 2 | 3,371,237 | 9 | 5 | €2,975,374 | 1 |
2004 | 3 | 5,787,225 | 2 | 3 | €4,061,905 | 1 |
2005 | 0 | 1,627,184 | 47 | 3 | €1,012,683 | 18 |
2006 | 0 | 2,326,220 | 28 | 1 | €1,716,208 | 5 |
2007* | 0 | 2,705,715 | 20 | 1 | €1,909,090 | 3 |
Career* | 15 (3) | 31,126,111 | 6 | 21 (1) | €20,536,974 | 2 |
* Complete as of October 7, 2007
These figures are from the respective tour's official sites. Note that there is double counting of money earned (and wins) in the majors and World Golf Championships since they became official events on both tours.
Amateur wins (4)
- 1984 World Junior Golf Championships (Boys 13-14 division)
- 1986 South African Boys Championship, South African Amateur Championship
- 1989 South African Amateur Stroke Play Championship
PGA Tour wins (15)
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European Tour wins (24)
- 1994 (1) Dubai Desert Classic
- 1995 (1) Lexington South African PGA Championship
- 1997 (1) Johnnie Walker Classic
- 1998 (1) South African Open
- 1999 (1) Alfred Dunhill South African PGA Championship
- 2000 (1) Standard Life Loch Lomond
- 2002 (3) Heineken Classic, Dubai Desert Classic, The Open Championship
- 2003 (5) Heineken Classic, Johnnie Walker Classic, Barclays Scottish Open, Omega European Masters, HSBC World Matchplay Championship
- 2004 (3) Heineken Classic, WGC-American Express Championship, HSBC World Matchplay Championship
- 2005 (3) Dubai Desert Classic, Qatar Masters, BMW Asian Open
- 2006 (1) Dunhill Championship (2005 calendar year, 2006 European Tour season)
- 2007 (2) South African Airways Open (2006 calendar year, 2007 European Tour season), HSBC World Matchplay Championship
Els's victories in The Open and the WGC-American Express Championship count as wins on both the PGA Tour and the European Tour. His two U.S. Opens do not count as European Tour wins because the three U.S. based majors did not become part of the European Tour's official schedule until 1998.
Sunshine Tour wins (15)
- 1991 (1) Amatola Sun Classic
- 1992 (6) Protea Assurance South African Open, Lexington South African PGA Championship, South African Masters, Hollard Royal Swazi Sun Classic, First National Bank Players Championship, Goodyear Classic
- 1995 (2) Bell's Cup, Lexington South African PGA Championship (co-sanctioned with European Tour)
- 1996 (1) Philips South African Open
- 1998 (1) South African Open (co-sanctioned with European Tour)
- 1999 (1) Alfred Dunhill South African PGA Championship (co-sanctioned with European Tour)
- 2001 (1) Vodacom Players Championship
- 2005 (1) Dunhill Championship (co-sanctioned with European Tour, 2006 season)
- 2006 (1) South African Airways Open (co-sanctioned with European Tour, 2007 season)
Other wins (12)
- 1993 (1) Dunlop Phoenix (Japan Golf Tour)
- 1994 (3) Toyota World Match Play Championship (unofficial money European Tour event), Sarazen World Open, Johnnie Walker World Championship
- 1995 (1) Toyota World Match Play Championship (unofficial money European Tour event)
- 1996 (1) Toyota World Match Play Championship (unofficial money European Tour event)
- 1997 (1) PGA Grand Slam of Golf (unofficial money PGA Tour event)
- 1999 (1) Nedbank Million Dollar Challenge (unofficial money Sunshine Tour event)
- 2000 (1) Nedbank Golf Challenge (unofficial money Sunshine Tour event)
- 2002 (2) Nedbank Golf Challenge (unofficial money Sunshine Tour event), Cisco World Match Play Championship (unofficial money European Tour event)
- 2004 (1) Nelson Mandela Invitational (unofficial money Sunshine Tour event; with Vincent Tshabalala)
Team appearances
- Alfred Dunhill Cup (representing South Africa): 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997 (winners), 1998 (winners), 1999, 2000
- World Cup (representing South Africa): 1992, 1993, 1996 (Individual and team winners), 1997, 2001 (winners)
- Presidents Cup (International team): 1996, 1998 (winners), 2000, 2003 (tie), 2007
Els-designed golf courses
- Mission Hills Golf Club (The Savannah Course) - Shenzhen, China
- Whiskey Creek - Ijamsville, Maryland, USA
- Oubaai - Garden Route, South Africa
He is also responsible for the refinement and modernisation of the West Course, Wentworth-Virginia Water, England- which took place in 2006.
Courses under construction include:
- Hoakalei Country Club - Honolulu, Hawaii
- The Dunes - Dubai, UAE
- Gardener Ross Golf and Country Estate - Gauteng, South Africa
Foundation
The Ernie Els and Fancourt Foundation was established in 1999. It has the objective of identifying youths which show talent and potential in the game of golf from under-privileged backgrounds. It provides educational assistance amongst other moral and financial help in order for these youths to reach their full potential.
The first Friendship Cup was played in 2006 which is a matchplay competition, played in a Ryder Cup type format. In the cup, Ernie's foundation plays against the foundation of Tiger Woods. Ernie's foundation won 12.5 points to 3.5 points.
Quotes
"I've never been a very technical player. I don't get caught up in swing positions and mechanics. When I work on my swing...I'm looking for feels. You'll get better results—and often more distance—if you swing at eighty percent effort. I get all kinds of people telling me I have the best swing in the world—it's beautiful, it's effortless. But I know when that isn't true."[1]
—Els to Golf Digest
See also
- Golfers with most major championship wins
- Golfers with most PGA Tour wins
- Golfers with most European Tour wins
References
- ^ The Gigantic Book of Golf Quotations, ed. Jim Apfelbaum. 2007.