Lee Trevino

Golfer

Lee Trevino was born in Dallas, Texas, United States on December 1st, 1939 and is the Golfer. At the age of 84, Lee Trevino biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

  Report
Date of Birth
December 1, 1939
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Dallas, Texas, United States
Age
84 years old
Zodiac Sign
Sagittarius
Networth
$50 Million
Profession
Golfer
Lee Trevino Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 84 years old, Lee Trevino has this physical status:

Height
170cm
Weight
82kg
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Lee Trevino Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Lee Trevino Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Claudia Bove, (m.1983–present), Claudia Fenley (divorced)
Children
6
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Lee Trevino Career

After Trevino was discharged from the Marines, he went to work as a club professional in El Paso, Texas. He made extra money by gambling for stakes in head-to-head matches. He qualified for the U.S. Open in 1966, made the cut, and tied for 54th, earning $600. He qualified again in 1967 and shot 283 (+3), eight shots behind champion Jack Nicklaus, and only four behind runner-up Arnold Palmer. Trevino earned $6,000 for finishing fifth, which earned him Tour privileges for the rest of the 1967 season. He won $26,472 as a rookie, 45th on the PGA Tour money list, and was named Rookie of the Year by Golf Digest. The fifth-place finish at the U.S. Open also earned him an exemption into the following year's event.

In 1968, his second year on the circuit, Trevino won the U.S. Open at Oak Hill Country Club, in Rochester, New York, four strokes ahead of runner-up Nicklaus, the defending champion. During his career, Trevino won 29 times on the PGA Tour, including six majors. He was at his best in the early 1970s, when he was Jack Nicklaus's chief rival. He won the money list title in 1970, and had six wins in 1971 and four wins in 1972.

Trevino had a remarkable string of victories during a 20-day span in the summer of 1971. He defeated Nicklaus in an 18-hole playoff to win the 1971 U.S. Open. Two weeks later, he won the Canadian Open (the first of three), and the following week won The Open Championship (British Open), becoming the first player to win those three titles in the same year. Trevino was awarded the Hickok Belt as the top professional athlete of 1971. He also won Sports Illustrated magazine's "Sportsman of the Year" and was named ABC's Wide World of Sports Athlete of the Year.

In 1972 at Muirfield in Scotland, Trevino became the first player to successfully defend The Open Championship since Arnold Palmer in 1962. In a remarkable third round at Muirfield, Trevino had five consecutive birdies from the 14th through the 18th, holing a bunker shot on the 16th and sinking a 30–foot chip on the 18th for a round of 66. In the final round, Trevino was tied for the lead on the 17th tee with Tony Jacklin. Trevino chipped in from rough on the back of the green for a par on the 17th. A shaken Jacklin three-putted the same hole from 15 feet for a bogey. Trevino parred the 18th hole for a final round of 71, winning him the Open by a stroke over Nicklaus, with Jacklin finishing third. Trevino holed out four times from off the greens during the tournament. Nicklaus had won the first two majors of the year (Masters, U.S. Open) and fell just short in the third leg of the grand slam. After holing his chip shot on the 17th in the final round, Trevino said: "I'm the greatest chipper in the world."

In 1974, Trevino won the Greater New Orleans Open without scoring any bogeys, the only time it had happened in a PGA Tour individual event until J. T. Poston accomplished the feat at the 2019 Wyndham Championship. At the PGA Championship he won the fifth of his six major championships. He won the title by a stroke, again over Nicklaus, the fourth and final time Nicklaus was a runner-up in a major to Trevino. At the Western Open near Chicago in 1975, Trevino was struck by lightning, and suffered injuries to his spine. He underwent surgery to remove a damaged spinal disk, but back problems continued to hamper his play. Nevertheless, he was ranked second in McCormack's World Golf Rankings in 1980 behind Tom Watson. Trevino had 3 PGA Tour wins in 1980 and finished runner-up to Tom Watson in the 1980 Open Championship. At the age of 44, Trevino won his sixth and final major at the PGA Championship in 1984, with a 15-under-par score of 273, becoming the first player to shoot all four rounds under 70 in the PGA Championship. He was the runner-up the following year in 1985, attempting to become the first repeat champion since Denny Shute in 1937.

In the early 1980s, Trevino was second on the PGA Tour's career money list, behind only Nicklaus. From 1968 to 1981 inclusive, Trevino won at least one PGA Tour event a year, a streak of 14 seasons. He also won more than 20 international and unofficial professional tournaments. He was one of the charismatic stars who was instrumental in making the Senior PGA Tour (now the PGA Tour Champions) an early success. He claimed 29 senior wins, including four senior majors. He topped the seniors' money list in 1990 and 1992.

Like many American stars of the era, Trevino played a considerable amount overseas. Early in his career he played sporadically on the Australasian Tour. He finished runner-up in the 1969 and 1970 Dunlop International and ultimately won down under at the 1973 Chrysler Classic. He also won an event on the Japan Golf Tour, the Casio World Open in 1981. Trevino also had a great deal of success in Europe. Among his greatest triumphs were at the 1971 Open Championship and 1972 Open Championship. Trevino was also invited to play at the very prestigious (though unofficial) Piccadilly World Match Play Championship three times (1968, 1970, 1972). He reached the finals twice. His most notable performance probably came in 1970 when he defeated defending Masters champion Billy Casper in the quarterfinals and defending PGA champion Dave Stockton in the semifinals. He also won two regular European Tour events late in his career at 1978 Benson & Hedges International Open and 1985 Dunhill British Masters. In fact, his last regular tour win was at the British Masters. Additionally, he finished runner-up at three European Tour events: the 1980 Bob Hope British Classic, 1980 Open Championship, and the 1986 Benson & Hedges International Open.

From 1983 to 1989, he worked as a color analyst for PGA Tour coverage on NBC television. In 2014 Trevino was named "Golf Professional Emeritus" at The Greenbrier resort in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, a position previously held by Sam Snead and Tom Watson.

At the Masters Tournament in 1989, 49-year-old Trevino opened with a bogey-free five-under-par 67 to become the oldest to lead the field after a round in the tournament. It came despite Trevino's words twenty years earlier, when he said after the 1969 edition: "Don't talk to me about the Masters. I'm never going to play there again. They can invite me all they want, but I'm not going back. It's just not my type of course." Trevino said that he felt uncomfortable with the atmosphere at Augusta National and that he disliked the course because his style of play, where he liked to fade low shots left to right, was not suited to the course.

Trevino did not accept invitations to the Masters in 1970, 1971, and 1974. In 1972, after forgoing the previous two Masters tournaments, he stored his shoes and other items in the trunk of his car, rather than use the locker room facilities in the clubhouse. Trevino complained that had he not qualified as a player, the club would not have let him onto the grounds except through the kitchen. But he later described his boycott of the Masters as "the greatest mistake I've made in my career" and called Augusta National "the eighth wonder of the world."

After his opening round 67 in 1989, Trevino tied for eighteenth; his best career result at the Masters was a tie for tenth (1975, 1985).

Source

Legendary golf commentator and former Ryder Cup star Peter Oosterhuis dies aged 75

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 2, 2024
Former Ryder Cup player Peter Oosterhuis has died at the age of 75.  The Englishman, who played in six Cup matches and twice beat Arnold Palmer in the singles, had been suffering from Alzheimer's since 2014. In a fine career, Oosterhuis topped the European Tour's Order of Merit four times between 1971 and 1974 and on two occasions was runner up at The Open, having also taken a three-shot lead into the final round of the 1973 Masters.

XCLUSIVE: Brian Hugh, Europe's longest-serving skipper, revisits tales of petty insults, putts, and police escorts ahead of the 44th Ryder Cup's launch

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 26, 2023
INTERVIEW EXCLUSIVE: It's a wild morning on the outskirts of Royal Porthcawl. The lovely chap who was once known as the Welsh Bulldog is looking out from the pavilion at the younger men of the Senior Open as a realization dawns on him. 'You're here to make me feel old, aren't you?' It's the same glint he sees in his eye now as well, according to Brian Hugh. He is partially correct, because we are here to discuss the Ryder Cup, and he has many lines of distinction when it comes to one of sport's most coveted activities. He is Europe's longest serving captain at 86, not least because he is Europe's longest living captain. 'I've never been told, but I assumed I must be,' he says. 'Well, you've done it - now I do feel old!' Hugh is a cracking fella, a gle, and an albatross wrapped in a hole in a single. He hasn't played at a ball in a decade because it's difficult to believe a team, but he could still beat it up in his seventies if he could have swung it around in a swan's.

Tiger Woods: Inside golfer's lifestyle, with £41m mansion and £100,000-a-year golf club membership

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 21, 2022
Woods, the legendary golfer, has a net worth of more than $1 billion (£880 million), according to Forbes, after a stellar career that saw him second in the all-time list for men's Major Championships. And Woods, 46, is reaping the benefits of his time on millionaire's playground Jupiter Island (inset), where he has a state-of-the-art £41 million mansion (right). It features a 3,300-square-foot living quarters and a 6,400-square-foot multi-purpose building with a gym, media room, wine cellar, and lift. His home is not far from another 15,000 square-foot mansion that he designed specifically for mother Kutilda after buying a plot of land.