Oliver Wilson

Golfer

Oliver Wilson was born in Mansfield, England, United Kingdom on September 14th, 1980 and is the Golfer. At the age of 44, Oliver Wilson 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
September 14, 1980
Nationality
United Kingdom
Place of Birth
Mansfield, England, United Kingdom
Age
44 years old
Zodiac Sign
Virgo
Profession
Golfer
Oliver Wilson Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 44 years old, Oliver Wilson has this physical status:

Height
180cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Oliver Wilson Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Oliver Wilson Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Lauren
Children
2
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Oliver Wilson Career

Wilson was born in Mansfield, England, where his golfing career began at Coxmoor Golf Club, having been a junior at Oakmere Park Golf Club. He played collegiately at Augusta State University.

Professional career

Wilson turned professional in 2003 and played on the Challenge Tour in 2004. He finished 15th on the Order of Merit list and moved up to the European Tour. He improved year-on-year, finishing 97th on the Order of Merit in 2005, 71st in 2006, 30th in 2007, 11th in 2008 and 7th in 2009.

In his rookie season on the European Tour in 2005, Wilson had three top ten finishes. In 2006 he lost in a play-off to Paul Casey at the Volvo China Open and in 2007 he had two second-place finishes. Wilson finished second four times in 2008, one of which took place at the BMW PGA Championship where he lost in a play-off to Miguel Ángel Jiménez. In April of that year Wilson reached the top 100 of the Official World Golf Ranking for the first time, the next month after his runner-up spot at the PGA Championship he reached a new high position of 45.

Also in 2008, Wilson qualified for that year's Ryder Cup matches.

In the opening tournament of the 2009 Race to Dubai, the HSBC Champions, Wilson recorded yet another runner-up finish. On 15 March 2009 he recorded a top-5 finish in the WGC-CA Championship. Wilson was also runner-up at the 2009 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship.

Wilson never finished higher than 5th in 2010, although he still finished in the top 50 of the Order of Merit. Wilson lost his full European Tour playing rights at the end of the 2011 season. He alternated between the European Tour and the Challenge Tour in 2012, but failed to regain his full playing rights through his play during the year or at the 2012 qualifying school.

After 228 European Tour starts, Wilson finally earned his first win at the 2014 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, picking up a cheque for $800,000. Prior to his win, he had nine runner-up finishes, the most for a non-winner. Wilson was a sponsor invite who started the week 252nd in the Race to Dubai, 104th in the Challenge Tour rankings, and 792nd in the world. The win moved Wilson up to 39th in the Race to Dubai, 156th in the world, and earned him European Tour membership through the end of 2016.

After his win in the 2014 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship Wilson had another long period with little success. He failed to regain his Tour card through Q School in 2016 and played on the Challenge Tour in 2017 but his poor form continued. Speaking in an interview with bunkered magazine in December 2017, Wilson conceded that he'd contemplated quitting the sport after failing to earn his European Tour card for the 2018 season, missing the cut at Q-School.

Wilson showed a return of form in mid-2018. He qualified for the 2018 Open Championship through Final Qualifying, his first major since 2010, finished tied for 29th in the Porsche European Open the week after the Open and won the Swedish Challenge the following week, at the second hole of a playoff. Wilson had previously lost four playoffs on the European Tour and a playoff in the 2013 Northern Ireland Open Challenge. He finished the season 17th in the Challenge Tour Order of Merit, to just miss out on a European Tour place for 2019.

Wilson finishing tied for third place in the South African Open in December 2018. The event was part of the Open Qualifying Series and his high finish and tiebreaker world ranking position gave him an entry to the 2019 Open Championship.

In September 2022, Wilson won his second European Tour event at the Made in HimmerLand in Denmark. He shot a final-round 67 to beat Ewen Ferguson by one shot. It was his first European Tour victory in over seven years.

Source

The BMA PGA is a non-LIV golfer. After the first day at Wentworth, non-LIV Golfers lead the way

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 8, 2022
RIATH AL-SAMARRAI AT WENTWORTH: despite the darkness in the skies and the wider golfing atmosphere, Tommy Fleetwood returned to the course in a different way after his mother's death. The world No. 29, who was playing in the worst weather in seven weeks, suffered through the worst of the storms for the first time in seven weeks, but the BMW PGA Championships featured the best of first rounds. Matthew Jordan, the third Englishman to shoot down an eight-under loop of 64 holes, led by a six-bird rally in his final seven holes, putting him in a share of the lead with Andy Sullivan and Norway's Viktor Hovland. In the DP World Tour's flagship event, Rory McIlroy was one of a group of four people.

After ending an eight-year search for glory, England's Oliver Wilson became ill

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 4, 2022
Oliver Wilson of England putt two massive birdie putts in a snap as he brought an almost eight-year victory drought to an end in a dramatic way in the Made in HimmerLand tournament. The world No. 745 rose from 65 feet for a bird on the 13th to take the outright lead on the 17th. Wilson, who had not earned a top-ten finish on the DP World Tour since a tie for fourth in the same event in 2019, maintained his vigilance until the last, striking a small mound of turf instead of a tee, a shot ahead of Scotland's Ewen Ferguson.