José María Olazábal |
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José María Olazábal (born 5 February 1966 in Fuenterrabia/Hondarribia, Guipúzcoa/Gipuzkoa Spain) is a professional golfer who has enjoyed success on both the European Tour and the PGA Tour, and has won two major championships. Career outlineOlazábal burst onto the golf scene in 1986, when he finished second on the European Tour Order of Merit in his first season at the age of twenty. In his first nine seasons, he finished in the top 10 every year except two, including another second place in 1989 and he was a regular member of the top ten of the Official World Golf Rankings. He was unable to play in 1996 due to a foot injury but he recovered and recorded further top ten placing in the Order of Merit in 1997, 1999 and 2000. He has more than twenty career titles on this tour. Both of Olazábal's majors have come in the United States, namely The Masters in 1994 and 1999. He has been highly placed in The Masters on a number of other occasions. In 2000 Olazábal began to play on the PGA Tour, while also retaining his membership of the European Tour. He had a solid year on the PGA Tour in 2002, when he won nearly two million dollars and came twenty fourth on the money list, but has not duplicated the success he enjoyed in Europe in the 1980s and 1990s. He has six career PGA Tour titles, five of them won before he became a full member of the Tour. In 2006 he made a return to the top twenty of the world rankings. Olazábal was a member of the European Ryder Cup team in 1987, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1997 and 1999. He had a famous partnership with fellow Spaniard Seve Ballesteros. Olazábal also holds the world record distance for a completed putt. During the 1999 European Ryder Cup team's Concorde flight to the United States, he holed a putt which travelled the full length of the cabin. The ball was in motion for 26.17s, during which time the Concorde, at 1,270mph, travelled 9.232 miles, beating US golfer Brad Faxon's previous record of 8.5 miles, set in 1997.
Tournament victoriesEuropean Tour
The European Tour recognised the three U.S. based majors in 1998, so Olazábal's 1999 Masters victory counts as a European Tour win, but his 1994 Masters title doesn't. PGA Tour wins
Majors are shown in bold. Olazabal's 1999 Masters win also counted as a European Tour title. Other professional wins
Amateur wins
Results in major championships
DNP = did not play Team appearancesAmateur
Professional
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