Peter Oosterhuis’s biography, net worth, fact, career, awards and life story

IntroProfessional golfer
IsAthlete 
Golfer 
FromUnited Kingdom 
TypeSports 
Gendermale
Birth3 May 1948, London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom
Age:72 years

Peter Arthur Oosterhuis (born 3 May 1948) is an English professional golfer and golf analyst. Oosterhuis played on the European circuit from 1969 to 1974, winning 10 tournaments and taking the Harry Vardon Trophy for heading the Order of Merit for four consecutive seasons from 1971 to 1974. From 1975 he played on the PGA Tour, winning the Canadian Open in 1981. He was twice runner-up in the Open Championship, in 1974 and 1982. Later he became a golf analyst on TV, initially in Europe and then in the United States. In 2015, Oosterhuis announced that he had Alzheimer’s disease.

Early years, amateur golf

Oosterhuis was born in London and educated at Dulwich College. He won the 1966 Berkshire Trophy by a stroke from Michael Bonallack, after a final round 67 which included nine 3s in 11 holes, with seven 3s in succession. He represented Great Britain in the 1967 Walker Cup and in the 1968 Eisenhower Trophy. He turned professional in November 1968.

European Tour

Oosterhuis played on the European circuit in the early years of his professional career, from 1969 to 1974, winning the Harry Vardon Trophy (the Order of Merit title) four consecutive times from 1971 to 1974.

In 1969, his rookie season, he started the season by winning the Sunningdale Foursomes, playing with the amateur Peter Benka, and finished runner-up in the Gor-Ray Under-24 Championship. He was awarded the Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year award. In 1970 Oosterhuis won two age-restricted events, Lord Derby’s Under-23 Professional Tournament and the Coca-Cola Young Professionals’ Championship. Later in the season he finished tied for sixth in the Open Championship and third in the Dunlop Masters. Oosterhuis had won the General Motors Open in South Africa in February, an event which served as the South African qualifier for the Alcan Golfer of the Year Championship. He finished tied for third place with Neil Coles and Lee Trevino, winning £2,487.

Oosterhuis won his first major British event, the Agfa-Gevaert Tournament, in May 1971 and followed this up by winning the Sunbeam Electric Tournament and the Piccadilly Medal later in the season.These, together a number of other high finishes, including being runner-up in the Carroll’s International and the Dunlop Masters, gave Oosterhuis the Order of Merit title with 1292.5 points, beating Neil Coles who finished just 7 points behind. 1972 was the first year of the European tour. Oosterhuis won the Penfold-Bournemouth Tournament and the Coca-Cola Young Professionals’ Championship, a non-tour event. He was runner-up in the Dutch Open, the Viyella PGA Championship and the John Player Classic. He won the Order of Merit title with 1751 points, ahead of Guy Hunt on 1710, although his performances in the big money events put him well ahead as the leading money winner with £18,525.

Oosterhuis won three European tour events in 1973, the Piccadilly Medal, French Open and Viyella PGA Championship. He was also runner-up in the Sunbeam Electric Scottish Open and Dutch Open. He won the Order of Merit again, with 3440 points, 460 points ahead of Maurice Bembridge. He won £17,455 in official tour events, second behind Tony Jacklin. Oosterhuis won three more European tour events in 1974, the French Open and the last two tournaments of the season, the Italian Open and El Paraiso Open. In addition he was runner-up in five other events, including the Open Championship, and was third in three more, finishing outside the top three only twice during the European Tour season. He won the order of merit for the fourth time, nearly 600 points ahead of second-place Dale Hayes.

Although he played on the PGA Tour from 1975, Oosterhuis made regular visits to play in the Open Championship and occasionally other European Tour events. He was runner-up in the 1977 Penfold PGA Championship, the 1981 Bob Hope British Classic and the 1982 Open Championship.

South African Tour

After turning professional Oosterhuis played in his first professional tournament in South Africa in January 1969. He played regularly in South Africa from the 1968/69 season until the 1973/74 season.

PGA Tour

Oosterhuis made his debut on the PGA Tour at the 1971 Greater Greensboro Open, the week before competing in his first Masters. In 1973 Oosterhuis led The Masters after three rounds before finishing third. In the 1974 Monsanto Open, Oosterhuis lost in a playoff to Lee Elder.

In November 1974 Oosterhuis finished fourth in the 144-hole PGA Tour Qualifying school, earning his card for the 1975 season. He made his debut as a tour player in the opening event of the season, the Phoenix Open. Oosterhuis played full-time on the PGA Tour from 1975 until 1986, winning the Canadian Open in 1981. Oosterhuis was twice a runner-up, in the 1975 First NBC New Orleans Open and the 1977 Canadian Open.

Ryder Cup

Oosterhuis played on six consecutive Ryder Cup teams for Great Britain and Ireland and later Europe from 1971 to 1981. Representing Great Britain and Ireland from 1971 to 1977 he had an impressive record, especially in singles matches. In 1971 he beat Gene Littler and Arnold Palmer, in 1973 he halved with Lee Trevino and beat Palmer again, in 1975 he beat Johnny Miller and J. C. Snead while in 1977 he beat Jerry McGee. At that time he had a singles record of 6 wins, a half and no losses. Although he lost his singles matches, playing for Europe, in his final two Ryder Cup matches, he finished with a 6–2–1 record in singles and with 6½ points is only ½ point behind the overall Ryder Cup singles record of 7 points held by 5 players including Arnold Palmer. Palmer had only three losses in 11 singles matches, two of them by Oosterhuis, the other being by Peter Alliss in 1963. In all matches Oosterhuis had a winning 14–11–3 record in the Ryder Cup, despite being on the losing side on all six occasions.

Club professional

From 1987 to 1993, he was Director of Golf at Forsgate Country Club in Jamesburg, New Jersey, and at the Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California.

Broadcasting career

In 1994, Oosterhuis was hired to cover the PGA Tour by Britain’s Sky Sports and covered the Open Championship for the BBC in 1996 and 1997. From 1995 to 1997, he was the lead analyst for the Golf Channel’s coverage of the European Tour.

In 1997, Oosterhuis joined of the CBS Sports announce team part time, working five events including the Masters and the PGA Championship. In 1998, he joined the CBS golf team full-time. Oosterhuis has also worked on early-round coverage when CBS was covering the weekend, fulfilling this role for ESPN (2003–2006), Golf Channel (1998–2002, 2007–2014), and USA Network (1997–2007). In 2010, Oosterhuis began to work for CBS part-time, again calling around five events per year including the Masters and PGA Championship. Oosterhuis retired from broadcasting following the 2014 PGA Championship due to health concerns stemming from early-onset Alzheimer’s disease.

Oosterhuis called the action at Augusta National’s 17th hole for 18 consecutive years from 1997 through 2014.

Personal

Oosterhuis lives in Charlotte, North Carolina, in the United States with his second wife, Ruth Ann. He is a member of the Quail Hollow Golf Club in that city. His son Rob is also a professional golfer.

In May 2015, Oosterhuis announced that he was battling early-onset Alzheimer’s disease.

Amateur wins

  • 1966 Berkshire Trophy

Professional wins (26)

Important pre-1972 wins (3)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
122 May 1971Agfa-Gevaert Tournament68-67-69-72=2762 strokes Brian Barnes, David Huish
229 Jun 1971Sunbeam Electric Tournament67-65=1324 strokes Peter Thomson
314 Aug 1971Piccadilly MedalWalk-over Eric Brown

European Tour wins (7)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
113 May 1972Penfold-Bournemouth Tournament+1 (72-70-72-71=285)Playoff Christy O’Connor Jnr
228 Apr 1973Piccadilly Medal−6 (67)6 strokes Terry Westbrook
33 Jun 1973French Open−4 (75-69-68-68=280)1 stroke Tony Jacklin
425 Aug 1973Viyella PGA Championship−4 (69-69-70-72=280)3 strokes Dale Hayes, Donald Swaelens
55 May 1974French Open+4 (71-72-68-73=284)2 strokes Peter Townsend
620 Oct 1974Italian Open37-72-70-70=2492 strokes Dale Hayes
726 Oct 1974El Paraiso Open−4 (69-69-74=212)Playoff Manuel Ballesteros

European Tour playoff record (2–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
11972Penfold-Bournemouth Tournament Christy O’Connor JnrWon with birdie on first extra hole
21974German Open Simon OwenLost to birdie on first extra hole
31974El Paraiso Open Manuel BallesterosWon with birdie on first extra hole

PGA Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runners-up
12 Aug 1981Canadian Open−4 (69-69-72-70=280)1 stroke Bruce Lietzke, Jack Nicklaus,
Andy North

PGA Tour playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
11974Monsanto Open Lee ElderLost to birdie on fourth extra hole

South African Tour wins (6)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner-upRef
114 Feb 1970General Motors Open70-65-75-75=2852 strokes Gary Player
220 Feb 1971Transvaal Open70-70-67-72=2796 strokes Graham Henning
36 Mar 1971Schoeman Park Open67-67-65-68=2673 strokes John Bland
419 Dec 1971Rhodesian Dunlop Masters68-67-69-68=2723 strokes Tienie Britz
55 Mar 1972Glen Anil Classic68-66-67-72=273Playoff Hugh Baiocchi
627 Jan 1973Rothmans International Matchplay6 & 5 Gary Player

Other wins (10)

This list may be incomplete.

  • 1969 Sunningdale Foursomes (with Peter Benka)
  • 1970 Lord Derby’s Under-23 Professional Tournament, Coca-Cola Young Professionals’ Championship
  • 1971 Southern Professional Championship
  • 1972 Coca-Cola Young Professionals’ Championship
  • 1973 Ford Maracaibo Open (Venezuela)
  • 1974 Raleigh Cup (Guadalajara, Mexico)
  • 1983 Spalding Invitational
  • 1985 Spalding Invitational
  • 1989 New Jersey PGA Championship

Results in major championships

Tournament19681969
Masters TournamentDNPDNP
U.S. OpenDNPDNP
The Open ChampionshipCUTCUT
PGA ChampionshipDNPDNP
Tournament1970197119721973197419751976197719781979
Masters TournamentDNPCUTT38T3T31CUTT23T46T14T34
U.S. OpenDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPT7T55T10T27DNP
The Open ChampionshipT6T18T28T182T7T42DNP6T41
PGA ChampionshipDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPT40T38DNPT26DNP
Tournament1980198119821983198419851986
Masters TournamentDNPDNPT24T20CUTDNPDNP
U.S. OpenDNPDNPT30T50T255669
The Open ChampionshipT23CUTT2CUTDNPDNPDNP
PGA ChampionshipCUTCUTT22T47CUTDNPDNP

DNP = Did not play
CUT = missed the half-way cut (3rd round cut in 1981 Open Championship)
“T” = tied
Yellow background for top-10.

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts made
Masters Tournament001115129
U.S. Open00002399
The Open Championship0202581511
PGA Championship00000185
Totals02138174434
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 16 (1975 U.S. Open – 1980 Open Championship)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 2 (1975 U.S. Open – 1975 Open Championship)

Team appearances

Amateur

  • Walker Cup (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 1967
  • Eisenhower Trophy (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 1968

Professional

  • Ryder Cup (representing Great Britain & Ireland/Europe): 1971, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1981
  • World Cup (representing England): 1971
  • Double Diamond International (representing England): 1973, 1974 (winners, captain)
  • Sotogrande Match: (representing Great Britain and Ireland): 1974 (winners)

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