Skip to content
Search
  • Members
  • Induction
    • Class of 2022
    • Criteria & Process
    • History
  • Stories
  • Visit
    • Location, Hours, Pricing
    • Exhibits
    • Events
    • World Golf Village
    • World Golf Hall of Fame IMAX Theater
  • Support
    • Donate
  • Store
Menu
  • Members
  • Induction
    • Class of 2022
    • Criteria & Process
    • History
  • Stories
  • Visit
    • Location, Hours, Pricing
    • Exhibits
    • Events
    • World Golf Village
    • World Golf Hall of Fame IMAX Theater
  • Support
    • Donate
  • Store
  • Home
  • >
  • Member Pages
  • >
  • Greg Norman

Greg Norman

Hometown
Queensland
Australia
Year Inducted
2001
Inducted Category
Competitor
Birthdate
Feb 10,1955
Major Championships & THE PLAYERS: 3

  • Open Championship: 1986, 1993
  • THE PLAYERS Championship: 1994

Additional PGA TOUR Wins: 17

  • 1984: Kemper Open, Canadian Open
  • 1986: Panasonic-Las Vegas Invitational, Kemper Open
  • 1988: MCI Heritage Classic
  • 1989: International, Greater Milwaukee Open
  • 1990: Doral Ryder Open, Memorial Tournament
  • 1992: Canadian Open
  • 1993: Doral Ryder Open
  • 1995: Memorial, Canon Greater Hartford Open, NEC World Series of Golf
  • 1996: Doral Ryder Open
  • 1997: FedEx St. Jude Classic, NEC World Series of Golf

European Tour Wins: 16

  • 1977: Martini International
  • 1979: Martini International
  • 1980: French Open, Scandinavian Open, World Match Play Championship
  • 1981: Martini International, Dunlop Masters (England)
  • 1982: Dunlop Masters (Wales), State Express Classic, Benson, Benson & Hedges International
  • 1983: Cannes Invitational, World Match Play Championship
  • 1986: European Open, Suntory World Match Play
  • 1988: Italian Open
  • 1994: Johnnie Walker Classic (Thailand)

PGA TOUR of Australia Wins: 35

  • 1976: Westlakes Classic
  • 1978: Caltex Festival of Sydney Open, Traralgon Classic, NSW Open
  • 1979: Traralgon Classic, Queensland PGA, Martini International
  • 1980: Australian Open
  • 1981: Australian Masters
  • 1983: Australian Masters, Stefen Queensland Open, NSW Open
  • 1984: Victorian Open, Australian Masters, Australian PGA Championship
  • 1985: Australian PGA Championship, Australian Open
  • 1986: Stefen Queensland Open, NSW Open, West End Jubilee South Australia Open, Western Australian Open
  • 1987: Australian Masters, Australian Open
  • 1988: Palm Meadows Cup, ESP Open, PGA National Tournament Players Championship, NSW Open
  • 1989: Australian Masters, PGA National Tournament Players Championship
  • 1990: Australian Masters
  • 1996: Ford South Australian Open, Australian Open
  • 1995: Australian Open
  • 1998: Greg Norman Holden International

Additional Wins: 17

  • 1977: Kuzaha Open (Japan)
  • 1978: South Seas Classic (Fiji)
  • 1979: Hong Kong Open
  • 1983: Hong Kong Open, Kapalua International
  • 1985: Australian Skins Challenge, Dunhill Cup
  • 1986: Grand Slam of Golf (USA), Dunhill Cup
  • 1988: Desert Scrmable (USA)
  • 1989: Chunichi Crowns (Japan)
  • 1993: Taiheiyo Masters (Japan), PGA Fran Slam of Golf (USA)
  • 1994: Grand Slam of Golf (USA)
  • 1995: Fred Meyer Challenge (USA)
  • 1997: Fred Meyer Challenge (USA), Canadian Skins Game, Andersen Consulting World Championship
  • 1998: Franklin Templeton Shootout (teamed with Steve Elkington)
  • 2001: Skins Fame (USA)

Presidents Cup Appearances: 5

Wins in bold

  • Player: 1996, 1998, 2000
  • Captain: 2009, 2011

Awards & Honors:

  • Arnold Palmer Award: 1986, 1990, 1995
  • Officer of the Order of Australia: 1987
  • Sport Australia Hall of Fame: 1988
  • Byron Nelson Award: 1988, 1990, 1993, 1994, 1995
  • Vardon Trophy: 1989, 1990, 1994
  • PGA TOUR leading money winner: 1986, 1990, 1995
  • Jack Nicklaus Award: 1995
  • Player of the Year: 1986, 1995
  • Florida Sports Hall of Fame: 2006
  • Old Tom Morris Award: 2008
  • GWAA Charlie Bartlett Award: 2008
  • Queensland Sport Hall of Fame: 2009
  • Australian Global Icon Award: 2015
  • National Golf Course Owner’s Association Award of Merit: 2015
  • The Memorial Tournament Honoree: 2017
  • Sport Australia Hall of Fame
  • Officer of the Order of Australia

Australian Greg Norman dominated the golf world for much of the 1980s and early 1990s with his aggressive game and charismatic demeanor. Labeled the “Great White Shark” by a newspaper columnist during the 1981 Masters, he is one of the most recognizable sports figures whose professional career produced 88 international victories, including two Open Championships.

He topped the World Ranking for a total of six years and he represented his country in three Presidents Cups. For his countless accomplishments, Norman garnered the highest percentage of votes of anyone who has been inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame via the PGA TOUR Ballot, with 82 percent.

Norman was born in Mt. Isa, Queensland, Australia, February 10, 1955. At 15, he tagged along with his mother, Toini, to Virginia Golf Club where she was club champion. He quickly grew attached to the game. Norman’s first taste of golf instruction came from Jack Nicklaus’ book, Golf My Way. After turning pro in 1976, Norman’s highflying lifestyle today is a far cry from his humble beginning as a $28-a-week assistant at Royal Queensland.

Norman won 20 times on the PGA Tour and was the first to surpass $10 million in career earnings. He won three Arnold Palmer Awards as the tour’s leading money winner (1986, 1990 and 1995) and three Vardon Trophies (1988, 1989 and 1994). He was PGA TOUR Player of the Year in 1995. But despite his numerous wins, Norman is frequently remembered for his historic losses. He is the only player to have lost all four Major Championships in playoffs.

“Sometimes I think I have an almost perverse love of being down, even being defeated, because I know it will spur me on to greater things.”

Norman’s 1986 season most accurately captures his exploits and crushing defeats. He led going into the final round of all four Majors. On Sunday at the Masters, he hit an errant approach at 18 and couldn’t save par to lose to then 46-year-old Nicklaus, who closed with a memorable six-under-par 30 on the back nine.

At the U.S. Open Norman ballooned to a closing 78, but that paled when he had victory snatched from his grasp at the PGA Championship when Bob Tway holed an improbable bunker shot at the last hole to beat the Shark by a stroke.

Norman won only the Open Championship in 1986 when he authored a second-round 63 in windy conditions at Turnberry to open a five-shot advantage and cruise to an eventual two-stroke victory. The ovation he received as he walked to the 72nd green remains one of golf’s most memorable scenes.

Despite losing three of the four Majors in excruciating fashion, Norman’s 1986 campaign ranks among the all-time best. He won 10 times worldwide and led both the U.S. and Australasian money lists.

Fact

Greg Norman’s lone career albatross came at the 1990 Australian Open.

Norman’s career is littered with many other near misses. He has been cruelly denied major tournament success perhaps more than any other player in history. While Norman scheduled his season around the Majors, the Masters was his true goal. When he first played at Augusta in 1981, he tied for fourth and seemed destined to be fitted for a green jacket soon after. But after losing to Nicklaus in 1986, the next year was more excruciating, losing to Larry Mize on the second hole of a sudden-death playoff when Mize chipped in from an impossible spot to the right of the 11th green.

In 1996, Norman suffered a historic collapse in the final round at Augusta when, leading by six strokes, he skied to a 78 and lost to Nick Faldo, who rallied with a flawless 67.

Norman could have been defeated by his heartbreaking losses, but he wasn’t. In his instructional book, Shark Attack, Norman wrote, “Sometimes I think I have an almost perverse love of being down, even being defeated, because I know it will spur me on to greater things.”

At the 1993 Open Championship, Norman did add to his Major tournament victories when he fired a remarkable final-round 64 to beat Faldo by two strokes at Royal St George’s.

Through his historic losses and gallant victories, Norman played the game with an intensity second to none.

Greg Norman was originally inducted through the PGA TOUR Ballot.

  • About Us
  • Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Media
  • Privacy Policy

Stay Connected

Don’t miss out on the latest golf news and updates!

Facebook Twitter Linkedin Instagram

© Copyright World Golf Hall of Fame 2020