Greg Norman
- In full:
- Gregory John Norman
- Byname:
- the Great White Shark
- Born:
- February 10, 1955, Mount Isa, Queensland, Australia (age 69)
- Awards And Honors:
- British Open (1986)
- Notable Family Members:
- spouse Chris Evert
News •
Greg Norman (born February 10, 1955, Mount Isa, Queensland, Australia) is an Australian professional golfer who was widely successful worldwide from the 1970s to the 1990s.
As a youth, Norman excelled at contact sports, especially rugby and Australian rules football. His interest in golf began at a relatively late age (15) after caddying for his mother. Norman’s professional career began in 1975 as a “trainee club professional” at Royal Queensland Golf Club. The next year he won his first professional tournament, and he then joined the European Tour, claiming his first European victory in his rookie year on the circuit at the 1977 Martini International in Scotland. Twenty-six victories followed before Norman won his first tournament on the U.S. Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) of America Tour in June 1984 at the Kemper Open. A month later he beat golfing great Jack Nicklaus by two shots to win the Canadian Open.
During his career, Norman won 91 professional tournaments (20 PGA and 71 international), registered 31 second-place finishes on the PGA Tour, and held the ranking of top golfer in the world for a total of 331 weeks (a record broken in 2004 by Tiger Woods). The highlights of his career included winning the British Open twice (1986 and 1993) and his near victories at the Masters Tournament, notably the 1996 tournament, where Norman famously squandered a six-stroke lead heading into the final day to lose to Britain’s Nick Faldo by five shots.
One of the most successful athletes-turned-entrepreneurs in the history of sports, Norman designed more than 70 golf courses, and his “shark” brand of golf equipment, sportswear, and wine became one of the most-recognizable logos in the golf world. In 2021 he became CEO of the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Investments, which sponsored a tour that offered multimillion-dollar paydays to PGA players. Norman was criticized for his involvement in LIV, as some claimed it was an attempt by the Saudi government to “sportswash” its human rights abuses. His autobiography, The Way of the Shark: Lessons on Golf, Business, and Life (written with Donald T. Phillips), was published in 2006. Norman was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2001.