World Golf Hall of Fame
The World Golf Hall of Fame is located at World Golf Village near St. Augustine, Florida, in the United States, and it is unusual among sports halls of fame in that a single site honors both men and women. It is supported by a consortium of 26 golf organizations from all over the world.[1]
Established | May 19, 1998 |
---|---|
Location | St. Johns County, Florida |
Type | Professional sports hall of fame |
Visitors | 350,000/year (2009) |
Website | www.worldgolfhalloffame.org |
The Hall of Fame Museum Building was designed by the specialist museum architecture firm E. Verner Johnson and Associates of Boston. They also produced the museum master plan that established the size, mission and qualities of the museum and the surrounding facilities and site.
The Hall of Fame Museum features a permanent exhibition and a rolling program of temporary exhibitions. Designed by museum design firm Ralph Appelbaum Associates, the Hall of Fame and exhibition area contains exhibits on the game's history, heritage, and techniques; major players and organizations; golf course design, equipment, and dress; and new directions, such as ecological concerns in course management.[2]
History
The World Golf Hall of Fame was originally located in Pinehurst, North Carolina, and was privately operated by Diamondhead Corp., then owners of the Pinehurst Resort. It opened in September 1974 with an initial class of 13 members.[3] Initially it was a local project, but the PGA of America took over management in 1983 and acquired full ownership in 1986.
Two other halls of fame have been merged into the World Golf Hall of Fame. The PGA of America established one in 1940, which was merged into the Pinehurst Hall in the 1980s. The Hall of Fame of Women's Golf was established by the LPGA in 1951, with four charter members: Patty Berg, Betty Jameson, Louise Suggs, and Babe Zaharias. It was inactive for some years, but in 1967 it moved into its first physical premises, which were in Augusta, Georgia and was renamed the LPGA Tour Hall of Fame. In 1998 it merged into the World Golf Hall of Fame.
In 1994 the global golf industry established a non-profit making body called the World Golf Foundation to promote the sport, with the creation of an enhanced Hall of Fame as one of its main objectives. Construction at the new site in St. Johns County began in 1996 and the new facility opened on May 19, 1998.
Membership categories
In October 2013, the Hall announced that it was reviewing its selection process and that there would be no induction ceremony in 2014.[4][5] A new process was announced in March 2014.
Starting in 2014, members are inducted into the Hall of Fame in one of four categories: Male Competitor, Female Competitor, Veterans, and Lifetime Achievement categories. Elections are held every other year with induction ceremonies in odd number years beginning in 2015. The process has changed from that used from 1996 to 2013. The minimum qualifications for male and female competitors are: minimum of 40 years old, or five years removed from "active competition" and 15 or more wins on "approved tours" or two "major wins". The veterans category is primarily for those golfers whose careers ended before 1980 and includes both amateurs and professionals. The lifetime achievement category remains from the old system.[6]
A 20-member selection sub-committee will choose from among the eligible candidates and select ballots for a selection committee. There will be five names each on the male and female ballots and three names each on the veterans and lifetime achievement ballots. A separate 16-member selection committee will then vote on all four ballots. Election to the Hall of Fame will require 75% of the vote and each year's election class is limited to two from each ballot and five total.[6][7]
In 2016, the Hall announced that the age requirement would be raised to 50 from 40 years old.[8] In 2020, the age went from 50 to 45.[9]
Qualification details
Male
- Approved tours (15 wins total)
- PGA Tour
- European Tour
- Japan Golf Tour
- Sunshine Tour
- Asian Tour
- PGA Tour of Australasia
- Majors or Players Championship (two wins)
Female
- Approved tours (15 wins total)
- Majors (two wins)
- U.S. Women's Open
- Women's PGA Championship
- Women's British Open (2001−current)
- ANA Inspiration (1983−current)
- The Evian Championship (2013−current)
- du Maurier Classic (1979−2000)
- Titleholders Championship
- Women's Western Open
Categories from 1996 to 2013
From 1996 to 2013, members were inducted into the Hall of Fame in one of five categories: PGA Tour/Champions Tour, LPGA Tour, International, Lifetime Achievement, and Veterans.
PGA Tour/Champions Tour ballot
Current and former PGA Tour and Champions Tour players were eligible for this ballot if they met the following requirements (beginning with 1996 election):
- PGA Tour
- Minimum of 40 years old
- PGA Tour member for 10 years
- 10 PGA Tour wins or two wins in the majors or Players Championship
- Champions Tour
Election requirements:
Years | % of returned ballots needed for election |
---|---|
1996–2000 | 75% |
2001–2003 | 65% |
2004–2013 | 65%, in the event that no candidate receives 65%, the nominee receiving the most votes with at least 50% is elected |
Voters voted for up to 30% of the players on the ballot. If a player was named on less than 5% of the ballots for two consecutive years, they were dropped from the ballot. Players not elected could remain on the ballot indefinitely[10] (prior to 2007 the limit was 10 years, from 2007 to 2009 the limit was 15 years).[11]
LPGA point system
LPGA Tour golfers were eligible through a point system. Since 1999, LPGA members automatically qualified for World Golf Hall of Fame membership when they meet these three criteria:
- Must be/have been an "active" LPGA Tour member for 10 years.
- Must have won/been awarded at least one of the following - an LPGA major championship, the Vare Trophy or Player of the Year honors; and
- Must have accumulated a total of 27 points, which are awarded as follows - one point for each LPGA official tournament win, two points for each LPGA major tournament win and one point for each Vare Trophy or Rolex Player of the Year honor earned.
Before 1999, players had to win 30 tournaments, including two majors; 35 tournaments with one major; or 40 tournaments in all to automatically qualify. At one time, players had to win two different majors to qualify with 30 wins, but this was changed earlier in the 1990s.
This point system is still used for selection to the LPGA Hall of Fame.[12]
International ballot
Men and women golfers not fully eligible for PGA/Champions Tour ballot or the LPGA Tour point system were eligible for the International ballot if they met the following requirements[13] (beginning with the 1996 election):
- Minimum of 40 years old
- Cumulative 50 points earned as follows:
- Men
- 6 points – Major victories
- 4 points – Players Championship win
- 3 points – Other PGA Tour win, European Tour win
- 2 points – Japan Golf Tour, Sunshine Tour, PGA Tour of Australasia, Champions Tour win
- 1 point – Other national championship win; Ryder Cup, Presidents Cup participation
- Women
- 6 points – Major[lower-alpha 1] victories
- 4 points – Other LPGA Tour win, Women's British Open win prior to 2001[lower-alpha 2]
- 2 points – LPGA of Japan Tour win, Ladies European Tour win
- 1 point – Other national championship win, Solheim Cup participation
- Men
Election requirements: same as PGA Tour ballot.
Lifetime Achievement category
There was also a "lifetime achievement" category through which anyone who had made a major contribution to the organization or promotion of the sport may be selected, for example, Bob Hope. These members were chosen by the Hall of Fame's Board of Directors. Most played golf, in some cases with some competitive success, but it was not their play alone which won them a place in the Hall of Fame.
Veteran's category
The last category was created to honor professional or amateur players whose career concluded at least 30 years ago. These members were also chosen by the Hall of Fame's Board of Directors.
Membership
New members are inducted each year on the Monday before The Players Championship[14] (previous to 2010 in October or November), and by May 2013 there were 146 members. Beginning in 2010, the ballots are due in July with the results announced later in the year. New entrants in the Lifetime Achievement and Veteran's categories are announced at irregular intervals. For example, Frank Chirkinian was elected in the Lifetime Achievement category in an emergency election in February 2011, with the vote presumably held because he was then terminally ill with lung cancer;[15] when it became clear he would not live to attend his induction, he videotaped his acceptance speech in late February, less than two weeks before his death.[16]
Men
Unless stated otherwise these men were inducted mainly for their on-course success. The exceptions mostly correspond with the lifetime achievement category, but not quite. For example, Charlie Sifford was notable as a player but was inducted for lifetime achievement.
- 1974
Walter Hagen - 1974
Ben Hogan - 1974
Bobby Jones - 1974
Byron Nelson - 1974
Jack Nicklaus - 1974
Francis Ouimet - 1974
Arnold Palmer - 1974
Gary Player - 1974
Gene Sarazen - 1974
Sam Snead - 1974
Harry Vardon - 1975
Willie Anderson - 1975
Fred Corcoran – many-faceted promoter and administrator - 1975
Joseph Dey – executive director of the USGA and the first commissioner of the PGA Tour - 1975
Chick Evans - 1975
Young Tom Morris - 1975
John Henry Taylor - 1976
Tommy Armour - 1976
James Braid - 1976
Old Tom Morris - 1976
Jerome Travers - 1977
Bobby Locke - 1977
John Ball - 1977
Herb Graffis – golf writer and founder of the U.S. National Golf Foundation - 1977
Donald Ross – golf course architect - 1978
Billy Casper - 1978
Harold Hilton - 1978
Bing Crosby – celebrity friend of golf who founded his own PGA Tour event - 1978
Clifford Roberts – co-founder of the Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters Tournament - 1979
Walter Travis - 1980
Henry Cotton - 1980
Lawson Little - 1981
Ralph Guldahl - 1981
Lee Trevino - 1982
Julius Boros - 1983
Jimmy Demaret - 1983
Bob Hope – celebrity friend of golf who founded his own PGA Tour event - 1986
Cary Middlecoff - 1987
Robert Trent Jones – golf course architect - 1988
Bob Harlow – promoter who played a key role in the early development of the PGA Tour - 1988
Peter Thomson - 1988
Tom Watson - 1989
Jim Barnes - 1989
Roberto De Vicenzo - 1989
Raymond Floyd - 1990
William C. Campbell – two-time President of the USGA - 1990
Gene Littler - 1990
Paul Runyan - 1990
Horton Smith - 1992
Harry Cooper - 1992
Hale Irwin - 1992
Chi-Chi Rodríguez - 1992
Richard Tufts – ran Pinehurst and served as President of the USGA - 1996
Johnny Miller - 1997
Seve Ballesteros - 1997
Nick Faldo - 1998
Lloyd Mangrum - 2000
Jack Burke Jr. - 2000
Deane Beman – Commissioner of the PGA Tour 1974-1994 - 2000
Michael Bonallack – British golf administrator - 2000
Neil Coles – first Chairman of the PGA European Tour - 2000
John Jacobs – first Tournament Director of the European Tour - 2001
Bernhard Langer (inducted with 2002 class)[17] - 2001
Greg Norman - 2001
Payne Stewart - 2001
Allan Robertson - 2001
Karsten Solheim – golf equipment manufacturer and founder of the Solheim Cup - 2002
Ben Crenshaw - 2002
Tony Jacklin - 2002
Tommy Bolt - 2002
Harvey Penick – golf instructor - 2003
Nick Price - 2003
Leo Diegel - 2004
Charlie Sifford - 2004
Isao Aoki - 2004
Tom Kite - 2005
Bernard Darwin – golf writer - 2005
Alister MacKenzie – golf course architect - 2005
Willie Park Sr. - 2005
Vijay Singh (inducted with 2006 class)[18] - 2006
Larry Nelson - 2006
Henry Picard - 2006
Mark McCormack – sports agent who represented many top golfers; the developer of golf's first world ranking system, adapted into today's Official World Golf Ranking - 2007
Joe Carr - 2007
Hubert Green - 2007
Charles B. Macdonald – inaugural U.S. Amateur champion, founding Vice-President of the USGA and "Father of American Golf Architecture" - 2007
Kel Nagle - 2007
Curtis Strange - 2008
Bob Charles - 2008
Pete Dye – golf course architect - 2008
Denny Shute - 2008
Herbert Warren Wind – golf writer - 2008
Craig Wood - 2009
Christy O'Connor Snr - 2009
José María Olazábal - 2009
Lanny Wadkins - 2009
Dwight D. Eisenhower – former U.S. President - 2011
Ernie Els - 2011
Masashi "Jumbo" Ozaki - 2011
Doug Ford - 2011
Jock Hutchison - 2011
Frank Chirkinian – television producer, known as the 'father of televised golf' for the impact he had on golf broadcasting. - 2011
George H. W. Bush – former U.S. President - 2012
Phil Mickelson[19] - 2012
Dan Jenkins – golf writer[20] - 2012
Sandy Lyle[21] - 2012
Peter Alliss[21] - 2013
Fred Couples[22] - 2013
Ken Venturi[23] - 2013
Willie Park Jr.[24] - 2013
Colin Montgomerie[25] - 2013
Ken Schofield[25] – Executive Director of the European Tour - 2015
David Graham[26] - 2015
Mark O'Meara[26] - 2015
A. W. Tillinghast – golf course architect[26] - 2017
Henry Longhurst – golf writer and commentator - 2017
Davis Love III - 2017
Ian Woosnam - 2019
Retief Goosen - 2019
Billy Payne − Chairman of Augusta National Golf Club - 2019
Dennis Walters − disabled golfer and inspirational speaker and performer - 2021
Tiger Woods[27] - 2021
Tim Finchem – Commissioner of the PGA Tour 1994-2017[28]
Women
The first five women on this list were grandfathered in 1998 from the Hall of Fame of Women's Golf, which was founded in 1951, via the LPGA Tour Hall of Fame, which was inaugurated in 1967. The list shows the years when they were originally inducted into the Hall of Fame of Women's Golf. Unless stated otherwise the women on the list were inducted primarily for their on-course achievements.
- 1951
Betty Jameson - 1951
Patty Berg - 1951
Louise Suggs - 1951
Babe Didrikson Zaharias - 1960
Betsy Rawls - 1964
Mickey Wright - 1975
Glenna Collett-Vare - 1975
Joyce Wethered - 1975
Kathy Whitworth - 1977
Sandra Haynie - 1977
Carol Mann - 1978
Dorothy Campbell Hurd Howe - 1982
JoAnne Carner - 1987
Nancy Lopez - 1991
Pat Bradley - 1993
Patty Sheehan - 1994
Dinah Shore – celebrity friend of the LPGA; founded a tournament that eventually became a major - 1995
Betsy King - 1999
Amy Alcott - 2000
Beth Daniel - 2000
Juli Inkster - 2000
Judy Rankin - 2001
Donna Caponi - 2001
Judy Bell – administrator; first female President of the USGA - 2002
Marlene Bauer Hagge - 2003
Hisako "Chako" Higuchi - 2003
Annika Sörenstam - 2004
Marlene Stewart Streit - 2005
Ayako Okamoto - 2005
Karrie Webb - 2006
Marilynn Smith - 2007
Pak Se-ri - 2008
Carol Semple Thompson - 2012
Hollis Stacy[29] - 2015
Laura Davies[26] - 2017
Meg Mallon - 2017
Lorena Ochoa - 2019
Peggy Kirk Bell - 2019
Jan Stephenson - 2021
Marion Hollins[28] - 2021
Susie Maxwell Berning[30]
Notes
- This specifically refers to events recognized as majors by the U.S. LPGA. The three richest women's tours each recognize a different set of majors, although the U.S. LPGA set is by far the most significant on a global scale. See women's major golf championships for a fuller discussion.
- The Women's British Open was first recognized as a U.S. LPGA major in 2001.
References
- "World Golf Hall of Fame Supporting Organizations".
- "Ralph Appelbaum Associates Project Description". Archived from the original on June 16, 2007.
- "World Golf Hall of Fame History".
- "Golf Hall to review selection process". ESPN. Associated Press. October 8, 2013. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- McEwan, Michael (October 8, 2013). "Golf Hall of Fame scrapped for 2014". bunkered. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- "World Golf Hall of Fame announces changes to enshrinement process". PGA Tour. March 23, 2014.
- "Criteria & Process". World Golf Hall of Fame. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- "World Golf Hall of Fame names Selection Commission Co-Chairs for 2017: Jack Nicklaus joins fellow Hall of Fame Member Co-Chairs, age change to induction criteria". PGA Tour. March 30, 2016.
- Harig, Bob (January 22, 2020). "Golf Hall of Fame lowers age eligibility requirements for induction". ESPN.
- "World Golf Hall of Fame Releases Ballots for 2011". PGA Tour. Archived from the original on June 11, 2010.
- "About the PGA Tour Ballot". Golf Digest. January 31, 2007.
- "LPGA Statement on Changes to World Golf Hall of Fame Induction Selection". LPGA. March 2014.
- "About the International Ballot". January 31, 2007. Archived from the original on June 25, 2011.
- "Hall of Fame to hold 2011 Ceremony on Monday of Players Championship". PGA Tour. Archived from the original on July 24, 2010.
- Dolch, Craig (March 4, 2011). "Chirkinian's impact on televised golf can't be overstated". PGA Tour. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
Bringing sounds to golf is just part of the reason why Chirkinian — who is considered "the father of televised golf" — was elected February 9 into the World Golf Hall of Fame on an emergency vote.
- Dorman, Larry (March 5, 2011). "At 19th Hole, Recalling an Innovator". The New York Times. Retrieved August 4, 2011.
- "Bernhard Langer". World Golf Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on March 20, 2012.
- "Nelson, Singh inducted into World Golf Hall of Fame". ESPN. Associated Press. October 30, 2006.
- "World Golf Hall of Fame to induct Mickelson in 2012". PGA Tour. November 11, 2011. Archived from the original on November 12, 2011.
- "World Golf Hall of Fame to induct Dan Jenkins in 2012". PGA Tour. December 14, 2011. Archived from the original on January 10, 2012.
- "Sandy Lyle, Peter Alliss picked for Hall". ESPN. Associated Press. December 15, 2011.
- "Couples to be inducted into World Golf Hall of Fame". PGA Tour. September 19, 2012. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
- "World Golf Hall of Fame adds Venturi to 2013 class". PGA Tour. October 8, 2012. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
- "Willie Park Jr. selected for World Golf Hall of Fame". PGA Tour. November 15, 2012. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
- "Montgomerie and Schofield Honoured by Hall of Fame" (Press release). PGA European Tour. December 18, 2012. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
- McAllister, Mike (October 15, 2014). "Class of 2015 Hall of Famers receive surprise calls". PGA Tour.
- Harig, Bob (March 11, 2020). "Tiger Woods to be inducted into World Golf Hall of Fame in 2021". ESPN.
- "Tim Finchem, former PGA Tour commissioner, elected to World Golf Hall of Fame". ESPN. Associated Press. April 20, 2020.
- "Hollis Stacy selected for Hall of Fame". ESPN. Associated Press. November 18, 2011. Retrieved November 18, 2011.
- "Susie Maxwell Berning elected to World Golf Hall of Fame". ESPN. Associated Press. April 22, 2020.