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Colin Montgomerie

Scottish professional golfer (born 1963)

Colin Montgomerie

Scottish professional golfer (born 1963)

FieldValue
nameColin Montgomerie
OBE
imageColinMontgomerie.jpg
imagesize
fullnameColin Stuart Montgomerie
nicknameMonty
birth_date
birth_placeGlasgow, Scotland
death_date
height6 ft 1 in
nationality
residenceDunning, Perthshire, Scotland
Naples, Florida
spouse{{plainlist
* {{marriageEimear Wilson19902006reasondiv}}
* {{marriageGaynor Knowles20082017reasondiv}}
children3
collegeHouston Baptist University
yearpro1987
tourPGA Tour Champions
European Senior Tour
extourEuropean Tour
prowins54
eurowins31 (4th all-time)
asiawins2
auswins1
champwins7
seneurowins9 (Tied 5th all-time)
otherwins7
majorwins
mastersT8: 1998
usopen2nd/T2: 1994, 1997, 2006
open2nd: 2005
pga2nd: 1995
wghofidcolin-montgomerie
wghofyear2013
award1Sir Henry Cotton
Rookie of the Year
year11988
award2European Tour
Order of Merit winner
year21993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
1997, 1998, 1999, 2005
award3European Tour
Golfer of the Year
year31995, 1996, 1997, 1999
award4European Senior Tour
Order of Merit winner
year42014, 2015
module{{Infobox personembed=yes
signatureColin_Montgomerie_signature.jpg

OBE Naples, Florida

European Senior Tour Rookie of the Year](sir-henry-cotton-rookie-of-the-year) Order of Merit winner](harry-vardon-trophy-winners) 1997, 1998, 1999, 2005 Golfer of the Year](european-tour-golfer-of-the-year) Order of Merit winner](european-senior-tour-order-of-merit-winners)

Montgomerie won three consecutive Volvo PGA Championships at Wentworth Club between 1998 and 2000. He has finished runner-up on five occasions in major championships and his career-high world ranking is second. He was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2013.

After turning 50 in 2013, Montgomerie has had a successful career on the PGA Tour Champions and European Senior Tour, including winning three senior major championships.

Early life

Although Scottish by birth and ancestry, he was raised in Yorkshire, England, where his father, James Montgomerie, was Managing Director of Fox's Biscuits. He spent a number of years with the Ilkley Golf Club, where he was tutored by the past professional Bill Ferguson. He was educated at both Leeds Grammar School and Strathallan School, Perthshire. During his time in Leeds, he became a supporter of Leeds United. His father later became the secretary of Royal Troon Golf Club, one of Scotland's most famous clubs.

Amateur career

Montgomerie became one of the first British golfers to go to a United States college, attending Houston Baptist University, where he played on the golf team for four years, and became its top player. He won three important Scottish amateur tournaments – the 1983 Scottish Youths Championship, the 1985 Scottish Amateur Stroke Play Championship and the 1987 Scottish Amateur Championship.

He played for Great Britain and Ireland twice in the Eisenhower Trophy, (1984 and 1986) and twice in the Walker Cup (1985 and 1987). He was also part of the Scottish team, winning the 1985 European Amateur Team Championship at Halmstad Golf Club, North Course, in Sweden. Before turning pro he considered a career in sports management, utilizing his degree in business management and law; the interview process included a golf outing that convinced the firm he should become a client rather than an employee.

Professional career

In 1988, Montgomerie turned professional before the season began. He was named the Rookie of the Year on the European Tour that year. He quickly developed into one of Europe's top pros, winning his first event at the 1989 Portuguese Open TPC by 11 shots, and his second, beating a world class field, at the 1991 Scandinavian Masters at Royal Drottningholm Golf Club in Sweden. He made his Ryder Cup debut later in 1991. He finished first on the European Tour Order of Merit every year from 1993 to 1999 (a record for most consecutive Orders of Merit), and has 31 victories on the tour, including the 1998, 1999, and 2000 Volvo PGA Championships at Wentworth, England. However, despite many near-misses, Montgomerie was unable to win on the PGA Tour.

Montgomerie first reached the top-10 in the Official World Golf Rankings in 1994, and spent 400 weeks in the top-10. His highest ranking was number two. In his prime Montgomerie was considered one of the best drivers of the golf ball in the world and became a very precise iron player, often able to judge the distance he hit the ball exactly from long range.

Montgomerie came first in the Volvo Bonus Pool every year from 1993 to 1998. The Volvo Bonus Pool was an extra tranche of prize money awarded at the end of each European Tour season from 1988 to 1998 to the regular members of the tour who had had the best performances over the season.

His form fell away gradually in the new millennium, partly due to marriage problems, and his ranking slumped to 82nd in the world, but he came back strongly in 2005, winning a record eighth European Tour Order of Merit and returning to the top ten in the World Rankings. Late in 2005 he became the first man to win 20 million Euros on the European Tour—topping the European Tour's all-time highest earners list. He won for the first time in nearly two years at the Smurfit Kappa European Open in July 2007. In 2008, Montgomerie slipped out of the top 100 players in the world ranking system. A runner-up finish at the 2008 French Open in June boosted him back up the rankings, but his good play was short-lived, and as a result Montgomerie failed to qualify for Nick Faldo's 2008 Ryder Cup team. In March 2009, Montgomerie played in his milestone 500th European Tour event at the Open de Andalucia where he made the cut, but was not in contention during the weekend. He remained the leader in career earnings on the European Tour until 2010, when he was surpassed by Ernie Els.

After nearly two years without a top-10 finish, Montgomerie posted a final round of 68 for a share of 7th place in the 2011 BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth. Despite the drop in form, his influence remained strong. In 2012, Montgomerie was named by the Golf Club Managers' Association's Golf Club Management magazine as the seventh most powerful person in British golf. In August 2012, Montgomerie finished tied for 6th at the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles, his highest finish in over four years.

In June 2013, after turning 50, Montgomerie joined the Champions Tour, where he made his debut in the Constellation Senior Players Championship, one of the five senior major championships. On 25 May 2014, Montgomerie won his first senior major championship at the Senior PGA Championship. He followed this up on 13 July 2014, when he claimed his second senior major at the U.S. Senior Open. On 24 May 2015, Montgomerie defended his Senior PGA Championship title to win his third senior major. However, in 2016 he narrowly missed out on making it three Senior PGA Championships in a row – finishing second and three shots behind winner Rocco Mediate. He won twice on the senior circuit in 2017, winning the inaugural Japan Airlines Championship before claiming his sixth Champions Tour win at the SAS Championship. His most recent victory came at the Invesco QQQ Championship in 2019.

Major championships

Montgomerie is generally considered to be one of the best golfers never to have won a major championship, after finishing in second place on five separate occasions. During what most consider to be his best years in the 1990s Montgomerie had several near-misses. A third place at the 1992 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach Golf Links was the first of these. He was prematurely congratulated by Jack Nicklaus who said "Congratulations on your first U.S. Open victory" to Montgomerie after he finished the 18th hole on Sunday. Tom Kite, who was still on the golf course when Montgomerie finished, won the championship.

At the 1994 U.S. Open, played at Oakmont Country Club, Montgomerie lost in a three-man playoff to Ernie Els (a playoff which also included Loren Roberts). Montgomerie shot 78 to trail the 74s shot by Els and Roberts, with Els winning at the 20th extra hole.

At the 1995 PGA Championship, Montgomerie birdied the final three holes of the Riviera Country Club course in the final round, to tie Steve Elkington at 17 under par. On the first sudden-death playoff hole, after being in a better position after two shots, Montgomerie missed his putt, while Elkington holed from 35 feet to claim the title.

Els defeated Montgomerie at the 1997 U.S. Open, played at Congressional Country Club. Montgomerie opened the tournament with a 65 but shot a 76 in the second round. A bogey on the 71st hole dropped Montgomerie one shot behind Els, who parred the last to win.

At the 2006 U.S. Open, played on the West course of the Winged Foot Golf Club, Montgomerie had yet another chance to win his first major championship. He stood in the middle of the 18th fairway in the final round having sunk a 50-foot birdie putt on the 17th green, which put him in the joint lead with Phil Mickelson. While waiting in position on the 18th fairway for the group in front to finish, Montgomerie switched his club from a 6-iron to a 7-iron, assuming adrenaline would kick in. Once the wait was over, he hit the approach shot poorly, ending up short and right of the green, in thick rough. He pitched onto the green, and then three-putted from 30 feet to lose the tournament by one stroke. After the loss, Montgomerie said, "At my age I've got to think positively. I'm 43 next week, and it's nice I can come back to this tournament and do well again, and I look forward to coming back here again next year and trying another U.S. Open disaster." Geoff Ogilvy won the championship.

Montgomerie's best finish in the Masters Tournament came in 1998 when he finished tied for 8th.

At The Open Championship in 2001 at Royal Lytham & St Annes Golf Club, Montgomerie started brightly with an opening 65, and still remained ahead after 36 holes, but he fell away over the weekend. He was also in contention with two rounds to play at Muirfield in 2002 and Royal Troon Golf Club in 2004, but failed to capitalise and finished midway down the field. His best finish in the Championship came in 2005 at St Andrews, where he finished second to Tiger Woods, who beat him by five shots.

In 2016, Montgomerie came through Open Qualifying at Gailes Links to qualify for his home Open at Royal Troon. He had the honour of hitting the opening tee shot at the tournament and ended up making the cut.

Following Sergio García's victory at the 2017 Masters, Montgomerie (with 75 starts) trailed only Jay Haas (87) and Lee Westwood (76) as the player with the most starts without a major title.

Ryder Cup

Practising before the [[2004 Ryder Cup

Despite his disappointments in the majors, Montgomerie is heralded as one of the greatest Ryder Cup players of all time. To date he has been a member of the European team on eight occasions, and has never lost in a singles match. He holds a win-lose-draw record of 20–9–7, thus giving him a total points scored tally of 23.5, only 5 points behind the all-time record held by Sergio García. He has played pivotal roles in several of the matches. He halved the last hole with Scott Hoch to obtain the half-point that won Europe the cup in 1997, and sank the winning putt, in what is considered to be his finest hour in the 2004 staging of the event.

Montgomerie was not part of Nick Faldo's 2008 Ryder Cup team, with the wildcards going to Paul Casey and Ian Poulter. Montgomerie captained the Great Britain and Ireland team in the first four stagings of the Seve Trophy, losing in 2000 but winning in 2002, 2003, and 2005.

On 28 January 2009, it was announced that Montgomerie would be the captain the European team at the 2010 Ryder Cup at Celtic Manor. On 4 October 2010, Montgomerie led the European team to victory, 14 to 13. On the same day he also announced that he would be stepping down as captain of the European Team. In December 2010, he accepted the BBC Sports Personality Coach of the Year award as captain of the victorious Ryder Cup team.

Montgomerie has been the playing captain of the European team in the Royal Trophy, played against a team from Asia. Europe was successful on both those occasions. He has the distinction having been a victorious player and captain in the Ryder Cup, Seve Trophy and Royal Trophy.

In 2011, Montgomerie was named president of the English junior golf charity, the Golf Foundation, and in 2012 the Scottish first minister, Alex Salmond, named him as an ambassador for the Scottish junior golf programme, ClubGolf.

In March 2015, Montgomerie accepted the captaincy of London Scottish Golf Club in Wimbledon to mark that club's 150th anniversary.

Montgomerie was also a columnist for the Scottish golf magazine, Bunkered, between 2008 and 2010.

Montgomerie represents the Turnberry resort in Scotland, where there is a Colin Montgomerie Golf Academy.

Personal life

Montgomerie met his first wife Eimear Wilson, from Troon, The couple had three children, and lived in Oxshott, Surrey. In 2002, Eimear gave Montgomerie an ultimatum to choose between golf and marriage, resulting in Montgomerie spending 10 weeks alone before they agreed to try again.

In 2006, the couple finally broke up, with Eimear suing for divorce on grounds of "unreasonable behaviour due to his obsession with golf", claiming it left her suffering from anxiety and depression. In 2006, the couple agreed to a clean break divorce settlement of £8 million, in return for Eimear giving up any claim on Colin's future earnings.

Since the divorce, he has had various relationships, including Spanish model Inés Sastre, and a divorced neighbour Jo Baldwin, whom he met on the school run. Their split, he suggested, caused his worst run in his professional career.

In 2007, Montgomerie announced his engagement to Scottish millionairess Gaynor Knowles. The couple wed on 19 April 2008 at Loch Lomond Golf Club. On 8 July 2010, Montgomerie was granted a super injunction by Mr Justice Eady, which came to light when he attended a press conference at the 2010 PGA Championship in Wisconsin. In March 2017, he and Knowles divorced. Montgomerie married for the third time in 2023 to his manager, Sarah Casey.

Awards and honours

  • In 1988, Montgomerie was named by the European Tour the Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year.
  • Montgomerie won the European Tour's Order of Merit eight times: from 1993-1999 and in 2005.
  • In 2004, he was named an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the New Year's Honours.
  • In 2013, Montgomerie was inducted to the World Golf Hall of Fame.
  • In 2014 and 2015, he won the European Senior Tour's Order of Merit.

Amateur wins

  • 1985 Scottish Amateur Stroke Play Championship
  • 1987 Scottish Amateur Championship

Professional wins (54)

European Tour wins (31)

Legend
Flagship events (3)
Tour Championships (2)
Other European Tour (26)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
122 Oct 1989Portuguese Open TPC−24 (67-65-69-63=264)11 strokesAUS Rodger Davis, ESP Manuel Moreno,
USA Mike Smith
24 Aug 1991Scandinavian Masters−18 (68-65-70-67=270)1 strokeESP Seve Ballesteros
325 Jul 1993Heineken Dutch Open−7 (68-73-71-69=281)1 strokeARG José Cóceres, FRA Jean van de Velde
47 Nov 1993Volvo Masters−10 (69-70-67-68=274)1 strokeNIR Darren Clarke
515 May 1994Peugeot Spanish Open−11 (70-71-66-70=277)1 strokeENG Richard Boxall, ZIM Mark McNulty,
ENG Mark Roe
621 Aug 1994Murphy's English Open−14 (70-67-68-69=274)1 strokeENG Barry Lane
728 Aug 1994Volvo German Open−19 (65-68-66-70=269)1 strokeGER Bernhard Langer
827 Aug 1995Volvo German Open (2)−16 (69-64-68-67=268)1 strokeSWE Niclas Fasth, SCO Sam Torrance
910 Sep 1995Trophée Lancôme−11 (64-69-65-71=269)1 strokeSCO Sam Torrance
1017 Mar 1996Dubai Desert Classic−18 (67-68-67-68=270)1 strokeESP Miguel Ángel Jiménez
117 Jul 1996Murphy's Irish Open−5 (69-69-73-68=279)1 strokeSCO Andrew Oldcorn, AUS Wayne Riley
128 Sep 1996Canon European Masters−24 (65-71-61-63=260)4 strokesSCO Sam Torrance
138 Jun 1997Compaq European Grand Prix−18 (69-68-68-65=270)5 strokesZAF Retief Goosen
146 Jul 1997Murphy's Irish Open (2)−15 (68-70-69-62=269)7 strokesENG Lee Westwood
1525 May 1998Volvo PGA Championship−14 (70-70-65-69=274)1 strokeZAF Ernie Els, SCO Gary Orr,
SWE Patrik Sjöland
1613 Sep 1998One 2 One British Masters−7 (70-72-70-69=281)1 strokeSWE Pierre Fulke, ARG Eduardo Romero
1727 Sep 1998Linde German Masters−22 (65-68-66-67=266)1 strokeSWE Robert Karlsson, FIJ Vijay Singh
1816 May 1999Benson & Hedges International Open−15 (68-66-71-68=273)3 strokesARG Ángel Cabrera, SWE Per-Ulrik Johansson
1931 May 1999Volvo PGA Championship (2)−18 (69-70-67-64=270)5 strokesENG Mark James
2011 Jul 1999Standard Life Loch Lomond−16 (69-65-70-64=268)3 strokesESP Sergio García, SWE Michael Jonzon,
SWE Mats Lanner
218 Aug 1999Volvo Scandinavian Masters (2)−20 (67-67-65-69=268)9 strokesSWE Jesper Parnevik
2222 Aug 1999BMW International Open−20 (69-65-64-70=268)3 strokesIRL Pádraig Harrington
237 May 2000Novotel Perrier Open de France−16 (71-68-65-68=272)2 strokesENG Jonathan Lomas
2429 May 2000Volvo PGA Championship (3)−17 (67-65-70-69=271)3 strokesNIR Darren Clarke, SCO Andrew Coltart,
ENG Lee Westwood
251 Jul 2001Murphy's Irish Open (3)−18 (63-69-68-66=266)5 strokesNIR Darren Clarke, SWE Niclas Fasth,
IRL Pádraig Harrington
265 Aug 2001Volvo Scandinavian Masters (3)−14 (66-69-69-70=274)1 strokeENG Ian Poulter, ENG Lee Westwood
2710 Nov 2002Volvo Masters Andalucía (2)−3 (70-69-72-70=281)Shared title with GER Bernhard Langer
2821 Mar 2004Caltex Masters1−16 (71-69-67-65=272)3 strokesUSA Gregory Hanrahan
292 Oct 2005Dunhill Links Championship−9 (70-65-73-71=279)1 strokeENG Kenneth Ferrie
304 Dec 2005
(2006 season)UBS Hong Kong Open1−9 (69-66-66-70=271)1 strokeKOR K. J. Choi, ZAF James Kingston,
TWN Lin Keng-chi, USA Edward Loar,
THA Thammanoon Sriroj
318 Jul 2007Smurfit Kappa European Open−11 (69-71-64-65=269)1 strokeSWE Niclas Fasth

1Co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour

European Tour playoff record (0–7–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
11991Volvo PGA ChampionshipESP Seve BallesterosLost to birdie on first extra hole
21992Volvo MastersSCO Sandy LyleLost to par on first extra hole
31994U.S. OpenZAF Ernie Els, USA Loren RobertsEls won with par on second extra hole after 18-hole playoff;
Els: +3 (74),
Roberts: +3 (74),
Montgomerie: +7 (78)
41995Murphy's English OpenIRL Philip WaltonLost to birdie on second extra hole
51995PGA ChampionshipAUS Steve ElkingtonLost to birdie on first extra hole
61998Murphy's Irish OpenENG David CarterLost to par on first extra hole
72002Deutsche Bank - SAP Open TPC of EuropeUSA Tiger WoodsLost to par on third extra hole
82002Volvo Masters AndalucíaDEU Bernhard LangerPlayoff abandoned after two holes due to darkness; tournament shared

Asian Tour wins (4)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
117 Nov 2002TCL Classic−16 (70-68-67-67=272)2 strokesTHA Thongchai Jaidee
219 Oct 2003Macau Open−11 (66-72-67-68=273)PlayoffAUS Scott Barr
321 Mar 2004Caltex Masters1−16 (71-69-67-65=272)3 strokesUSA Gregory Hanrahan
44 Dec 2005UBS Hong Kong Open1−9 (69-66-66-70=271)1 strokeKOR K. J. Choi, ZAF James Kingston,
TAI Lin Keng-chi, USA Edward Loar,
THA Thammanoon Sriroj

1Co-sanctioned by the European Tour

Asian Tour playoff record (1–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12003Macau OpenAUS Scott BarrWon with birdie on first extra hole

PGA Tour of Australasia wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner-up
118 Feb 2001Ericsson Masters−10 (72-67-70-69=278)1 strokeAUS Nathan Green

Other wins (7)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
11 Dec 1996Nedbank Million Dollar Challenge−14 (66-71-70-68=274)PlayoffZAF Ernie Els
24 Jan 1997Andersen Consulting World Championship of Golf2 upUSA Davis Love III
318 Nov 1997Hassan II Golf Trophy−15 (73-68-67-69=277)3 strokesUSA Donnie Hammond, ENG David Howell,
SWE Henrik Nyström
423 Nov 1997World Cup of Golf Individual Trophy−22 (68-66-66-66=266)2 strokesGER Alex Čejka
517 Oct 1999Cisco World Match Play Championship3 and 2USA Mark O'Meara
625 Nov 2000Skins Game$415,000$155,000FIJ Vijay Singh
725 Nov 2007Omega Mission Hills World Cup
(with SCO Marc Warren)−25 (63-68-66-66=263)Playoff− Heath Slocum and Boo Weekley

Other playoff record (2–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
11996Nedbank Million Dollar ChallengeZAF Ernie ElsWon with birdie on third extra hole
22006WGC-World Cup
(with SCO Marc Warren)− Bernhard Langer and Marcel SiemLost to par on first extra hole
32007Omega Mission Hills World Cup
(with SCO Marc Warren)− Heath Slocum and Boo WeekleyWon with par on third extra hole

PGA Tour Champions wins (7)

Legend
Senior major championships (3)
Charles Schwab Cup playoff events (1)
Other PGA Tour Champions (3)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
125 May 2014Senior PGA Championship−13 (69-69-68-65=271)4 strokesUSA Tom Watson
213 Jul 2014U.S. Senior Open−5 (65-71-74-69=279)PlayoffUSA Gene Sauers
324 May 2015Senior PGA Championship (2)−8 (72-69-70-69=280)4 strokesMEX Esteban Toledo
425 Sep 2016Pacific Links Bear Mountain Championship−15 (67-64-67=198)PlayoffUSA Scott McCarron
510 Sep 2017Japan Airlines Championship−14 (69-66-67=202)1 strokeUSA Billy Mayfair, USA Scott McCarron
615 Oct 2017SAS Championship−16 (69-67-64=200)3 strokesUSA Doug Garwood, FIJ Vijay Singh
73 Nov 2019Invesco QQQ Championship−14 (69-70-63=202)PlayoffDEU Bernhard Langer

PGA Tour Champions playoff record (3–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12014U.S. Senior OpenUSA Gene SauersWon three-hole aggregate playoff;
Montgomerie: E (5-3-4=12),
Sauers: x (5-4-x=x)
22016Pacific Links Bear Mountain ChampionshipUSA Scott McCarronWon with birdie on third extra hole
32019Invesco QQQ ChampionshipDEU Bernhard LangerWon with par on first extra hole

European Senior Tour wins (9)

Legend
Senior major championships (3)
Tour Championships (1)
Other European Senior Tour (5)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
11 Sep 2013Travis Perkins plc Senior Masters−10 (68-68-70=206)6 strokesESP Miguel Ángel Martín, ENG Paul Wesselingh
225 May 2014Senior PGA Championship−13 (69-69-68-65=271)4 strokesUSA Tom Watson
313 Jul 2014U.S. Senior Open−5 (65-71-74-69=279)PlayoffUSA Gene Sauers
431 Aug 2014Travis Perkins Masters (2)−12 (68-69-67=204)10 strokesSUI André Bossert, AUT Gordon Manson,
USA Tim Thelen
57 Sep 2014Russian Open Golf Championship (Senior)−14 (69-68-65=202)3 strokesCAN Rick Gibson
624 May 2015Senior PGA Championship (2)−8 (72-69-70-69=280)4 strokesMEX Esteban Toledo
76 Sep 2015Travis Perkins Masters (3)−5 (73-67-71=211)PlayoffSCO Ross Drummond
813 Dec 2015MCB Tour Championship−15 (68-64-69=201)3 strokesZAF David Frost
93 Jun 2018Shipco Masters−11 (71-67-67=205)3 strokesENG Paul Eales, ENG Barry Lane

European Senior Tour playoff record (2–0)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12014U.S. Senior OpenUSA Gene SauersWon three-hole aggregate playoff;
Montgomerie: E (5-3-4=12),
Sauers: x (5-4-x=x)
22015Travis Perkins MastersSCO Ross DrummondWon with birdie on second extra hole

Results in major championships

Tournament1990199119921993199419951996199719981999
Masters TournamentT37T52CUTT17T39T30T8T11
U.S. Open3T33T2T28T102T18T15
The Open ChampionshipT48T26CUTCUTT8CUTCUTT24CUTT15
PGA ChampionshipT33CUTT362CUTT13T44T6
Tournament2000200120022003200420052006200720082009
Masters TournamentT19CUTT14CUTCUTCUTCUT
U.S. OpenT46T52CUTT42T42T2CUTCUT
The Open ChampionshipT26T1382WDT252CUTCUTT58CUT
PGA ChampionshipT39DQCUTCUT70CUTCUTT42CUTCUT
Tournament2010201120122013201420152016
Masters Tournament
U.S. OpenT64
The Open ChampionshipT6878
PGA ChampionshipCUTT69CUT

CUT = missed the half-way cut

WD = withdrew

DQ = disqualified

"T" = tied

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts madeTotals051610217546
Masters Tournament000015159
U.S. Open0314571714
The Open Championship0101262213
PGA Championship0101232110
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 9 (1998 PGA – 2000 PGA)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 2 (1994 U.S. Open – 1994 Open Championship)

Results in The Players Championship

Tournament19921993199419951996199719981999
The Players ChampionshipCUTT9T14T2T7CUTT23
Tournament20002001200220032004200520062007
The Players ChampionshipT3T40T63CUTT42CUTCUT

CUT = missed the halfway cut

"T" indicates a tie for a place

Results in World Golf Championships

Tournament1999200020012002200320042005200620072008
Match PlayR64R32R64R64R16R32R32R16
ChampionshipT20T25NT1T31T51T3T41T55T65
InvitationalT30T84WDT23T58T9T4177

1Cancelled due to 9/11

WD = Withdrew

QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play

"T" = tied

NT = No Tournament

Senior major championships

Wins (3)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunner-up
2014Senior PGA Championship1 shot lead−13 (69-69-68-65=271)4 strokesUSA Tom Watson
2014U.S. Senior Open4 shot deficit−5 (65-71-74-69=279)PlayoffUSA Gene Sauers
2015Senior PGA Championship (2)3 shot lead−8 (72-69-70-69=280)4 strokesMEX Esteban Toledo

Results timeline

Results are not in chronological order.

Tournament2013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242025
The TraditionT16T24T17T25T27WDNTT39T18T23T67T52
Senior PGA Championship112T17T6T21NTCUTT8T15T43T58
Senior Players ChampionshipT9T15T3T13T6T43T13T3T12T25T27T44T40
U.S. Senior OpenT3012T11T42T38T24NTT34T28T23CUT
The Senior Open ChampionshipT2123CUTT23T14T18NTT11968T37T31

WD = withdrew

CUT = missed the halfway cut

"T" indicates a tie for a place

NT = no tournament due to COVID-19 pandemic

Team appearances

Amateur

  • European Youths' Team Championship (representing Scotland): 1982 (winners), 1984
  • Eisenhower Trophy (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 1984, 1986
  • European Amateur Team Championship (representing Scotland): 1985 (winners), 1987
  • Walker Cup (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 1985, 1987
  • St Andrews Trophy (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 1986 (winners)

Professional

19911993199519971999200220042006Total
1.53.523.53.54.53223.5
  • Seve Trophy (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 2000 (playing captain), 2002 (playing captain, winners), 2003 (playing captain, winners), 2005 (playing captain, winners), 2007 (winners)
  • UBS Cup (representing the Rest of the World): 2003 (tie), 2004
  • Royal Trophy (representing Europe): 2010 (playing captain, winners), 2011 (playing captain, winners)

Notes

References

References

  1. (10 November 2008). "Week 45 – Sergio Garcia Claims The World Number Two Spot With Victory at the HSBC Champions". Official World Golf Ranking.
  2. (18 December 2012). "Montgomerie, Schofield complete Hall of Fame class". PGA Tour.
  3. Lyons, William. (24 January 2005). "Monty's anger as he sells £6m home". The Scotsman.
  4. "Monty's Backing".
  5. (12 March 2000). "Colin Montgomerie". BBC Radio 4 – Desert Island Discs.
  6. "69 Players Who Have Reached The Top-10 in World Ranking". Official World Golf Ranking.
  7. "Colin Montgomerie – 2015 PGA Championship profile". PGA of America.
  8. (5 December 2005). "Montgomerie back in world top 10". BBC Sport.
  9. (1 June 2008). "Week 22 – 2008". Official World Golf Ranking.
  10. Dunsmuir, Alistair. (26 July 2012). "Golf Power List 10-1". The Golf Business.
  11. Gray, Will. (26 June 2013). "Montgomerie eyes major in Champions Tour debut". Golf Channel.
  12. (25 May 2014). "Montgomerie shoots 65 in winning Senior PGA". ESPN.
  13. (13 July 2014). "Montgomerie wins U.S. Senior Open in playoff". PGA Tour.
  14. Inglis, Martin. (30 May 2016). "Colin Montgomerie: 'I did nothing wrong'".
  15. (16 October 2017). "Colin Montgomerie wins sixth Champions Tour title".
  16. "Colin Montgomerie wins Invesco QQQ Championship - PGA TOUR".
  17. Diaz, Jaime. (22 June 1992). "Golf; Kite Beats the Elements, but It Isn't a Breeze". The New York Times.
  18. (2007). "The Gigantic Book of Golf Quotations". Skyhorse Publishing.
  19. Inglis, Martin. (28 June 2016). "Colin Montgomerie set for 'special' Troon swansong".
  20. Inglis, Martin. (14 July 2016). "Colin Montgomerie gets the Open underway".
  21. Inglis, Martin. (15 July 2016). "Colin Montgomerie makes Royal Troon cut".
  22. (9 April 2017). "Masters 2017: Key numbers to know ahead of Sunday's final round". PGA of America.
  23. Montgomerie is widely credited as having holed the winning putt, although [[Ian Poulter]] birdied on the 15th hole of his match to guarantee a half-point and so mathematically win the Ryder Cup seconds before Montgomerie. This was commentated on by course commentators and [[BBC Radio 5 Live. Radio Five]], whose golf correspondent Ian Coulter recalled in the ''[[News of the World]]'': "My editor said Poulter was three up seconds before Monty hit his putt. Then Colin's putt went in – you can imagine the situation. To have overruled his achievement would have been like trying to deny [[Alan Shearer]] a goal that went in off a defender." "This man won us Ryder Cup – not Monty" ''News of the World'' (London); 26 September 2004; Geoff Sweet; p. 75. Frank Keating of ''The Guardian'' also noted this chain of events, writing "radio logged the fact that it was not Montgomerie's putt which actually clinched the cup but Poulter's, a matter of seconds before and a few holes behind." "Golf, Cricket: Notes from the touchline" ''[[The Guardian]]''; 24 September 2004; Frank Keating; p. 34
  24. (28 January 2009). "Monty to lead Europe at Ryder Cup". BBC Sport.
  25. MacAskill, Sandy. (4 October 2010). "Ryder Cup 2010 reaction: Graeme McDowell says pressure was 'bananas'". The Telegraph.
  26. (5 October 2010). "Captain Montgomerie tips Olazabal". BBC Sport.
  27. (19 December 2010). "Colin Montgomerie wins Sports Personality coach award". BBC Sport.
  28. (17 September 2011). "McGinley in pole position, but what now? - News". Irish Golf Desk.
  29. (11 July 2012). "Colin Montgomerie one of Scotland's new ambassadors". Strathspey Herald.
  30. Clarke, Tom. (7 April 2015). "Montgomerie made London Scottish captain".
  31. (1 May 2004). "The cruellest cut: Monty's marriage collapses in the final round". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  32. "Colin Montgomerie Divorce Settlement".
  33. Johnstone, Helen. (11 September 2004). "Marriage left me depressed, says Monty's ex-wife". The Daily Telegraph.
  34. (2 February 2006). "Monty in £15m divorce settlement". BBC Sport.
  35. "Colin Montgomerie's divorce costs him £15m". Golf Today.
  36. "The Sports Network".
  37. Kelso, Paul. (18 July 2005). "Montgomerie happy to be back on track". The Guardian.
  38. "Sport News - The Scotsman - Scottish Sport". The Scotsman.
  39. Mair, Lewine. (29 August 2007). "Colin Montgomerie's dinner engagement". The Daily Telegraph.
  40. Mair, Lewine. (31 October 2007). "Ernie Els can still be king of Europe". The Daily Telegraph.
  41. (11 August 2010). "Colin Montgomerie wins gagging order over tabloid story". The Daily Telegraph.
  42. Mulholland, James. (24 March 2017). "Colin Montgomerie settles divorce from wife Gaynor". The Scotsman.
  43. Sunderland, Tom. (11 January 2023). "Golf icon Colin Montgomerie marries for third time after wedding his manager". Daily Mirror.
  44. (3 September 1982). "Scots beat odds to reach youth's final". [[The Glasgow Herald]].
  45. Nordlund, Anders. (September 1982). "Sveriges öde i junior-EM hängde på ett sprinklerlock, Junior-EM, pojkar".
  46. Nordlund, Anders. (October 1984). "JEM-brons med idel debutanter, Junior-EM, pojkar".
  47. (30 August 1984). "Scots trail by 15 shots". [[The Glasgow Herald]].
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