Ian Baker-Finch | |
---|---|
— Golfer — | |
Personal information | |
Full name | Ian Michael Baker-Finch |
Nickname | Finchy, The Dark Shark |
Born |
Nambour, Australia |
24 October 1960
Height | 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in) |
Nationality | Australia |
Residence | North Palm Beach, Florida, U.S. |
Career | |
Turned professional | 1979 |
Former tour(s) |
PGA Tour European Tour PGA Tour of Australasia |
Professional wins | 18 |
Number of wins by tour | |
PGA Tour | 2 |
European Tour | 2 |
Japan Golf Tour | 3 |
PGA Tour of Australasia | 11 |
Other | 1 |
Best results in major championships (wins: 1) |
|
Masters Tournament | T6: 1992 |
U.S. Open | T13: 1992 |
The Open Championship | Won: 1991 |
PGA Championship | T34: 1989 |
Ian Michael Baker-Finch (born 24 October 1960) is an Australian professional golfer, who is best known for winning The Open Championship in 1991.
Baker-Finch was born in Nambour, Queensland, Australia. He grew up in the same Queensland "neighborhood" as fellow professional golfers Greg Norman and Wayne Grady.
Baker-Finch turned professional in 1979. Baker-Finch credits Jack Nicklaus as his greatest influence, saying that he based his game on Nicklaus' book, Golf My Way. He began his professional career on the PGA Tour of Australasia, winning his first professional tournament, the New Zealand Open, in 1983. That victory earned him an entry to the British Open in 1984. He would make headlines by taking the 36-hole lead, holding onto the lead after three rounds but then shooting a disastrous last round 79 to finish ninth, much in the manner of Bobby Clampett who had endured a similar collapse two years previously.
Baker-Finch joined the European Tour, winning the 1985 Scandinavian Enterprise Open and finishing in the top-20 on the order of merit in both 1985 and 1986. At the same time he continued to play in Australasia in the Northern Hemisphere winter, picking up several further tournament titles there and occasionally played on the Japan Golf Tour.
Baker-Finch first played on the PGA Tour as an invitee in 1985 and began to do so regularly in 1989, having qualified for tour membership by finishing third in the 1988 World Series of Golf. He won his first PGA Tour title at the 1989 Southwestern Bell Colonial, gaining him a two-year exemption on Tour. In 1990, he finished 16th on the PGA Tour money list, on the strength of three runner-up finishes and two third-places.