Sir Nick Faldo 1989
Knighted for services to golf in the 2009 Birthday Honours, Sir Nick Faldo made his final competitive appearance at The Open Championship at St. Andrews, Scotland in 2015, by which time he has amassed 41 professional wins, including six major championships. Faldo won The Open three times, at Muirfield in 1987, at St. Andrews in 1990 and at Muirfield again in 1992, and the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia three times, in 1989, 1990 and 1996.
Following his first Masters victory, in 1989, Hertforshire-born Faldo was also voted BBC Sports Personality of the Year, ahead of boxer Frank Bruno and snooker player Steve Davis. The sporting year was, of course, overshadowed by the Hillsborough disaster – the deadliest in British sporting history, utimately resulting in 97 fatalities – at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield on April 15, less than a week after the climax of the Masters Tournament. All of the victims were fans of Liverpool Football Club, deemed to have been “unlawfully killed” and, fittingly, the SPOTY trophy was presented by Bishop of Liverpool, David Sheppard, who was deeply involved in helping Liverpool heal from the tragedy.
After collecting the trophy, Faldo said, “Can I obviously thank everybody’s who voted for me, everybody’s who’s supported me this year, the fans, obviously, who’ve supported golf so much, recently, in the last few years…”
At Augusta, Faldo had trailed by five strokes heading into the final round, but made eight birdies and just one bogey to post 65 and a 72-hole total of 283 (-5), which gave him the clubhouse lead. American Scott Hoch, who had trailed the third-round leader, compatriot Ben Crenshaw, by a single stroke at the start of the day, emerged as the principal challenger and actually had a putt to win the tournament, albeit from 25 feet, on the final regulation hole. He missed, and missed again, from four feet, on the first playoff hole, the tenth, only for Faldo to hole his birdie putt from 25 feet to win his first Masters title and the second major championship of his career.