George Archer


George William Archer was an American professional golfer who won 13 events on the PGA Tour, including one major championship, the Masters in 1969.

Early life

Archer was born in San Francisco, California, and raised just south in San Mateo. He grew to tall, and as a boy he dreamed of a basketball career, but took up golf at San Mateo High School after working as a caddy at the Peninsula Golf and Country Club near his home. He was kicked off the high school basketball team because he missed too many practices due to golf.

Professional career

In 1964, Archer turned professional and claimed the first of 13 victories on the PGA Tour at the Lucky International Open the following year.
The leading achievement of his career was his win at the Masters in 1969. In the first round, he fired a 67, good for second place behind Billy Casper. His subsequent rounds of 73-69-72 earned him a one-stroke victory over runners-up Casper, Tom Weiskopf, and George Knudson.
Archer's other top-10 finishes in the majors came at the U.S. Open and the PGA Championship.
Archer was hampered by injuries throughout his career and had surgery on his left wrist, back and left shoulder. In 1996, he had his right hip replaced and two years later became the first man to win on the Senior PGA Tour after having the surgery. He won 19 times on the Senior Tour between 1989 and 2000, although he did not win a senior major. Archer is also the only player in PGA Tour Champions history to win a tournament in each of the first three decades of its existence.
Archer is considered one of the game's all-time great putters, and at one time held the PGA Tour record for fewest putts over four rounds with 94 putts at the Sea Pines Heritage in 1980. The record stood for nine years, until broken by Kenny Knox in 1989.
Archer was known as the "Golfing Cowboy," tracing to a summer job in his youth at his friend and sponsor, Lucky Lager Brewing Company founder Eugene Selvage's, Lucky Hereford Ranch in Gilroy.
Archer made Masters history in 1983 when he employed its first female caddy, his 19-year-old daughter Elizabeth, in the first year that outside caddies were allowed at Augusta National. He finished tied for 12th, his third-best at Augusta and final top-20 finish in a major. At the time Liz was a sophomore at Stanford University and had caddied for her father at twenty previous events; a member of the Cardinal track team, she threw the javelin and discus. She started caddying for him on tour in the summer of 1980, prior to her senior year at Gilroy High School.

Personal life

Illiteracy

Six months after his death, Archer's widow, Donna, revealed in the March/April 2006 issue of Golf For Women magazine that he had suffered his entire life from a severe form of learning impairment. Despite years of effort and the consultation of many experts, he was never able to read more than the simplest sentences and could only write his own name. She reported that they never revealed this truth beyond their family and that Archer lived in constant fear that the secret of his illiteracy would be revealed.
In 2008, Donna created the George Archer Memorial Foundation for Literacy, a 501 organization located in Incline Village, Nevada. The Foundation's mission is to raise funds to identify reading deficiencies, diagnose causes and effective treatments for learning disabilities, improve systems for training teachers, tutors and other educators in literacy issues, provide grants, stipends and scholarships for deserving students, and assist in the development of tools and techniques for the effective teaching of reading and writing skills. The Foundation's primary fundraiser is the George Archer Memorial Stroke of Genius Pro-Am golf tournament held every October since 2008 at the Peninsula Golf and Country Club, in San Mateo, California – the club at which Archer began his golf career.

Death

Archer died of Burkitt's lymphoma – a lymphatic system malignancy – in Incline Village, Nevada in 2005, six days before his 66th birthday. He was survived by his wife, Donna, and two daughters, Elizabeth and Marilyn. He played his final round of golf with his wife in nearby Truckee on August 25, a month before his death.

Amateur wins

PGA Tour wins (13)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victory
Runner-up
1Jan 31, 1965Lucky International Open68-73-69-68=278−6Playoff

Other wins (7)

Senior PGA Tour Tour playoff record
No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
11989Gatlin Brothers Southwest Senior Classic

Other senior wins (4)

  • 1990 Sports Shinko Cup, Princeville Classic
  • 1991 Sports Shinko Cup
  • 1994 Chrysler Cup

    Major championships

Wins (1)

Results timeline

Tournament1970197119721973197419751976197719781979
Masters TournamentT3135T12T43WDCUTCUTT19WD
U.S. OpenT30T5T65T34T27CUT
The Open Championship
PGA ChampionshipT61T34T36T51T1961

Tournament1980198119821983198419851986198719881989
Masters TournamentCUTT11T30T12T25T53CUTCUTT43
U.S. OpenT58
The Open Championship
PGA ChampionshipT17CUTT34T67T47

Tournament199019911992
Masters Tournament49WD51
U.S. Open
The Open Championship
PGA Championship

CUT = missed the half-way cut
WD = withdrew
"T" = tied

Summary

  • Most consecutive cuts made – 13
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 3