Sam Snead was a professional American golfer
@Professional Golfer, Birthday and Childhood
Sam Snead was a professional American golfer
Sam Snead born at
Sam Snead was best known for playing his tournaments barefoot and also wore his signature straw hat while playing.
He married Audrey in 1940 and had two sons; Sam Jr. and Terry. The couple remained together till Audrey’s death in 1990
He passed away on May 23, 2002, in Hot Springs, Virginia following complications from a stroke, four days before his 90th birthday.
Sam Snead was born on May 27, 1912, in Ashwood, Virginia, Near Hot Springs.
As a young boy, he was raised on a farm near the small town of Ashwood and was expected to get into squirrel hunting, which was a tradition for all rural boys in Virginia. However, he was very drawn to sports and was an all-round athlete when he was in school, making it to the football and the track-team.
It is believed that this young boy played golf with a crooked stick and stones that he collected. His first real introduction to the game was when he was picked as a caddy at the age of 15 at a Hot Springs golf course, not far from his home.
He and his friends would walk barefoot to the course and caddy for professional players and earn a little money in the process. This eventually got him hooked to the sport.
He soon worked as an assistant pro at ‘The Homestead’ at the age of 19 and turned to professional golf in 1934. Two years later, he joined the PGA Tour and accomplished instant triumph.
In 1936, he won two golf bouts at the Meadow Brook Club, earning a $10,000 fee. This fee helped him financially and helped him play the sport full time.
1937 was his first full year on the Tour, where he won five events, including the Oakland Open at Claremont Country Club in California. The same year, he played in the US Pro Tennis Championship, losing to Karel Kozeluh. The next year, he won the Greater Greensboro Open.
In 1942, he was conscripted to the US Navy during World War II, where he served as an athletic specialist in San Diego. After a back injury, he was given a medical discharge from the army.
In 1944, he was made a head pro at ‘The Greenbrier Resort’ in White Sulphur Springs, in West Virginia. Six years later, he won 11 events, achieving third place overall after Byron Nelson and Ben Hogan.
In 1952, at the Jacksonville Open, he forfeited rather than playing against Doug Ford, after the duo’s match ended in a tie at the finish of the regulation play.
From 1939 to 1955, he won the Vardon Trophy four times.
In 1949, he was presented the ‘PGA Player of the Year’ Award.
He was the only player to post a top-10 finish in at least one major championship in five different decades.
He was inducted into the ‘World Golf Hall of Fame’, in 1974.
He is the holder of the title of ‘Most PGA Tour Victories’ (82).