(1955-01-30) January 30, 1955 (age 69) Norfolk, Virginia
Height
5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Weight
180 lb (82 kg; 13 st)
Sporting nationality
United States
Spouse
Sarah Strange
Children
2 sons
Career
College
Wake Forest University
Turned professional
1976
Former tour(s)
PGA Tour Champions Tour
Professional wins
29
Highest ranking
3 (June 19, 1988)[1]
Number of wins by tour
PGA Tour
17
European Tour
2
Japan Golf Tour
1
PGA Tour of Australasia
3
Other
8
Best results in major championships (wins: 2)
Masters Tournament
T2: 1985
PGA Championship
T2: 1989
U.S. Open
Won: 1988, 1989
The Open Championship
T13: 1988
Achievements and awards
World Golf Hall of Fame
2007 (member page)
Haskins Award
1974
PGA Tour money list winner
1985, 1987, 1988
PGA Player of the Year
1988
Curtis Northrup Strange (born January 30, 1955) is an American professional golfer and TV color commentator. He is the winner of consecutive U.S. Open titles and a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame and Virginia Sports Hall of Fame. He spent over 200 weeks in the top-10 of the Official World Golf Ranking between their debut in 1986 and 1990.[2]
^"Week 25 1988 Ending 19 Jun 1988" (pdf). OWGR. Retrieved December 20, 2018.
^"69 Players Who Have Reached The Top-10 In World Ranking". Official World Golf Ranking. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 17, 2015. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
Curtis Northrup Strange (born January 30, 1955) is an American professional golfer and TV color commentator. He is the winner of consecutive U.S. Open...
on Long Island—the first golfer to win consecutive U.S. Opens since CurtisStrange in 1988 and 1989. He won the third major at the 2018 PGA Championship...
Jack Nicklaus 5: Ben Hogan, Tom Watson 4: Arnold Palmer 3: Sam Snead, CurtisStrange, Greg Norman, Vijay Singh, Justin Thomas 2: Byron Nelson, Julius Boros...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...
Faldo ended 72 holes of regulation play in a tie for the lead with CurtisStrange. Faldo's even-par fourth round of 71 started with 14 consecutive pars...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...
Macatee's similar role under USA Network) as studio host, as well as CurtisStrange as studio analyst. CBS carries two 15-minute highlight programs in late...
1978 Greater Milwaukee Open Lee Elder Lost to par on eighth extra hole 10 1980 Michelob-Houston Open CurtisStrange Lost to birdie on first extra hole...
round 70 to edge Ben Crenshaw by one shot. 1981: Raymond Floyd defeats CurtisStrange and Barry Jaeckel on the first hole of a sudden death playoff. In addition...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...
$4 million level in career earnings. In 1985, Nicklaus finished second to CurtisStrange in the Canadian Open, which marked his seventh and final second-place...
championships, one stroke ahead of runners-up Andy Bean, Mike Reid, and CurtisStrange. Weather stopped play on Friday and Saturday with the rounds completed...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...
by two strokes over runners-up Seve Ballesteros, Raymond Floyd and CurtisStrange. His second major came at the 1993 Masters Tournament with a four-shot...
Australian TV chef CurtisStrange (born 1955), American professional golfer Curtis Warren (born 1963), British criminal Curtis Weaver (born 1998), American...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...
boards at The Belfry still read "The 2001 Ryder Cup", and U.S. captain CurtisStrange deliberately referred to his team as "The 2001 Ryder Cup Team" in his...
1985 Andy North 1986 Raymond Floyd 1987 Scott Simpson 1988 CurtisStrange† 1989 CurtisStrange 1990 Hale Irwin† 1991 Payne Stewart† 1992 Tom Kite 1993 Lee...