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Norman Von Nida

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Norman Guy Von Nida (14 February 191420 May 2007) was an Australian golfer.

Von Nida was born in Strathfield and grew up in Brisbane. He turned professional in 1933, after attracting attention by winning the Queensland Amateur aged just 18. He would go on to become one of Australia's finest professional golfers, and the first Australian to win regularly on the British tour, although World War Two certainly deprived him of competition during what might have been his peak years. In 1946 he travelled to Britain for the first time and finished second on the Order of Merit; in 1947, he returned and won seven tournaments and topped the Order of Merit. [1] He was renowned for his short temper - at a tournament in 1948 he became involved in an argument with future US Ryder Cup player Henry Ransom that resulted in the local sheriff having to pull them apart, and he was also known to hurl his putter into the undergrowth after missing putts, on occasions breaking or even losing them mid-round.[2]

The PGA Tour of Australasia's developmental tour is named the Von Nida Tour after him.

Von Nida died on 20 May 2007 in a Gold Coast, Queensland nursing home, aged 93.[3].

Tournament wins

References

  1. ^ Herald-Sun "Golfing great dies at 93" May 21, 2007
  2. ^ The Hindu "Australian golf great Norman Von Nida dies at age 93" May 21 2007
  3. ^ News | Legendary Von Nida passes away at 93 | iseekgolf.com

External links

Categories: Australian golfers | 1914 births | 2007 deaths

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