Ross Whitehead
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Surrey, England
Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, England
| Ross Whitehead | |
|---|---|
| Personal information | |
| Full name | Edmund Ross Whitehead |
| Born | 19 April 1934 Surrey, England |
| Died | 4 October 1999 (aged 65)[1][2] Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, England |
| Sporting nationality | |
| Career | |
| Turned professional | 1950 |
| Former tour(s) | European Tour European Seniors Tour |
| Professional wins | 6 |
| Number of wins by tour | |
| European Tour | 1 |
| Other | 5 |
| Best results in major championships | |
| Masters Tournament | DNP |
| PGA Championship | DNP |
| U.S. Open | DNP |
| The Open Championship | T12: 1962 |
Edmund Ross Whitehead (19 April 1934 – 4 October 1999) was an English professional golfer. His most successful year was 1962 when he won the Wentworth Foursomes, Sunningdale Foursomes and the Gor-Ray Cup, tied for 12th in the 1962 Open Championship and reached the final of the News of the World Match Play.[3] His only win in a major tournament was the 1972 John Player Trophy.
While an assistant at Walton Heath Golf Club, Whitehead won the 1958 Coombe Hill Assistants' Tournament.[4] In 1962 he moved to Banstead Downs Golf Club and won the Gor-Ray Cup, the Assistants' Championship, by 6 strokes.[5]
In 1972, at the age of 38, he won his first major tournament, the John Player Trophy, and the first prize of £1,500.[6]
He was joint runner-up in the 1984 Trusthouse Forte PGA Seniors Championship, 3 strokes behind Ernie Jones.[7]
Professional wins (6)
European Tour wins (1)
| No. | Date | Tournament | Winning score | Margin of victory | Runners-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 27 May 1972 | John Player Trophy | +6 (74-71-69-72=286) | 1 stroke |
Other wins (5)
- 1957 Sunningdale Foursomes (with Brian Huggett)
- 1958 Coombe Hill Assistants' Tournament
- 1962 Wentworth Foursomes (with Martin Christmas), Sunningdale Foursomes (with Neil Coles), Gor-Ray Cup