Toronto Star

Golf pioneer was first black man on PGA Tour

- DOUG FERGUSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Charlie Sifford, who only wanted a chance to play and broke the colour barrier in golf as the first black PGA Tour member, died Tuesday night, the PGA of America said.

Sifford, who recently had suffered a stroke, was 92. Details of his death and funeral arrangemen­ts were not immediatel­y available.

PGA of America president Derek Sprague called Sifford “an uncommon and faithful servant.”

“His love of golf, despite many barriers in his path, strengthen­ed him as he became a beacon for diversity in our game,” Sprague said. “By his courage, Dr. Sifford inspired others to follow their dreams. Golf was fortunate to have had this exceptiona­l American in our midst.”

A proud man who endured racial taunts and threats, Sifford set modest goals and achieved more than he imagined.

Sifford challenged the Caucasiano­nly clause and the PGA rescinded it in 1961. He won the Greater Hartford Open in 1967 and the Los Angeles Open in 1969. He also won the 1975 Senior PGA Championsh­ip, five years before the Champions Tour was created.

His career was fully recognized in 2004 when he became the first black man inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame. Last November, U.S. President Barack Obama presented him with the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom. Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer are the only other golfers who received that honour.

“Charlie won tournament­s, but, more important, he broke a barrier,” Nicklaus once said. “I think what Charlie Sifford has brought to his game has been monumental.”

The one goal that eluded him was a chance to play in the Masters, which did not invite its first black player until Lee Elder in 1975. Sifford remained bitter, though the pain was eased when Tiger Woods won the first of his four green jackets in 1997.

Woods often has said he would not have played golf if not for Sifford and other black pioneers.

“It’s not an exaggerati­on to say that without Charlie, and the other pioneers who fought to play, I may not be playing golf,” Woods said in an email to The Associated Press late last year. “My pop likely wouldn’t have picked up the sport and maybe I wouldn’t have either.” The road was never easy. Sifford was born on June 22,1922 in Charlotte, N.C. He worked as a caddie and dominated the all-black United Golfers Associatio­n, winning five straight national titles. He longed to play against the best players, only to run into the same barriers that Teddy Rhodes and Bill Spiller faced.

In his autobiogra­phy, Just Let Me Play, Sifford told of meeting Jackie Robinson in California about the time Robinson was trying to break the colour barrier in baseball.

“He asked me if I was a quitter,” Sifford wrote. “I told him no. He said, ‘If you’re not a quitter, you’re probably going to experience some things that will make you want to quit.’ ”

During the 1952 Phoenix Open, one of the few events that blacks could play, Sifford found human feces in the cup when he got to the first green. He received death threats over the phone at the 1961 Greater Greensboro Open and heard racial slurs as he walked the fairways. He finished fourth and didn’t quit.

He was beloved my some of golf’s biggest stars, including Nicklaus and Palmer.

Sifford often attended the Bridgeston­e Invitation­al at Firestone, not far from his home in Ohio. During an interview with The Associated Press in 2000, Sifford said he was proud of the role he played in making the PGA Tour accessible to blacks.

“If I hadn’t acted like a profession­al when they sent me out, if I did something crazy, there would never be any blacks playing,” he said. “I toughed it out. I’m proud of it. All those people were against me and I’m looking down on them now.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Charlie Sifford was remembered as a “beacon for diversity in our game” by PGA of America president Derek Sprague.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Charlie Sifford was remembered as a “beacon for diversity in our game” by PGA of America president Derek Sprague.

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