Darren Clarke

Professional

Birthday August 14, 1968

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Dungannon, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland

Age 55 years old

Nationality Ireland

Height 6ft 2in

Weight 215 lb

#47673 Most Popular

1938

Clarke also played in his first U.S. Open although he missed the cut and had his highest finish, at the time, in The Open Championship with a tie for 38th place.

1967

He missed the cut on his debut at The Players Championship, but his first visit to Augusta National Golf Club was much more successful, shooting 67–69 on the weekend to finish in a tie for 8th at the Masters Tournament.

This remains his highest ever finish at the Masters to date.

1968

Darren Christopher Clarke, (born 14 August 1968) is a professional golfer from Northern Ireland who currently plays on the PGA Tour Champions and has previously played on the European Tour and PGA Tour.

He has won 21 tournaments worldwide on a number of golf's main tours including the PGA Tour, European Tour, Japan Golf Tour and Sunshine Tour.

1987

Clarke was born in Dungannon, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, and in 1987 he played collegiate golf at Wake Forest University in the United States.

He was a junior member of Dungannon Golf Club, whose junior section also included three others who are current PGA Golf Professionals: Alistair Cardwell, Barry Hamill and Gary Chambers.

Clarke represented his school, Royal School Dungannon, together with Cardwell and Chambers.

1990

Clarke turned professional in 1990 and played his first full season on the European Tour in 1991.

1991

He contested in his first major championship at the 1991 Open Championship, making the cut before finishing in a tie for 64th place.

1992

In 1992 Clarke had a solid season on the European Tour, finishing 41st in overall Order of Merit, in doing so achieving his highest finish of his career at the time with a second-place finish at the Honda Open.

He finished three strokes behind champion Bernhard Langer.

1993

Clarke's real breakthrough year was in 1993 when he won his maiden European Tour event and played his way to 8th position on the Order of Merit.

After a relatively solid but unspectacular first half of the season, Clarke's form improved greatly during the August–September stretch, achieving four top-10 finishes in four consecutive tournaments.

In October 1993, Clarke won his maiden European Tour event at the Alfred Dunhill Open in Belgium.

Clarke had the lead after 54 holes and held off the challenge of Englishman Nick Faldo and Vijay Singh, who shot a final-round 64.

Clarke prevailed by two strokes.

A month later Clarke nearly won his second title at the European Tour's season-ending Volvo Masters, however, he was pipped to the title by Colin Montgomerie who finished one stroke clear.

Overall for the season Clarke made 24 out of 30 cuts and finished in the top-10 on seven occasions.

1994

The follow-up year in 1994 was another solid season for Clarke on the tour, making 17 of 21 cuts and finishing 37th on the Order of Merit list.

1995

In 1995, Clarke had better success, with seven top-10s in 27 events, most notably at the Portuguese Open where he finished second after losing a sudden-death playoff to Adam Hunter on the first extra hole, despite having the joint 54-hole lead.

1996

In 1996, Clarke won his second European Tour title at the Linde German Masters by one stroke, shooting a final round 63 to finish 24 under par, one stroke ahead of Englishman Mike Davis.

Clarke also recorded his best finish in a major, at that current time, with a tie for 11th place at The Open Championship in 1996.

He also equalled his best finish on the Order of Merit, placing in 8th for the season.

1997

Clarke has represented Ireland as both an amateur and as a professional, notably at the World Cup and Alfred Dunhill Cup, and was a member of five consecutive European Ryder Cup teams between 1997 and 2006.

In May 1997, Clarke finished second at the Volvo PGA Championship, two strokes behind Ian Woosnam.

In July 1997, Clarke was in a position to win his first major championship at the 1997 Open Championship at Royal Troon.

Clarke held the lead with American Jim Furyk after the first round and then pulled two strokes clear of the field after a 66 in the second round, but a third-round 71 put him two strokes behind leader Jesper Parnevik going into the final day.

However, the winner was not to come from the final pairing, as Justin Leonard came storming through the pack with a 65 to beat both Clarke and Parnevik by three strokes.

Clarke ended the season 4th on the Order of Merit.

1998

His highest finish on the European Tour money list is second, which he achieved in 1998, 2000 and 2003.

Clarke is currently ranked as the seventh highest career money winner on the European Tour.

In 1998, Clarke made his first appearances at two of the biggest golf events worldwide.

In May 1998, Clarke won his third career event on the European Tour at the Benson & Hedges International Open by three strokes from Santiago Luna.

Clarke then had three more 2nd-place finishes during the season before winning the season-ending Volvo Masters in Spain.

His two victories in 1998 helped him to finish in 2nd place on the final 1998 Order of Merit standings behind Colin Montgomerie.

2000

Clarke has also won two World Golf Championship events, most notably the 2000 WGC-Andersen Consulting Match Play Championship, when he defeated Tiger Woods in the final.

Clarke was ranked in the top-10 of the Official World Golf Ranking for 43 weeks between 2000 and 2002.

2011

His biggest victory came when he won the 2011 Open Championship at Royal St George's in England, his first major win after more than 20 years and 54 attempts.

2014

Clarke ended the year 14th on the Order of Merit.