George Bayer Explained

George Bayer
Birth Date:15 September 1925
Birth Place:Bremerton, Washington, U.S.
Death Place:Palm Springs, California, U.S.
Weight:230lb
College:Washington
Yearpro:1954
Extour:PGA Tour
Champions Tour
Prowins:6
Pgawins:4
Otherwins:1 (regular)
1 (senior)
Masters:T15: 1965
Usopen:T11: 1964
Open:DNP
Pga:T3: 1962

George Bayer (September 15, 1925 – March 16, 2003) was an American professional golfer who played on the PGA Tour and the Senior PGA Tour.

Bayer was born in Bremerton, Washington.[1] He attended the University of Washington and was a member of the football team from 1946–1949; he played in the 1949 East-West Shrine Game.[2] After college, he was drafted by the Washington Redskins in the 20th round (253rd overall). He was released by the Redskins and played for the Brooklyn Brooks and Richmond Arrows of the minor league American Football League in 1950.[3] Bayer did not begin playing golf professionally until he was 29 years old; he started in golf as a caddie at Kitsap Golf and Country Club, which is located between Silverdale, Washington and his hometown of Bremerton.[4]

At 6-foot-5-inches tall and 230 pounds, the power that Bayer could generate was astonishing. He was known for booming 300-yard drives.[3] Bayer won four times on the PGA Tour in a four-year period made remarkable by the fact that he played in an era of inconsistently wound balls; and laminated maple or persimmon clubs that were made for players of average height (5'9" tall) and build (160 pounds). His achievements came in an era when golf equipment was simply not available for extremely tall or extremely short people.[5] He also won the par-3 contest at the Masters Tournament in 1963.

Bayer also played on the Senior PGA Tour. His best year on that circuit was 1984, when he finished 21st on the money list with $64,491 in earnings. His last appearance in competitive golf was at the 2002 Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf. Bayer suffered a fatal heart attack at home in Palm Springs, California while dining with his wife, golfer Bob Goalby and Goalby's wife.[4]

Professional wins (6)

PGA Tour wins (4)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of
victory
Runner-up
1 Jul 13, 1957Canadian Open−13 (70-68-64-69=271)2 strokes Bo Wininger
2Nov 16, 1958Havana International+6 (75-64-74-73=286)Playoff Sam Snead
3Dec 14, 1958Mayfair Inn Open−12 (68-67-69-68=272)1 stroke Chick Harbert
4Mar 21, 1960St. Petersburg Open Invitational−6 (66-69-75-72=282)Playoff Jack Fleck

PGA Tour playoff record (2–2)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
11957Western Open Doug Ford, Gene Littler,
Billy Maxwell
Ford won with par on third extra hole
Littler and Maxwell eliminated by par on first hole
21958Havana International Sam SneadWon with par on first extra hole
31960St. Petersburg Open Invitational Jack FleckWon with birdie on first extra hole
41961Ontario Open Eric Monti, Bobby NicholsMonti won with birdie on second extra hole

Other wins (1)

Senior wins (1)

Notes and References

  1. News: George Bayer, 77; Noted for Long Drives in Golf . Los Angeles Times . March 20, 2003.
  2. News: George Bayer, 77, Long-Driving Golfer . The New York Times . March 20, 2003 . Associated Press.
  3. Web site: George Bayer passes away . 4malamute.com . March 22, 2003 . November 3, 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303205852/http://www.4malamute.com/zb9.html . March 3, 2016 . dead .
  4. Web site: Bayer, also ex-Redskins lineman, dies of heart attack . ESPN . March 19, 2003 . January 11, 2008.
  5. Web site: The tall and short of it: It's your swing – not body type – that counts in golf . Penner . Andrew . Golf Instruction . November 3, 2007.