Walter Godfrey (golfer)


Walter Godfrey is a professional golfer from New Zealand.

Amateur career

Godfrey is from Matamata, New Zealand. Godfrey was a star amateur golfer. He won a number of school championships in his youth before reaching the finals of the Auckland Schoolboys' Championship at the age of 13, losing to a student named JB Williams. He won the New Zealand Amateur Championship in 1958 while only 16 years old. He remains the youngest winner of this tournament with current PGA Tour professional Danny Lee. Two years later, Godfrey represented New Zealand in the Eisenhower Trophy, playing with Bob Charles. Their team finished 5th out of 32 teams. Godfrey also participated at the 1962 Eisenhower Trophy, leading his team to a 4th-place finish. During this era he was also invited to play in amateur tournaments in South Africa but, because he is Maori, he decided not to travel, circumspect of how he would be treated in the apartheid country. As an amateur, he also finished runner-up in the 1962 New Zealand Open behind Kel Nagle.

Professional career

The following year, Godfrey turned professional. He sporadically played in Europe in his first year, participating in the 1963 Open Championship won by Bob Charles, but the weather did not appeal to him and he returned to New Zealand. The following year, he won his first important professional tournament, tying Frank Phillips at the West End Tournament in Victor Harbor, Australia. Godfrey missed a 3 1/2 foot putt on the 18th hole to win outright. The following year, he tied for second at the Metalcraft Tournament in his home country of New Zealand, three behind Australian legend Peter Thomson. During this era, he moved permanently to Australia.
In 1967, Godfrey scored his greatest successes. At the beginning of the 1967–68 season Godfrey nearly won again at the West End Tournament. Godfrey shot a course record 65 during on Friday to get into contention and could have won if it were not for Kel Nagle's 64 – usurping Godfrey's own course record – on Sunday. Godfrey finished in a tie for second, three back of Nagle. Two months later, on 10 December, he entered the final round of the BP Tournament, held near his hometown in Auckland, New Zealand, tied with Peter Thomson. The two players alternated the lead several times down the stretch. On the 15th hole, Thomson missed a six-foot putt and Godfrey took the lead. However Thomson regained the solo lead two holes later. On the final hole, however, Thomson drove into the trees and made bogey while Godfrey birdied, exchanging the lead once more, giving the New Zealander the win. The following week he won the Metalcraft Tournament, held in Wellington. It was another dramatic win as Godfrey was tied for the lead entering the final hole. He hit a "magnificent" two-iron on the 516 yard, par-5 18th to five feet assuring his victory. He describes these victories as his greatest successes because he defeated legendary golfers Kel Nagle and Peter Thomson at both of them. In January, he nearly won again. He held the clubhouse lead at the New Zealand PGA Championship before Bob Shaw birdied the 72nd hole to win outright. He recorded his third and final runner-up finish of the season at the Tasmanian Open the following month.
Godfrey's best era of his career may have been later, however, during 1971–72 season down under. In October 1971, he won the West End Tournament again. His final total of 276 was only two off the course record and even more impressive given the "atrocious weather." He won by five shots. The following month, he won the Cumberland Classic in Sydney by one stroke over American Marty Bohen. Two weeks later, on 28 November 1971 he finished third in the New Zealand Open, Godfrey's best finish in his national open since his amateur days. Later in the season, in February 1972, he won the Victorian Open. Possessing a 3-shot lead over Kel Nagle on the 11th hole, Godfrey hit his drive into the trees. Rather than pitching out to the fairway he decided to gamble, hitting a 5-iron approach over a "menacingly low overhanging bough" towards the green. It worked out perfectly, as the ball stopped a foot from the cup for an easy birdie. Coupled with a bogey from Nagle, Godfrey built a 5-shot lead and cruised to a 7-shot win. He also had some success on the Asian circuit that fall. Early in 1972, he finished one behind Japan's Takashi Murakami at the Malaysian Open. In April, he finally won on the Asian circuit, winning the Hong Kong Open. Godfrey shot a final round 67 at the Fanling Golf Course to avenge his loss to Murakami, defeating Japanese star by two shots. It was his first win on the Asian circuit after eight years of effort.
Although Godfrey was unable to repeat this extraordinary success, he scored a number of achievements through the 1970s. In October 1972 he nearly defended his West End title. Like the previous year, he shot a course record in the second round, this time being a seven-under par 63, tying Kel Nagle for the lead. Both players were neck and neck through the weekend but Nagle ultimately outshot Godfrey by three on Sunday to win. The following year he finished only one behind Bob Charles at the 1973 City of Auckland Classic. In January 1974, he had one more duel with Nagle, this time at the New Zealand PGA Championship. Godfrey came from behind to tie Nagle in the final round however he bogeyed the 18th hole while Nagle birdied it providing the deciding two shot differential. During this era, a young Steve Williams was briefly his caddie.
In 1977, Godfrey retired from working as a touring professional. Although he did not state it at the time, the major reason was because his eyesight was severely diminishing. He later stated, "I was just playing on memory, but by the end I couldn't judge hills or breaks on the greens. I got to the stage where I couldn't see ." He took a job as a club professional at Subang National Golf Club in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia where he worked for five years. During this time he won an event held at the golf club where he worked, the 1977 Malaysian Dunlop Masters. In 1982 he returned to Australia and got a job at Fox Hills Golf Club in Sydney. He worked there for 10 years. In 1992 he left the golf industry permanently and bought a news agency that he owned until 2002.
In 2007 he had laser surgery performed on his eyes. The operations, however, have not been completely successful.
Godfrey estimates he has won well over 20 global tournaments.

Personal life

As of 1971, he was married with a daughter and a son. He got remarried while living in Malaysia.

Amateur wins

Australian/New Zealand circuit wins (8)

Note: Godfrey only played in The Open Championship.
CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" indicates a tie for a place

Team appearances

Amateur
Professional