\"O\'meara\"In what is probably the only feat of its kind, his last two victories on the main US PGA Tour – before joining the senior ranks – were Grand Slam titles. He was 41 at the time, and had not previously won a major.

Mark Francis O\'Meara (born 13 January 1957) was a prolific tournament winner on the US PGA Tour and around the world from the mid 1980s to the late 1990s. He spent nearly 200 weeks in the top-10 of the Official World Golf Rankings from their launch in 1986 to 2000. O\'Meara was born in Goldsboro, North Carolina, but grew up in southern California in Mission Viejo. He took up golf at 13, sneaking on to the nearby Mission Viejo Country Club course. He later became an employee of the club and played on his high school golf team.

He was an All- American at Long Beach State, and won the US Amateur in 1979, defeating John Cook. After graduating with a degree in marketing in 1980, O\'Me- ara turned professional and would win 16 events on the PGA Tour, beginning with the Greater Milwaukee Open in 1984.

He won the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am five times, but he passed his 41st birthday in January 1998 without having won a major championship as a professional.

In a late finale to his PGA Tour winning career, O\'Mea- ra won two majors in 1998, the Masters and the British Open. O\'Meara attributed this resurgence partly to the inspiration of working with Tiger Woods, the new superstar of the game at the time, with whom O\'Meara had become good friends. In the same year he won the Cisco World Match Play Championship and he reached a career best of second in the Official World Golf Rankings.

O\'Meara is known for competing outside the United States more often than most leading American golfers, and has won tournaments in Europe, Asia, Australia and South America. A man with a genial demeanour, he is one of the most popular figures in international golf.

In the new millennium his form took a downturn and he began to struggle with injuries, but in 2004 he won an official tour event for the first time since 1998, taking the Dubai Desert Classic title, which despite being played in the Middle East is a European Tour event.

In 2007, O\'Mea- ra began play on the Champions Tour; he had numerous top-10 places in his first three seasons including several runner-up finishes, but no wins. In 2010, he broke through with a win in the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf with Nick Price, followed by his first senior major victory in the Constellation Energy Senior Players Championship.

Mark O\'Meara has begun to develop a golf course design practice and enjoys fishing in his leisure time.