I Was Told My Career Was Over — Two Months Later I Won the European Open
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About This Episode
Ross sits down with Andrew Murray — European Open champion, BBC Radio 5 Live golf commentator of 35 years, and one of the most colourful characters to come through the European Tour's formative era. From humble beginnings as a 16-year-old apprentice pro with one Woodwork O-Level to lifting the Panasonic European Open trophy at Walton Heath, Andrew's story is as honest and entertaining as it gets.
What We Cover
Winning the 1989 Panasonic European OpenAndrew takes us back to that famous week at Walton Heath — the six iron into the last, the 12-foot winning putt he nearly turned into a nerve-shredder, and what it felt like to beat a leaderboard featuring Sandy Lyle, Ian Woosnam, Sam Torrance and Frank Nobilo. He still has the picture on the wall of his study.
The hip condition that almost ended it allDays before his European Open victory, Andrew's consultant had told him his hip was deteriorating rapidly and he needed to consider a different career. He shares just how fragile that triumph really was — and how he managed to play on for another four or five years he was never supposed to have.
Life on the road in the early daysMonday qualifying. Caravans. Fishing trips gone wrong. Andrew paints a vivid picture of what it was like to be a struggling tour pro in the late 70s and early 80s — winning £2,000 in an entire season and not knowing how he kept the fuel in the car.
The African Safari TourA pivotal chapter for many British pros of that generation. Andrew describes the six-week circuit through Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Zambia and Zimbabwe — and tells the brilliant story of how Ian Woosnam won a Range Rover on that tour, which effectively bankrolled his European breakthrough.
Witnessing the greats up closeAndrew shares his take on the most impressive players he competed alongside — Seve, Faldo, Langer, Woosnam and Lyle. He's particularly effusive about Sandy Lyle and Woosie's natural talent, and draws a fascinating comparison between Woosnam and current star Ludvig Åberg.
Breaking into broadcastingRenton Laidlaw made a phone call in 1991 that changed Andrew's life off the course. He recalls being thrown in at the deep end at Royal Birkdale with one piece of advice: "Don't forget every listener is blind." That was 35 years ago — and he's barely stopped talking since.
Seniors Tour, Tour School at 58… with his son on the bagAndrew went back to Tour School aged 58, took the full-size tour bag (when everyone else had pencil bags) and won it — with his son Tom caddying. He believes he was the oldest winner at that stage, and the pride in telling that story is unmistakable.
Corporate golf and life todayAndrew runs a thriving corporate golf events business from Cheshire, with events at Turnberry, St Andrews, South Africa, Abu Dhabi and beyond. At approaching 70, he's still playing off +0.2 and still getting nervous on the first tee.
Connect with Andrew Murray
🌐 andrewmurraygolf.com📸 Instagram: @andrewmurraygolf
Linked By Golf is a weekly podcast celebrating the game and the people who love it. New episodes every week.