
CHEROKEE VILLAGE, Ark. (AP) -- Tommy Bolt, the 1958 U.S. Open champion who had one of golf's sweetest swings and most explosive tempers, has died. He was 92.
His wife, Mary Lou Bolt, said he died Saturday after "his liver shut down."
"He was the best man I ever knew," she said Wednesday.
Bolt won 15 times on the PGA Tour, with his lone major at Southern Hills in the 1958 by four shots over Gary Player. He was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2002, which he called the highlight of his career.
But it was temper that gained him the most notoriety.
Bolt was called "Terrible Tommy" and "Thunder," and he was often fined and suspended by the PGA Tour for slamming clubs and using abusive language. He set up a special fund from his earnings to pay the fines.
"That's been ballooned out of proportion a little bit," Bolt said when he was selected for the Hall of Fame. "Now, I threw a couple of clubs. I'm human, just like the other guys. But I threw them at the most opportune time, it seemed like. They always had the camera on me when I was throwing one."
Bolt attended the U.S. Open at Southern Hills in 2001, and someone asked if tales of his temper were overblown. "I couldn't have possibly broken as many clubs I was supposed to have broken. They haven't made that many," he said.
During his induction in 2002, Bolt regaled the crowd with his favorite story about breaking or throwing clubs. He was playing the Bing Crosby Pro-Am at Pebble Beach one year when he had 135 yards left to the 16th.
Bolt turned to his caddie and asked for a 7-iron, and the caddied replied, "It's either a 3-iron or a 3-wood. Those are the only clubs you have left."
Bolt was born March 31, 1916, in Haworth, Okla. He served in the U.S. Army during World War II and turned professional in 1946, joining the Tour four years later. His first victory was the North and South Open, and he won at least one time through 1955, when he captured four titles.
His best season was 1958, when he won the U.S. Open by four strokes over 22-year-old Gary Player. He also won the Colonial Open that year and finished seventh on the money list. His last PGA Tour win came at the Pensacola Open in 1961, but he remained in the top 60 on the PGA Tour through the 1967 season and won the 1969 Senior PGA Championship.
A member of both the 1955 and 1957 U.S. Ryder Cup teams, Bolt compiled a 3-1-0 record. In 1955 at Thunderbird G&CC in Palm Springs, Calif., , he teamed with Jack Burke Jr. to win a foursomes match, the defeated Christy O'Connor Sr. by 4 and 2 in singles. In 1957 at Lindrick GC in England, Bolt and Dick Mayer won a foursomes match before Bolt suffered his only Ryder Cup defeat, falling 4 & 3 to Eric Brown.
"Today's players owe a debt of gratitude to Tommy Bolt and his fellow pioneers," PGA Tour Cmmissioner Tim Finchem said. "His golf prowess was only matched by his formidable and colorful personality, and he helped launch an era of the game's popularity that has continued for nearly half a century."
Survivors include a son, Thomas Walker Bolt.
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