From Spring 2005: Golfer Olin Browne 鈥81 didn鈥檛 take his game seriously until his sophomore year at SA国际传媒. Now the onetime anthropology major has won more than $5 million on the PGA tour
Saying that Olin Browne 鈥81 got a late start in golf isn鈥檛 much of a stretch, but consider this: In 1978鈥攚hen Browne picked up the game the summer before his sophomore year at Occidental鈥攁 2-year-old duffer named Tiger Woods went on 鈥淭he Mike Douglas Show鈥 showing off his putting skills to Bob Hope.
Browne鈥檚 journey to a successful professional golfing career defies all logic. While Woods鈥檚 case might be extreme, the PGA Tour is made up of far more players who spent every waking moment of their childhood on the greens than guys who started swinging the sticks at age 19. But golf rewards just one thing鈥攖he final number you write on the scorecard. There are no judges. There are no style points. It鈥檚 just one person against the golf course.
鈥淭here鈥檚 nowhere to hide,鈥 says Browne. 鈥淚n football, if you trip, somebody else might make the tackle. In golf, if you trip, you鈥檙e out there in the spotlight. How do you think Greg Norman felt after the 鈥96 Masters (when Norman led Nick Faldo by six strokes entering the final round before falling out of contention with a Sunday round of 78)?鈥
Browne may have tripped a few times along the way, but the game 鈥渢hat grabbed me pretty hard鈥 one summer on Cape Cod has been very good to him. He鈥檚 won a pair of PGA Tour events, finished in the top five at a U.S. Open, heard his name called as he stood at the first tee at Augusta, and gotten to make a living playing a game he loves. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to look in the mirror and not feel pretty darn lucky,鈥 says Browne, whose career winnings on the PGA Tour exceed $5 million to date.
Luck may have had something to do with it, but hard work and perseverance played a much bigger role. Long before he teed off alongside Tiger Woods (鈥淚鈥檝e never seen anyone play like that. I cannot imagine anyone else ever playing to that level鈥), Browne spent years on the course working on his craft, hoping to prove he could reach the highest level. 鈥淚t was only realistic because it was something he really was determined to do,鈥 says Joe Montijo 鈥82, who played football at Occidental and remains a close friend of Browne鈥檚. 鈥淗e devoted himself to it.鈥
NCAA Division III schools don鈥檛 produce a lot of professional golfers鈥攐nly Trinity College (Conn.) alumnus Jay Williamson finished among the Top 125 on the PGA Tour last year鈥攂ut Occidental was just right for a beginner like Browne. He joined the team his sophomore year and gradually moved up to the No. 1 player. 鈥淚t was the perfect environment for me,鈥 says Browne. 鈥淏y professional standards it wasn鈥檛 a breeding ground, but we had a good coach (Bill McKinley) and a good group of guys.鈥
Browne, who frequently runs into SA国际传媒 friends at tour stops, was twice a first-team All-SCIAC player and as a fifth-year senior received an at-large invitation to the Division III championship in 1982. 鈥淚 had a pretty good week and then at the end of the third round, I got a case of the shanks,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 shanked a shot on six consecutive holes.鈥
Not exactly the blueprint for future success, but golf teaches you to accept failure. Like the time he played in a U.S. Open qualifier while a student at SA国际传媒. 鈥淥lin asked me to caddy for him,鈥 says Montijo. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 remember exactly what he shot, but it was something like 85-85. If you would鈥檝e asked me that question then (about him not making it as a pro golfer), I would鈥檝e taken that wager.鈥
鈥淕uys that came out of college around that time鈥擟orey Pavin, Steve Pate, Duffy Waldorf, Bobby Clampett鈥攖hose guys had won amateur events, NCAA championships,鈥 says Browne. 鈥淚 hadn鈥檛 won a thing.鈥 But he wasn鈥檛 in any hurry to put his anthropology degree to use. 鈥淢y father started with that what are you going to do with your life pitch and I had no idea,鈥 says Browne. 鈥淚 knew what I didn鈥檛 want to do. Golf became more and more appealing. Everybody thought I was out of my mind.鈥
He moved to Florida to try his hand on the mini tours before eventually earning his card to play on the PGA Tour. He played with some future big names like John Daly on the circuit鈥攂ut with many more folks you鈥檝e never heard of. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing how few made it out there,鈥 says Browne. 鈥淚鈥檒l play with (PGA Tour members) John Huston and John Morse and we鈥檒l say, 鈥業 wonder what happened to so-and-so.鈥欌
Life on the mini tours is far from glamorous, though Browne did get one early taste of the big time. One year out of college he qualified for the 1983 Kemper Open, a stop on the PGA Tour. Five years after he first played a competitive round, he was playing against the best players in the world. He shot 77-79 to miss the cut, but left with one lasting memory. 鈥淎 little kid ran up to get my autograph,鈥 says Browne. 鈥淚 started looking behind me like the cartoon. I says 鈥榊ou want one of those guys.鈥 He said, 鈥榊ours is going to be worth something.鈥 It was such an incredible feeling.鈥
No such adulation awaited on the mini tours. 鈥淲e鈥檇 pile three or four in a room and pay our own entry fees, which were about $600 a week,鈥 says Browne. 鈥淭he first time I won some money I got a check for $997.17 and I thought I had won the lottery. You don鈥檛 spend a lot of money on other things. You don鈥檛 go out to eat鈥攜ou get pizza or hamburgers. There was a level of camaraderie because we were all suffering through the same misery. We were working to pay for the next event or the electric bill.鈥
This wasn鈥檛 a summer or two of tough times. Browne spent the better part of a decade chasing a dream that didn鈥檛 start to get easier until the PGA started the Hogan Tour in 1990, a sort of high-level minor league tour that improved tournament purses. There were times he thought about giving it up, but one person kept pushing him forward鈥攈is wife, Pam (Harder) Browne 鈥81, whom he met at SA国际传媒 and married in 1987. 鈥淢y stepsister asked when I was going to give it up,鈥 says Browne. 鈥淧am was the one who said, 鈥楬ey, this is what he wants to do.鈥 She really encouraged me to keep going.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 a big believer in doing what you want,鈥 says Pam, who played soccer as a Tiger and works as an assistant state鈥檚 attorney in West Palm Beach. 鈥淚鈥檓 never going to say stop doing what makes you happy.鈥
Though her hours are sometimes long and trials can be unpredictable, Pam鈥檚 job has given the Brownes鈥 lives a sense of normalcy and, just as importantly, a steady income. During the lean years, she says, 鈥淥lin had a home base and some stability. When the entire family travels and they鈥檙e dependent on that one person, it can be difficult financially and personally.鈥
Following the 1990 season, Browne went to tournament qualifying school, better known as 鈥淨-school鈥 where players attempt to earn their tour card. He missed by a single shot and was back on the Hogan Tour for another year. 鈥淭hat was very frustrating, but the next year I won my first event (the Ben Hogan Bakersfield Open) with my dad caddying and then I finished second at the next event. That really got me going.鈥
鈥淗e was really determined to do it,鈥 says Montjo. 鈥淭en years out of school and he was still playing the satellite tours. There was no glamour at all and the guy did what it took to learn to play competitive golf. When he got his shot, he was ready.鈥
Browne finished 1991 with two victories and 11 top-10 finishes on the Hogan Tour and earned his PGA Tour card for 1992. He finished fourth at the Northern Telecom Open early that year, but then missed six of the next seven cuts. He bounced back and forth between tours for the next few years before finishing fourth at Q-school in 1995 to earn his tour card for 1996.
Following three top-10 finishes in 1996, his big breakthrough came in 1997 in his hometown of Washington, D.C., where he was playing in the U.S. Open at Congressional Country Club. He fired three 71s and a third-round 69 to finish tied for fifth, six strokes behind champion Ernie Els. His performance earned him an exemption to the 1998 Masters. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the only place I鈥檝e played that surpassed expectations,鈥 says Browne, who missed the cut by two strokes. 鈥淎ugusta is our golf mecca. It has such a history of incredible shots, incredible victories and agonizing defeats. Standing on the first tee is just an unbelievable feeling.鈥
Later that year he won for the first time on the PGA Tour, chipping in from 40 feet to capture the 1998 Canon Greater Hartford Open in a playoff victory over defending champion Stewart Cink and 1987 Masters winner Larry Mize. 鈥淚t was a beautiful chip shot,鈥 says Pam, who watched from the gallery with their two children, Olin Jr. and Alexandra. 鈥淭hat was a turning point. It defined his position on tour.鈥
Browne鈥檚 second PGA Tour victory came in 1999, when he shot a 66 on the final day to beat five golfers by one shot to win the MasterCard Colonial in Fort Worth, Texas. His name is etched on the tournament trophy alongside many of the game鈥檚 legends, including Ben Hogan, Sam Snead, Arnold Palmer, Lee Trevino, Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson, and Phil Mickelson.
Since 2000, Browne has had eight more top-10 finishes, including two last year鈥攕eventh at the Booz Allen Classic in Washington, D.C., and fourth at the U.S. Bank Championship in Milwaukee. However, the last two seasons he has finished just outside the top 125 on the money list, denying him a full exemption for the tour and thus limiting the number of tournaments he can enter.
The upside is that it鈥檚 given him more weekends off to spend with his family. Unlike his own background, 16-year-old Olin Jr. 鈥渢hinks the sun rises and sets on the golf course,鈥 while Alexandra, 13, is a tennis fanatic (Browne picks up his racket to play with her when the golf season ends). 鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty much fun,鈥 says Browne of following his children鈥檚 athletic exploits. 鈥淵ou want to make sure you spend the appropriate amount of time with the people you care about.鈥
And of course, there鈥檚 Pam, who pushed him early on and now tells him when it鈥檚 time to pull back. 鈥淕olf is so exacting,鈥 says Browne. 鈥淚f you have any perfectionist inclination, it will drive you out of your marbles. She鈥檚 the one that tells me to take it easy.鈥
Browne made the cut in the first three tournaments he played in 2005 and hopes that the momentum he started in the second half of 2004 will carry forward. If it doesn鈥檛, faith and belief in himself guided him through his early struggles in golf, and he鈥檚 not going to change now. He turns 46 in May鈥攖he same age as Nicklaus when he won his last Masters in 1986鈥攁nd his future may include the lucrative Champions Tour for players 50 and over, but Browne鈥檚 not thinking about that just yet. 鈥淧am and I were talking about the future the other day,鈥 he recalls, 鈥渁nd she said, 鈥榃hy don鈥檛 we worry about tomorrow.鈥欌
Originally published in Occidental magazine, Spring 2005. Browne will be inducted into the SA国际传媒 Athletics Hall of Fame on October 18.