Freddie Jacobson

{{short description|Swedish professional golfer}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2024}}

{{Infobox golfer

| name = Freddie Jacobson

| image =

| imagesize =

| caption =

| fullname = Fredrik Ulf Yngve Jacobson

| nickname = Freddie, Fidde

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1974|9|26|df=y}}

| birth_place = Kungsbacka, Sweden

| death_date =

| death_place =

| height = {{height|m=1.85|precision=0}}

| weight = {{convert|178|lb|kg st|abbr=on}}

| nationality = {{SWE}}

| residence = Hobe Sound, Florida
Kullavik, Kungsbacka, Sweden

| spouse = {{marriage|Erika Juthage Jacobson|2003}}

| partner =

| children = 3

| college =

| yearpro =

| tour = PGA Tour Champions

| extour = PGA Tour
European Tour

| prowins = 4

| pgawins = 1

| eurowins = 3

| japwins =

| asiawins =

| sunwins =

| auswins =

| nwidewins =

| chalwins =

| champwins =

| seneurowins =

| otherwins =

| majorwins =

| masters = T17: 2004

| usopen = T5: 2003

| open = T6: 2003

| pga = T17: 2004

| wghofid =

| wghofyear =

| award1 =

| year1 =

| award2 =

| year2 =

| awardssection =

}}

Fredrik Ulf Yngve Jacobson (born 26 September 1974) is a Swedish professional golfer who formerly played on the PGA Tour and the European Tour.

Early life

Jacobson was born in Kungsbacka, 30 kilometers south of Gothenburg, at the west coast of Sweden. At young age, he was a promising ice hockey player. When Jacobson was 10 years old, he started playing golf. The club pro, Per Nellbeck, at the local golf club, Kungsbacka Golf Club, also played ice hockey and taught the entire Jacobson family to play, his parents Ulf and Monica and his sister Therese, who also came to be a golf professional.

Jacobson also showed early talent in table tennis and ranked top 30 in his country at age 14–15.

Amateur career

At age 18, Jacobson won both the European and the World final of the 1992 Doug Sanders International Junior Championship at Hazlehead Golf Club, Aberdeen, Scotland.{{cite magazine |url=http://www.e-magin.se/paper/1kmgj6xd/popup/81? |first=Johan |last=Dahlqvist |title=Vilka Juniorer! Resultat, Internationellt, Amatörer |language=sv |trans-title=What Juniors! Results, International, Amateurs |magazine=Svensk Golf |number=10 |date=October 1992 |pages=68–69, 81}}

In 1994, Jacobson won the last edition of the British Youths Open Championship, scoring 277 over 72 holes at Royal St David's Golf Club, Wales.

Jacobson represented Sweden at the 1994 Eisenhower Trophy at Le Golf National outside Paris, France. He finished 3rd with his team and best Swedish player, tied 4th individually, one stroke ahead of Tiger Woods.

Professional career

He turned professional in late in 1994 and qualified for the 1995 European Tour through qualifying school, He was a member of the European Tour in 1995 and from 1997 to 2004. In December 2002 he won his first European Tour title, belonging to the 2002–2003 season, and went on to claim two more victories that season. His fourth-place finish on the Order of Merit that year equalled Anders Forsbrand's Swedish record set in 1992, and was the first Swede to win three official money events in one season on the European Tour. Jacobson's victory at the 2003 Algarve Open de Portugal was the 50th win by a Swedish player on the European Tour.{{cite book |url=http://www.e-magin.se/paper/1pfc350j/popup/1? |title=Golf – Den stora sporten |trans-title=Golf – The Great Sport |first=Anders |last=Jansson |publisher=Swedish Golf Federation |year=2004 |isbn=91-86818007 |pages=258, 260, 270 |language=sv}}

At the 2003 German Masters, Jacobson tied the European Tour 18-hole scoring record for one round, by shooting 12 under par 60 in the first round. The record was beaten in 2018, when Oliver Fisher scored a round of 59 at the Portugal Masters, but it is still, as of November 2020, a tied European Tour record in relation to par. It was also the lowest 18 hole score ever by a Swedish male player.

Jacobson was the top scorer in the 2003 Seve Trophy, representing the Continent of Europe against Great Britain and Ireland. He collected four and a half points out of five.

In 2004 he just missed out on a Ryder Cup place, finishing one place short in both the European Tour rankings and the world ranking points rankings, and not being selected as a captain's pick.

=PGA Tour=

In 2004, he joined the PGA Tour. Jacobson won his first PGA Tour title in 2011 at the Travelers Championship. He beat Ryan Moore, who missed a short four footer at the 72nd hole which would have gotten him into a playoff with Jacobson, but instead settled for a tie with John Rollins one shot behind. During the week, Jacobson went 63 holes bogey-free until the difficult par four 10th on Sunday where he made a bogey five. He hit 100% of the fairways during rounds three and four.

In November 2011, Jacobson had his best finish ever in a World Golf Championship event when he finished solo 2nd at the WGC-HSBC Champions in Shanghai, China. Jacobson had led the tournament after rounds two and three and entered the final round with a two stroke advantage over Louis Oosthuizen. However it was a final round surge from Martin Kaymer that denied Jacobson, the German firing nine birdies on the day to post a 63. Jacobson could only record a 71 to fall short by three strokes.

At the 2013 Northern Trust Open, Jacobson had a chance to win his second PGA Tour title when he birdied the 15th and 16th holes in the final round to tie the lead. He then missed a short birdie putt at the 17th to take the outright lead. On the 72nd hole, Jacobson missed a five-foot par putt, which left him one shot outside of the playoff.

Jacobson has been featured in the top 20 of the Official World Golf Rankings, with 16th his highest position, received in November 2003.

Jacobson cut his 2014–15 season short after the Crowne Plaza Invitational to care for his son Max, who underwent open-heart surgery. The procedure was successful, and Max recovered well. The PGA Tour granted Jacobson a medical extension under the family crisis provision. Jacobson fulfilled his medical extension with a fifth-place finish at the 2016 RSM Classic.{{cite web |url=http://www.pgatour.com/long-form/2016/03/08/jacobson.html |title=What Happens If I Don't Wake Up? |publisher=PGA Tour |last=Ross |first=Helen |date=8 March 2016 |access-date=8 March 2016}}

=PGA Tour Champions=

Jacobson made his PGA Tour Champions debut the week after he turned 50 at the 2024 Constellation Furyk and Friends, where he was tied for the lead after the first round and ultimately finished tied 10th.{{cite news |last=Bissell |first=Kathlene |title=Three top Constellation Furyk & Friends, One just turned 50 |url=https://progolfnow.com/posts/three-top-constellation-furyk-friends-turned-50-01j9cn4s2dc2 |access-date=7 October 2024 |work=Pro Golf Now |date=October 5, 2024}} He finished solo second behind Søren Kjeldsen at the Qualifying Tournament to secure one of five available cards for the 2025 season, where he was runner-up at the Hoag Classic, a stroke behind Miguel Ángel Jiménez.{{cite magazine |last=Kelly |first=Todd |title=These are the 5 golfers who earned PGA Tour Champions cards for 2025 |url=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/story/sports/golf/2024/12/06/pga-tour-champions-five-earned-2025-tour-card/76831864007/ |access-date=26 March 2025 |magazine=Golfweek |date=4 December 2024}}{{cite news |last=Szabo |first=Matt |title=Miguel Ángel Jiménez sinks short birdie for first Hoag Classic title |url=https://www.latimes.com/socal/daily-pilot/sports/story/2025-03-23/miguel-angel-jimenez-sinks-short-birdie-for-first-hoag-classic-title |access-date=26 March 2025 |newspaper=Los Angeles Times |date=23 March 2025}}

Awards, honors

In 2000 Jacobson earned Elite Sign No. 120 by the Swedish Golf Federation, on the basis of national team appearances and national championship performances.{{cite book |last=Jansson |first=Anders |url=http://www.e-magin.se/paper/1pfc350j/popup/1? |title=Golf - Den stora sporten |date=2004 |publisher=Swedish Golf Federation |isbn=91-86818007 |page=97 |language=Swedish |trans-title=Golf - The great sport}}

In 2012, Jacobson was awarded honorary member of the PGA of Sweden.{{cite web |title=PGA of Sweden, Utmärkelser, Hedersmedlemar |trans-title=PGA of Sweden, Awards, Honorary Members |url=https://www.pgasweden.com/om-pga-of-sweden/pga-utmarkelser/honorary-members/ |accessdate=6 November 2024 |publisher=PGA of Sweden |language=Swedish}}

Amateur wins

Professional wins (4)

=PGA Tour wins (1)=

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;"

!No.!!Date!!Tournament!!Winning score!!Margin of
victory!!Runners-up

align=center|1

|align=right|26 Jun 2011

|Travelers Championship

|−20 (65-66-63-66=260)

|1 stroke

|{{flagicon|USA}} Ryan Moore, {{flagicon|USA}} John Rollins

=European Tour wins (3)=

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;"

! Legend

style="background:thistle"

| Tour Championships (1)

Other European Tour (2)

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;"

!No.!!Date!!Tournament!!Winning score!!Margin of
victory!!Runner(s)-up

align=center|1

|align=right|1 Dec 2002
(2003 season)

|Omega Hong Kong Open1

|−16 (68-65-63-64=260)

|2 strokes

|{{flagicon|ARG}} Jorge Berendt, {{flagicon|SWE}} Henrik Nyström

align=center|2

|align=right|20 Apr 2003

|Algarve Open de Portugal

|−5 (64-76-71-72=283)

|1 stroke

|{{flagicon|ENG}} Brian Davis, {{flagicon|WAL}} Jamie Donaldson,
{{flagicon|WAL}} Bradley Dredge

style="background:thistle"

|align=center|3

|align=right|2 Nov 2003

|Volvo Masters Andalucía

|−12 (64-71-71-70=276)

|Playoff

|{{flagicon|ESP}} Carlos Rodiles

1Co-sanctioned by the Asian PGA Tour

European Tour playoff record (1–2)

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;"

!No.!!Year!!Tournament!!Opponent!!Result

style="background:#F2C1D1;"

|align=center|1

|1998

|Belgacom Open

|{{flagicon|ENG}} Lee Westwood

|Lost to birdie on first extra hole

style="background:#F2C1D1;"

|align=center|2

|2002

|Barclays Scottish Open

|{{flagicon|ARG}} Eduardo Romero

|Lost to birdie on first extra hole

style="background:#D0F0C0;"

|align=center|3

|2003

|Volvo Masters Andalucía

|{{flagicon|ESP}} Carlos Rodiles

|Won with par on fourth extra hole

Results in major championships

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;text-align:center;"

!Tournament

!1998

!1999

align=left|Masters Tournament

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

align=left|U.S. Open

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

align=left|The Open Championship

|76

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

align=left|PGA Championship

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;text-align:center;"

!Tournament

!2000

!2001

!2002

!2003

!2004

!2005

!2006

!2007

!2008

!2009

align=left|Masters Tournament

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|T17

|CUT

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

align=left|U.S. Open

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:yellow;"|T5

|CUT

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|CUT

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

align=left|The Open Championship

|CUT

|CUT

|CUT

|style="background:yellow;"|T6

|CUT

|T52

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|T19

|T70

align=left|PGA Championship

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|CUT

|T17

|T34

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|T24

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;text-align:center;"

!Tournament

!2010

!2011

!2012

!2013

!2014

!2015

!2016

align=left|Masters Tournament

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|T19

|T25

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

align=left|U.S. Open

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|T14

|T15

|CUT

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

align=left|The Open Championship

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|T16

|T54

|T44

|CUT

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

align=left|PGA Championship

|CUT

|CUT

|T36

|CUT

|T69

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|T73

{{legend|yellow|Top 10}}

{{legend|#eeeeee|Did not play}}

CUT = missed the half-way cut

"T" = tied

=Summary=

class=wikitable style=text-align:center

!Tournament !! Wins !! 2nd !! 3rd !! Top-5 !! Top-10 !! Top-25 !! Events !! Cuts made

align=left|Masters Tournament00000343
align=left|U.S. Open00011363
align=left|The Open Championship000013138
align=left|PGA Championship000002106
Totals00012113320

  • Most consecutive cuts made – 5 (2012 Masters – 2013 Masters)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 2 (2003 U.S. Open – 2003 Open Championship)

Results in The Players Championship

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;text-align:center;"

!Tournament

!2004!!2005!!2006!!2007!!2008!!2009!!2010!!2011!!2012!!2013!!2014!!2015!!2016!!2017

align=left|The Players Championship

|CUT

|CUT

|T22

|CUT

|T32

|T49

|style="background:yellow;"|T10

|T64

|CUT

|T48

|64

|T42

|T49

|CUT

{{legend|yellow|Top 10}}

CUT = missed the halfway cut

"T" indicates a tie for a place

Results in World Golf Championships

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

!Tournament!!2003!!2004!!2005!!2006!!2007!!2008!!2009!!2010!!2011!!2012!!2013

align="left"|Match Play

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:yellow;"|R16

|R64

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|R64

|style="background:yellow;"|R16

align="left"|Championship

|T28

|T59

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|68

|T16

align="left"|Invitational

|84

|T32

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|T56

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|T11

|T50

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

align="left"|Champions

|colspan=6 style="background:#D3D3D3;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:yellow;"|2

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

|style="background:#eeeeee;"|

{{legend|yellow|Top 10}}

{{legend|#eeeeee|Did not play}}

QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play

"T" = tied

Note that the HSBC Champions did not become a WGC event until 2009.

Team appearances

Amateur

  • Jacques Léglise Trophy (representing the Continent of Europe): 1992
  • European Boys' Team Championship (representing Sweden): 1992{{cite web |url=http://www.ega-golf.ch/page/european-team-championships |title=European Team Championships, European Boys' Team Championship, 1992 |date=16 October 2015 |publisher=European Golf Association |access-date=22 January 2021}}
  • European Amateur Team Championship (representing Sweden): 1993{{cite web |url=http://www.ega-golf.ch/page/european-team-championships |title=European Team Championships, European Amateur Team Championship, 1993 |date=16 October 2015 |publisher=European Golf Association |access-date=22 January 2021}}
  • Eisenhower Trophy (representing Sweden): 1994

Professional

References

{{reflist}}