On Thursday, the PGA Tour announced that former pro and longtime Masters analyst Peter Oosterhuis passed away at 75.
Oosterhuis, who won the 1981 Canadian Open and was a member of six straight Ryder Cup teams, worked for Sky Sports, the BBC, Golf Channel, and CBS Sports during his career as a broadcaster.
Most golf fans in the United States will remember Oosterhuis’ tenure as one of CBS’s top golf analysts. For much of his career he was a fixture on the network’s Masters coverage, calling the 17th hole each year from 1997 through 2014 as well as other PGA Tour events.
CBS tweeted their condolences on Thursday.
A statement from CBS Sports on the passing of Peter Oosterhuis pic.twitter.com/IhshRfYRhE
— CBS Sports PR (@CBSSportsGang) May 2, 2024
“The CBS Sports family is saddened by Peter Oosterhuis’ passing,” the statement reads. “Peter was an integral member of our golf coverage and an incredible teammate for nearly two decades. After a successful playing career which included six Ryder Cup teams and leading the Order of Merit four times, Peter brought a unique style and distinct perspective to our broadcasts which made him one of the most respected analysts in the sport. Our deepest condolences go out to his with Ruth Ann and his entire family.”
Oosterhuis retired from broadcasting after the 2014 PGA Championship and revealed in 2015 that he had early-onset Alzheimer’s.
[PGA Tour]

About Joe Lucia
I hate your favorite team. I also sort of hate most of my favorite teams.
Recent Posts
John Buccigross signs multi-year extension with ESPN
The longtime SportsCenter anchor has been a major voice of hockey for ESPN on both the NHL and NCAA sides.
Scottie Scheffler calls out ‘terrible question’ from reporter at the Masters
"That's just a terrible question. Next question. Awful."
John Goodman-narrated open, Jim Nantz welcome CBS viewers to the Masters
"Generation to generation to generation, Augusta National remains an American treasure. A gift to the game."
Don Orsillo delivers electric ‘Holy Sheets!’ call on Padres walk-off home run
"A THREE-RUN HOME RUN TO WALK IT OFF! SECOND STRAIGHT NIGHT FOR SAN DIEGO! HOLY SHEETS!"
Mark Jones plans to stay with Kings ‘a long, long time’ after leaving ESPN
Jones told the Sacramento Bee he isn't going anywhere, even if his future role with the Kings isn't fully defined yet.
JJ Redick calls out media for doubting Lakers this season
"I know none of you guys had us in the top four to start the season. That's just the reality."