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Japanese Golf Legend ‘Jumbo’ Ozaki Dies at Age 78

Japanese golf icon Masashi ‘Jumbo’ Ozaki has died at age 78. He was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2011.

Masashi ‘Jumbo’ Ozaki passed away on Tuesday at the age of 78 after battling colon cancer. Ozaki won a record 94 tournaments on the Japan Golf Tour Organization (JGTO), including five Japan Open titles and six Japan PGA Championships. He was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2011. His only international victory came at the 1972 New Zealand PGA Championship.

Most Successful Golfer in JGTO History

No golfer in Japanese history has matched Ozaki’s dominance. His 94 JGTO wins are 43 more than second-place Isao Aoki. He also claimed the tour’s Order of Merit 12 times, another record. Thanks to his domestic success, Ozaki spent 200 weeks ranked in the world’s top 10 and played a key role in popularizing golf in Japan. While his international wins were limited, he posted top-10 finishes at the 1973 Masters, 1989 U.S. Open, and 1979 Open Championship.

A Unique Life On and Off the Course

Nicknamed ‘Jumbo’ for his 1.81m, 90kg frame and powerful drives, Ozaki thrilled Japanese fans with his all-or-nothing playing style and became a national celebrity. His path to golf was unconventional—he was a promising baseball player who won a national high school championship and played professionally for three years before switching to golf at age 23. He won his first JGTO event in 1973 at age 26 and his last 29 years later at 55.

Leveraging his fame, Ozaki also launched a brief music career in the late 1980s, releasing three singles that charted in Japan.