Brandel Eugene Chamblee (born July 2, 1962) is an American former professional golfer, commentator and writer.

Early life and amateur career

Chamblee was born in St. Louis, Missouri. He graduated from the University of Texas with a degree in Speech Communication and was a first-team All-American in his junior year and twice a second-team All-American.

Professional career

Chamblee turned professional in 1985 and has one PGA Tour victory. He shared a first round lead at the 1999 Masters Tournament and for seven consecutive years (1995–2001) was among the top-100 for money earnings on the Tour.

Chamblee lost his PGA Tour card in 2003, and since then has worked as the lead studio analyst for the Golf Channel, Golf Central and for its "Live From" coverage of major championships.

In 2018, Chamblee returned to professional golf on the PGA Tour Champions. In 2023, after the news broke that Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund would become a minority investor in The PGA Tour, Chamblee has promoted his view that the Department Of Justice will block the deal.

Personal life

Chamblee lives in Phoenix, Arizona. He has four children with his ex-wife Karen: sons Brandel Jr., Brennen, Braeden, and a daughter, Bergen. A memorial playground was set up at the Phoenix Children's Hospital for a son, Braeden, who died as an infant.

He is now married to Bailey (Mosier) Chamblee, who is also a television personality.

Awards and honors

Chamblee was inducted into the Irving Independent School District Hall of Fame Class of 2014. Chamblee was inducted into the University of Texas Hall of Fame (Hall of Honor) in 2008

Amateur wins

  • 1983 Rice Planters Amateur

Professional wins (4)

PGA Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of victoryRunner-up
1Aug 30, 1998Greater Vancouver Open−19 (67-64-68-66=265)3 strokesUnited States Payne Stewart

PGA Tour playoff record (0–2)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
11996BellSouth ClassicUnited States Paul StankowskiLost to par on first extra hole
22001Nissan OpenAustralia Robert Allenby, Japan Toshimitsu Izawa, United States Dennis Paulson, United States Jeff Sluman, United States Bob TwayAllenby won with birdie on first extra hole

Ben Hogan Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreMargin of victoryRunner-up
1Jul 5, 1990Ben Hogan New England Classic−1 (68-78-69=215)1 strokeUnited States Jeff Maggert

Other wins (2)

  • 1986 TPA Tucson Open
  • 1994 Abierto International Open (Chile)

Results in major championships

Tournament198719881989199019911992199319941995199619971998199920002001
Masters TournamentT18
U.S. OpenCUTCUTCUTT46T61T44
The Open ChampionshipT66CUTT62
PGA ChampionshipCUTCUTCUTCUT

CUT = missed the half-way cut "T" = tied

See also

External links