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Juan Chi-Chi Rodriguez is one of
the great showmen in sports history.
In a career which spans four
decades, Chi-Chi won 22 Senior PGA
Tour victories, 8 regular PGA Tours
and has career earnings of over $7
million dollars...Book
Chi-Chi Rodriguez for Your Event
Chi-Chi Rodriguez was born in Rio
Piedras in 1935 and as a young boy
helped his father work the hot,
dusty sugar cane fields. He began
caddying at the age of six and
actually learned how to play golf
with clubs fashioned out of guava
tree limbs and tin cans hammered
into balls. From the start he has
become one of the most successful
and widely recognized names in the
game of golf.
Chi-Chi's golf expertise began at
the age of 12, when he shot a 67.
Chi-Chi became known for his
eye-hand coordination and
imagination skills that more than 40
years have help him overcome all
kinds of obstacles.
It
has been said that pound for pound
Chi-Chi is the longest hitter in the
history of golf. At 5-7 and weight
ranging from 112-130 pounds, the
wiry Puerto Rican has at times
driven a golf ball over 350 yards.
He has consistently been at over 250
yards throughout his career.
Chi-Chi's talent extend beyond what
he does on the golf course, he has a
strong desire to make a positive
impact on today's youth. He has
founded the "Chi-Chi Rodriguez Youth
Foundation" in Clearwater Florida
which is a home to troubled and
abused youngsters. Chi-Chi's
philosophy is clear, he wants to
give kids a chance to succeed. "I
figure kids are the future. If I
made it, anybody can do it. I think
I can be a good role model for them
because they could look at me and
say, "look, he's a small guy, he was
poor and he worked hard and made
it."
Chi-Chi's incredible career includes
winning PGA tournaments four times
in each of the 1990-91 seasons and
was the only winner of back to back
events in 1991. He became the first
player on the Senior Tour to win the
same event three consecutive years,
he set a senior tour record with
eight consecutive birdies en route
to a win at the 1987 Silver Pages
Classic, represented Puerto Rico on
12 World Cup Teams, won the Hispanic
Achievement Recognition Award ('86)
and Replica's Hispanic Man of the
Year ('88) and was inducted into
PGA's World Golf Hall of Fame in
1992.
Despite a strong, successful career,
Rodriguez's health started failing
him and it was showing in his game.
Rodriguez has not won since 1993
and some of his troubles on the
course have coincided with a loss of
power. He fiddled with equipment,
worked on his game, tried to find
out what was wrong, but couldn't
figure it out. He was feeling weak
and a pain persisted in his jaw, but
Rodriguez never saw a doctor. He
didn't believe much in medicine, so
he left it unattended. Even when he
had the worst kind of stomach pain,
the kind that had him doubling over,
Rodriguez figured it was simply
indigestion. Of course, that is not
so, as Rodriguez learned, nearly
tragically. In October 1998,
Rodriguez had a heart attack just
before he was to play in a Senior
PGA Tour event in California. "I had
an artery that was blocked by 50
percent," said Rodriguez, who had an
angioplasty to clear the artery. "I
was exercising one day and that
artery turned loose. Fortunately,
one percent of the blood was flowing
through that artery or I would have
died." Rodriguez is also hoping
others will learn from his mistakes.
Now
he is feeling better and his heart
is coming along fine. Thanks to the
modern-day medicine and great
doctors, we will continue to see
Chi-Chi Rodriguez on the golf course
doing his famous sword dance when he
holes a putt.
Legendary golfer "Chi-Chi" Rodriguez
has demonstrated to be a great golf
champion, but he's a greater
champion to the lives of our youths
and to the Hispanic community.
>>>
Book Chi-Chi Rodriguez for Your Event
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