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Stuart Grehan

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Stuart Grehan
Personal information
Full nameStuart Peter Grehan
Born (1992-12-30) 30 December 1992 (age 33)
Tullamore, Ireland
Height6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Sporting nationalityBERJAYA Ireland
Spouse
Carla Reynolds
(m. 2023)
Children1
Career
CollegeEastern Michigan University
Maynooth University
Turned professional2017[a]
Former toursChallenge Tour
Clutch Pro Tour
PGA EuroPro Tour
Professional wins5

Stuart Peter Grehan[2] (born 30 December 1992) is an Irish golfer who won the 2026 Amateur Championship. Outside of golf, he works as a financial advisor.

After a promising amateur career, Grehan turned professional in 2017. He struggled to establish himself in the professional ranks and applied for the reinstatement of his amateur status in 2024. Grehan was selected for the 2025 Walker Cup and won the Amateur Championship in 2026, which earned him invitations to the Open Championship, Masters Tournament and U.S. Open.

Early life and amateur career

[edit]

Grehan was born on 30 December 1992 in Tullamore, Ireland,[2][3] to Helen and John Grehan.[2] He started playing golf at age 13, initially through pitch and putt. He improved quickly, recalling in 2024: "When I got down to a two or three handicap, I thought 'Jeez, maybe I'll give this a go'. Then I had a really good year when I was 17 or 18 and I got from a three-handicap into the plus figures."[4]

In 2012, Grehan won the Irish Youths Amateur.[5] He received a scholarship to play golf at Eastern Michigan University, beginning in January 2013. He said in 2024: "When I went out there, I'll never forget coming off the plane. I started in January and there was three-feet of snow. I was like, 'What am I doing here?'."[4] While with the Eastern Michigan Eagles, Grehan won an individual collegiate title at the Firestone Invitational in October 2013, shooting 73-67-67 for a three-stroke victory.[6][7] He left Eastern Michigan University after a year due to homesickness and the unfavourable winter weather. He then received a Paddy Harrington Scholarship to attend Maynooth University.[8] He earned a degree in entrepreneurship from Maynooth.[4]

Grehan won the 2015 East of Ireland Open. It was the first time in the event's 75-year history that it had been reduced to 54 holes, as heavy rain and wind gusts reaching 100 km/h (62 mph) made the course unplayable.[9] He also won the 2015 South of Ireland Open.[10] In February 2016, Grehan finished runner-up at the South African Stroke Play Championship.[11] During the event, he shot a 10-under 62, which was his career-low round and broke the course record.[12] Grehan also finished runner-up alongside Grant Forrest at the Scottish Amateur Stroke Play Championship in May 2016.[13]

Grehan played for the Europe team which won the 2016 Arnold Palmer Cup.[14] He also played for Ireland at the 2016 European Amateur Team Championship,[15] and for Great Britain & Ireland at the 2016 St Andrews Trophy.[16] Later that year, Grehan helped Ireland to win a bronze medal at the 2016 Eisenhower Trophy, which was the country's first medal in the competition.[17]

In January 2017, Grehan was included in Great Britain & Ireland's 19-man initial lineup for the 2017 Walker Cup. At the time, he was ranked at 54th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking.[18] He suffered an injury to his elbow while playing a game of football tennis with friends later in 2017, which sidelined him for multiple weeks and led to a downturn in form. He missed the cut at the 2017 U.S. Amateur and was not named to the final Walker Cup squad.[19]

Professional career

[edit]

After missing out on the 2017 Walker Cup, Grehan turned professional and competed in European Tour Qualifying School.[4][20] He missed the cut at first stage in October 2017.[21] Grehan recorded his first professional win in February 2018 at the Palmares Classic, an event on the Portugal Pro Tour, and received €2,000. He shot 10-under to finish one stroke ahead of Max Orrin.[22][23] Grehan played on the PGA EuroPro Tour in 2018. In his first event, he finished runner-up at the Motocaddy Masters in May 2018 and earned £6,000. Grehan received invites afterwards to events on the Challenge Tour, but had little success. He struggled in 2019, missing 10 cuts in 16 starts across the PGA EuroPro Tour and Challenge Tour.[4]

Grehan's career was hindered by the COVID-19 pandemic. He recalled in 2024: "It was tough. Very, very tough. I remember trying to fly to Europe with three people on the plane, trying to do antigen tests before you fly and then at tournaments, doing antigen tests just after your round to fly home the next day and it was really expensive."[24] Grehan missed 9 of 15 cuts in 2021 while in the midst of an attempt to change his swing, and said that he had considered giving up on his golf career at the end of 2021 due to financial concerns.[4]

In 2022, Grehan had the best year of his professional career.[24] He won the K Club Pro-Am in July, for which he received a career-high payout of €20,000.[25][26] Grehan also won the Spey Valley Championship on the EuroPro Tour in September, which was his first victory in an Official World Golf Ranking-sanctioned event. He prevailed in a playoff for the title against Dermot McElroy and Michael Stewart.[27] Later in September, the EuroPro Tour announced that it would fold at the conclusion of the 2022 PGA EuroPro Tour season. At the time, Grehan was seventh in the tour's order of merit, narrowly outside the top five rankings which would secure promotion to the Challenge Tour.[28]

Grehan struggled in 2023. He registered only one top-10 finish on the Challenge Tour during the year and lost his status on the tour. He again considered ending his professional career as he and his wife were expecting their first child, but he decided to continue.[24] In January 2024, Grehan totalled 9-under to win the first event of Swing 2 on the Winter Tour, one stroke ahead of Wouter De Vries.[29] The following month, Grehan shot rounds of 63-62-62 to win on the Toro Tour, a mini-tour in Spain. His total of 26-under was 12 shots clear of runner-up Harvey Byers.[30] Grehan finished second on the Winter Tour Order of Merit, which earned him an invitation to an event on the 2024 Challenge Tour schedule.[24] He played on the 2024 Clutch Pro Tour and made his first Challenge Tour start of the year at the D+D Real Czech Challenge.[31]

At the D+D Real Czech Challenge in October 2024, Grehan shot rounds of 68-67-67 to stand at 8-under through 54 holes, but was 14 strokes behind the leader and eventual champion Benjamin Follett-Smith. This was one of many "back in the pack" situations Grehan had experienced as a professional golfer.[32] On the night after the third round, he filed an application for the reinstatement of his amateur status.[33] He ultimately finished the tournament in tied-40th place at 12-under, earning around €1,500.[31] He recalled: "If I had finished third or fourth that week my career earnings would have been enough that it would have taken me 12 months to get reinstated."[32] As he did not finish inside the top four, he was eligible for amateur reinstatement after six months.[20] Speaking on the decision to end his professional career, Grehan said in 2025: "I have asked myself many times where I fell short as a pro. Did I think I was good enough? Absolutely. And I still think I am. ... But I've no regrets. I gave it a good go and learned so much from it all."[34]

Reinstated amateur

[edit]

Grehan's amateur status was reinstated in April 2025.[1][33] He won the Irish Amateur Open in May and the Irish Amateur Close in August of that year. In doing so, Grehan became the third man to win both titles in the same year, joining Pádraig Harrington (1995) and Peter O'Keeffe (2021).[35][36] He was selected to represent Ireland at the 2025 European Amateur Team Championship,[37] and was named to the Great Britain & Ireland team for the 2025 Walker Cup held at Cypress Point in September.[38] He had a 1–2–1 record at the Walker Cup as the United States won by a score of 17–9.[39]

In May 2026, Grehan won the East of Ireland Open, breaking the tournament record with a score of 17-under to claim a six-shot victory. As part of a final-round 65, he aced the 207-yard (189 m) par-3 17th hole at County Louth Golf Club.[40]

Grehan won The Amateur Championship in June 2026. He defeated American Matt Moloney, 1 up, at Royal Liverpool Golf Club to win the title. With the victory, Grehan earned exemptions into the 2026 Open Championship, 2027 Masters Tournament and 2027 U.S. Open.[41] He was the first Irishman to win the Amateur Championship since James Sugrue in 2019.[42] When asked after the victory about leaving the professional ranks, Grehan said: "I love golf, I love competing. To be able to come back and play as an amateur while working also, it's the best of both worlds."[43]

Personal life

[edit]

Grehan married Carla Reynolds in 2023.[44] They had their first child in June 2024.[20] Grehan and his family live in Termonfeckin, County Louth.[44] As of 2025, he works as a financial advisor with a firm in Dundalk.[32]

Amateur wins

[edit]
  • 2012 Irish Youths Amateur Close
  • 2013 Firestone Invitational
  • 2015 East of Ireland Open, South of Ireland Amateur Open
  • 2017 R&A Foundation Scholars Tournament, Mullingar Scratch Trophy
  • 2025 Irish Amateur Open, Irish Amateur Close
  • 2026 East of Ireland Open, The Amateur Championship

Source:[45]

Professional wins (5)

[edit]

PGA EuroPro Tour wins (1)

[edit]
No. Date Tournament Winning score Margin of
victory
Runners-up
1 9 Sep 2022 Spey Valley Championship −9 (67-66=133)[b] Playoff Northern Ireland Dermot McElroy, Scotland Michael Stewart

Other wins (4)

[edit]
  • 2018 Palmares Classic VI[22]
  • 2022 The K Club Pro-Am[46]
  • 2024 Winter Tour Swing 2 (Villa Padierna),[47] Toro Tour Winter Series 10[48]

Results in major championships

[edit]
Tournament2026
Masters Tournament
PGA Championship
U.S. Open
The Open Championship
  Did not play

Team appearances

[edit]

Source:[45]

Notes

[edit]
  1. Amateur status reinstated in 2025.[1]
  2. Shortened to 36 holes due to weather.

References

[edit]
  1. 1 2 "Comeback Story: Reinstated amateur Stewart Grehan wins Irish Open Amateur". Amateurgolf.com. 11 May 2025. Retrieved 9 July 2026.
  2. 1 2 3 "Stuart Grehan – Men's Golf". Eastern Michigan University Athletics. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  3. "Stuart Grehan". European Tour. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Browne, P. J. (6 March 2024). "Chasing the sun: The Offaly man grinding to keep pro golf dream alive". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  5. Keogh, Brian (9 June 2014). "Grehan defies testing weather to lead the field". The Irish Times. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  6. "Men's spring preview: MAC". Golfweek. 16 January 2014. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  7. "Grehan Claims Medalist Honors as EMU Finishes Third at Firestone". Eastern Michigan University Athletics. 8 October 2013. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  8. Keogh Baltray, Brian (2 June 2015). "Stuart Grehan declared winner as weather hits 'East'". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  9. Keogh, Brian (2 June 2015). "Grehan crowned East champion as bad weather forces early finish". Irish Independent. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  10. Mulqueen, Charlie (27 July 2015). "Stuart Grehan seals double with South of Ireland victory". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  11. "More than luck for Irishman Jack Hume at South African Stroke Play". AmateurGolf. 5 February 2016. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  12. "Stuart Grehan in contention for South African Strokeplay title". The Irish Times. 4 February 2016. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  13. "Cameron John Wins Scottish Open Amateur". AmateurGolf. 29 May 2016. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  14. Keogh, Brian (26 June 2016). "Grehan in Palmer Cup win". Irish Golf Desk. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  15. Smart, Chris (7 July 2016). "Stuart Grehan and Jack Hume impress as Ireland progress". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  16. Mitchelmore, Ian (22 July 2016). "Grehan shines as GB&I fight back in style to retain Trophy". Irish Independent. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  17. Keogh, Brian (1 January 2017). "Irish amateur golf's 2016 rising". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  18. "Former Golfer Stuart Grehan Named to GB&I Walker Cup Squad". Eastern Michigan University Athletics. 26 January 2017. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  19. McGuire, Bernie (29 September 2017). "Stuart Grehan ready to plough into the professional ranks". Irish Golfer Magazine. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  20. 1 2 3 Herrington, Ryan (6 September 2025). "This 32-year-old's crazy golf journey comes full circle at the Walker Cup". Golf Digest. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  21. "First Qualifying Stage Section D Frilford Heath Red 2017". European Tour. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  22. 1 2 McGuire, Bernie (20 February 2018). "Stuart Grehan claims his first professional win". Irish Golfer Magazine. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  23. McGuire, Bernie (4 October 2018). "Grehan enjoying the Challenge of life on Tour". Irish Golfer Magazine. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  24. 1 2 3 4 MacNamara, Ronan (9 April 2024). "Stuart Grehan - The Dream Lives On". Irish Golfer Magazine. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  25. Keogh, Brian (14 July 2022). "Special K for Stuart with big pro-am win". Irish Independent. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  26. Corrigan, Kevin (18 July 2022). "€20,000 win for Tullamore professional golfer". Offaly Live. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  27. MacNamara, Ronan (9 September 2022). "Grehan eyeing Challenge Tour promotion after marathon playoff victory". Irish Golfer Magazine. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  28. Keogh, Brian (29 September 2022). "Blow to fledgling pros as PGA EuroPro Tour folds". Irish Independent. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  29. MacNamara, Ronan (17 January 2024). "Grehan finishes in style to win Winter Tour event". Irish Golfer Magazine. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  30. MacNamara, Ronan (8 February 2024). "Another 62 gives Grehan whopping twelve shot Toro Tour win". Irish Golfer Magazine. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  31. 1 2 MacNamara, Ronan (5 October 2024). "Stuart Grehan ends pro career: "I gave it my all it just hasn't worked out"". Irish Golfer Magazine. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  32. 1 2 3 "Walker Cup: Grehan bringing experience on debut". R&A. 2 September 2025. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  33. 1 2 Jourdan, Cameron. "8 years after injury setback, GB&I's Stuart Grehan finally gets his Walker Cup shot at Cypress Point". Golfweek. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  34. Small, Darragh (4 September 2025). "Grehan the GB&I elder statesman at Walker Cup". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  35. "Grehan creates more history in Westport". Irish Golfer Magazine. 17 August 2025. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  36. Small, Daragh (16 August 2025). "Stuart Grehan targets Irish Close history in Westport". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  37. "Tiernan and Ireland look to make history in Killarney". Golf Ireland. 20 June 2025. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  38. "Tiernan and Grehan selected for Walker Cup". RTÉ. 18 August 2025.
  39. "2025 – Cypress Point". Walker Cup. 5 June 2025. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  40. Allen, Caomh Breen (31 May 2026). "'I'm really proud of myself' - Stuart Grehan makes history with East of Ireland triumph". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  41. Jourdan, Cameron. "Mid-amateur Stuart Grehan, 33, takes British Amateur title at Royal Liverpool". Golfweek. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  42. "Stuart Grehan wins Amateur Championship at Royal Liverpool". The Irish Times. 20 June 2026. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  43. "'It's stuff you dream of' - Grehan on major opportunities". RTÉ. 24 June 2026.
  44. 1 2 Kierans, John (22 June 2026). "Stuart Grehan toast of Louth and Offaly golf clubs after Amateur Championship win". Irish Independent. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  45. 1 2 "Stuart Grehan". World Amateur Golf Ranking. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  46. "The K-Club Pro- Am Sponsored by CFM". PGA Ireland. Archived from the original on 1 September 2022. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  47. "Winter Tour Swing 2 (Villa Padierna - Flamingos)". NextCaddy (in Spanish). Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  48. "Toro Tour Winter Series 10 2024". European Golf Rankings. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
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