Holman at the Greater Hartford Open (late 1980s) | |
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Nationality | American |
| Born | (1954-09-29)September 29, 1954 (age 71) |
| Years active | 1974-1996 (competition) 1996-present (broadcasting) |
| Height | 5 ft 9 in (175 cm) |
| Sport | |
| Bowling Information | |
| Affiliation | PBA |
| Dominant hand | right |
| Wins | 22PBA Tour (4 majors) |
| Sponsors | Nike,Columbia 300 |
Marshall Holman (born September 29, 1954) is a retired professionalten-pin bowler and current American sports broadcaster. He was known for his flamboyant, fiery demeanor and his success on thePBA Tour from the mid-1970s to the end of the 1980s. He is one of only 17 players in history to reach at least 20 career PBA Tour titles. Holman was sponsored byColumbia 300 andNike.[1]
The first bowler on the PBA Tour to surpass $1.5 million in earnings, Holman won 22 titles (13th most all-time), including four majors (twoU.S. Opens and twoTournament of Champions titles).
Holman's first PBA title came at the Fresno Open on July 8,1975, when he was just 20 years old. He became the youngest winner in the Tournament of Champions, topping the field in the1976 event when he was just 21 years old.[2] Holman would hold this record all the way up until2016, whenJesper Svensson won that year's Tournament of Champions as a 20-year-old.[3] In 1979, Holman became the youngest bowler in history (24 years, 274 days) to reach ten career PBA Tour titles.[4] That record would later be broken byPete Weber in 1987 (24 years, 247 days).[5]
After going without a title in the 1980 season, Holman roared back with three titles in 1981, including his second major at the BPAA U.S. Open where he defeated friend and doubles partnerMark Roth in the final match. One of the reasons Holman did not win any titles in 1980 was an incident at a tournament that June, when he kicked (and broke) the foul light on his lane out of frustration with his game, netting him a $2500 fine and a 10-tournament suspension.[6] Before the decade was out, Holman would win his second U.S. Open (1985) and second Firestone Tournament of Champions (1986). He and partner Mark Roth won their third PBA Doubles title in 1984. So dominant were the pair in doubles tournaments, the PBA has hosted an annual event since2015 called the Roth-Holman Doubles Championship.
Marshall was named PBA Player of the Year in1987, despite not winning a title. However, he did lead the 1987 Tour in average and a few other statistical categories.
Holman's 22nd PBA title was earned at the1996 PBAEbonite Classic. This came eight years after he had last won on the PBA Tour. In this event, he defeatedWayne Webb, 246–235, in what turned out to be a very emotional battle that came down to the final frames. After Holman converted the tenth frame spare he needed to secure victory, the 42-year old exclaimed, "I'm back, baby, I'm back!" However, this would be his last title on Tour, as well as his last appearance in the televised finals.[7]
Holman was a three-time winner of the George Young High Average award (1982, 1984 and 1987), and earned nearly $1.7 million on tour.[8] Perhaps more impressive than his 22 titles, Holman made it to the final championship match 53 times (finishing runner-up 31 times) and had 63 more top-five finishes, for a total of 116 championship round appearances.[9]
He was inducted into the PBA Hall of Fame in 1990 and into theOregon Sports Hall of Fame in 2001. In 2006, he was inducted into theInternational Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.[10] He is also a 2010 inductee to theUSBC Hall of Fame in the Performance category.[11] He was ranked 9th on the PBA's 2008 list of "50 Greatest Players of the Last 50 Years."
Holman indicated in a 2017 interview that he is retired from competitive bowling and does not anticipate taking part in any more PBA senior events.[12]
Major championships are inbold type.
Holman served as acolor analyst alongsideMike Durbin on severalESPN andESPN2 bowling telecasts from 1996 to 2001. From 1998 to 1999, he worked forCBS Sports and was teamed with Gary Seibel for telecasts when that network briefly showed PBA events.
After several years out of the booth, Holman has returned to the broadcasting arena. He served as a color analyst at the 2007USBC Queens tournament and was in the broadcast booth (along withNelson Burton, Jr.) for ESPN's five-week coverage of the 2007 and 2008U.S. Women's Open events. He later provided commentary, alongside play-by-play manDave Ryan, for the 2009 U.S. Women's Open telecasts. Holman was also the analyst for the live broadcast of the 2015 Men'sU.S. Open, which ran onCBS Sports Network that season, and has appeared as an analyst at several Roth-Holman Doubles telecasts since then.
At age four, Holman moved to the city ofMedford, Oregon. His father, Phil, was a morningDJ at radio stationKBOY (now KEZX) in Medford. He was nicknamed "Holman the Poleman", as he once did a radio show whilepole sitting in 1959. Marshall was then dubbed a similar nickname "Holman the Bowlman", as well as "Medford Meteor"; color analystNelson Burton, Jr. provided this information during a PBA Tour telecast onABC on February 2, 1985.
Earlier in his bowling career, as once mentioned in the AmericanBowlers Journal magazine in the 1980s, Holman had a girlfriend from the state ofNew Hampshire. He would occasionally try the sport ofcandlepin bowling, popular in his acquaintance's state of residence, while visiting there.
For several years after retiring as a full-time PBA member, Holman continued to receive commissioner's exemptions to participate in the PBA's Medford Classic. Holman is currently the marketing director at Diamondback Wines.[13]