Reflecting on his appointment, Llewellyn said: “I’m absolutely bowled over. I was knocked sideways when I was asked.
“Being entrusted to represent the PGA, uphold its good name, and be its figurehead for a year is a huge honour. As it is to follow in the footsteps of some very famous names, some of whom I know and have played with.
“I played with Bernard Gallacher when he was at the top of his game and, as a young Welshman, Dave Thomas and Dai Rees looked after me when I was making my way in the game. Unfortunately, I didn’t get to play with Peter Alliss, but he said some nice things about me when he was commentating.”
That may well have been when Llewellyn, representing Wales in tandem with Ian Woosnam, won the World Cup in 1987. Other highlights as a player include being named Sir Henry Cotton’s Rookie of the Year at the age of 20 and, 17 years later during his second spell on the European Tour, winning the AGF Biarritz Open when he set a record low four round total of 258. It was a record that, equalled by Woosnam in 1990, stood for 32 years until Andy Sullivan surpassed it by a shot.
Llewellyn also experienced success in Africa, winning the Ivory Coast and Zambia Opens before opting to concentrate on coaching and return to life as a club professional in the early 1990s.
He had begun that process on turning professional in 1968 and working as an assistant to Tom Colinge at Olton Golf Club in the West Midlands. Roles at the Royal Malta Golf Club, Purley Chase Golf Club, Warwickshire, Thirsk and Northallerton Golf Club, and now Carden Park have followed.