History
of Golf The origin
of golf is open to debate among Chinese, Dutch and Scottish.
Golf was mentioned on February 26 in the year 1297 for
the first time in the Netherlands in a city called Loenen
aan de Vecht. Here the Dutch played a game with a stick
and leather ball. Whoever hit the ball in a target several
hundreds of meters away the least number of times, won.
The Scots
however regard golf to be a Scottish invention, as the
game was supposedly mentioned in two 15th-century laws
prohibiting the playing of the game of "gowf".
Scholars, however, suggest that this refers to another
game which is much akin to shinty or hurling, or to modern
field hockey rather than golf. They point out that a game
of putting a small ball in a hole in the ground using golf
clubs was played in 17th-century Netherlands rather than
Scotland. This is backed up by the fact that the term golf
is an alteration of Dutch "kolf" meaning "stick, "club" and "bat".
The oldest
playing golf course in the world is The Old Links at Musselburgh.
Evidence has shown that golf was played on Musselburgh
Links in 1672 although Mary, Queen of Scots reputedly played
there in 1567.
Golf
courses have not always had eighteen holes. The St Andrews
Links occupy a narrow strip of land along the sea. As early
as the 15th century, golfers at St. Andrews established
a customary route through the undulating terrain, playing
to holes whose locations were dictated by topography. The
course that emerged featured eleven holes, laid out end
to end from the clubhouse to the far end of the property.
One played the holes out, turned around, and played the
holes in, for a total of 22 holes. In 1764, several of
the holes were deemed too short, and were therefore combined.
The number was thereby reduced from 11 to nine, so that
a complete round of the links comprised 18 holes.
The major
changes in equipment since the 19th century have been better
mowers, especially for the greens, better golf ball designs,
using rubber and man-made materials since about 1900, and
the introduction of the metal shaft beginning in the 1930s.
Also in the 1930s the wooden golf tee was invented. In
the 1970s the use of metal to replace wood heads began,
and shafts made of graphite composite materials were introduced
in the 1980s.
Ming Emperor Xuande putting for a par?In January 2006, new evidence re-invigorated
the debate concerning the origins of golf. Recent evidence unearthed by
Prof. Ling Hongling of Lanzhou University suggests that a game similar
to modern-day golf was played in China since Southern Tang Dynasty, 500
years before golf was first mentioned in Scotland.
Dongxuan
Records (Chinese:???) from the Song Dynasty describe a
game called chuiwan (??) and also include drawings. It
was played with 10 clubs including a cuanbang, pubang,
and shaobang, which are comparable to a driver, two-wood,
and three-wood. Clubs were inlaid with jade and gold, suggesting
golf was for the wealthy. Chinese archive includes references
to a Southern Tang official who asked his daughter to dig
holes as a target. Ling suggested golf was exported to
Europe and then Scotland by Mongolian travellers in the
late Middle Ages.
A spokesman
for the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, one
of the oldest Scotland golf organization, said "Stick
and ball games have been around for many centuries, but
golf as we know it today, played over 18 holes, clearly
originated in Scotland.
The
following is a partial timeline of the history of golf:
1354
- The first recorded reference to "chole", the
probable antecedent of golf. It is a derivative of hockey
played in Flanders.
1421 - A Scottish regiment aiding the French against the English at the Siege
of Bauge is introduced to the game of chole. Hugh Kennedy, Robert Stewart
and John Smale, three of the identified players, are credited with introducing
the game in Scotland.
1457 - Gowf (as it was known in the British Isles), along with football, is
banned by the Scots Parliament of James II to preserve the skills of Archery
by prohibiting gowf on Sundays because it has interfered with military
training for the wars against the English.
1470 - The ban on golf is reaffirmed by the Parliament of James III.
1491 - The golf ban is affirmed again by Parliament, this time under James
IV.
1502 - With the signing of the Treaty of Glasgow between England and Scotland,
the ban on golf is lifted.
James IV makes the first recorded purchase of golf equipment, a set of clubs
from a bow-maker in Perth.
1513 - Queen Catherine, queen consort of England, in a letter to Cardinal Wolsey,
refers to the growing popularity of golf in England.
1527 - The first commoner recorded as a golfer is Sir Robert Maule, described
as playing on Barry Links, Angus (near the modern-day Carnoustie).
1552 - The first recorded evidence of golf at St. Andrews, Fife.
1553 - The Archbishop of St Andrews issues a decree giving the local populace
the right to play golf on the links at St. Andrews.
1567 - Mary, Queen of Scots, seen playing golf shortly after the death of her
husband Lord Darnley, is the first known female golfer.
1589 - Golf is banned in the Blackfriars Yard, Glasgow. This is the earliest
reference to golf in the west of Scotland.
1592 - The Royal Burgh of Edinburgh bans golfing at Leith on Sunday "in
tyme of sermonis." (Eng: sermons)
1618 - Invention of the featherie ball.
King James VI of Scotland and I of England confirms the right of the populace
to play golf on Sundays.
1621 - First recorded reference to golf on the links of Dornoch (later Royal
Dornoch), in the far north of Scotland.
1641 - Charles I is playing golf at Leith when he learns of the Irish rebellion,
marking the beginning of the English Civil War. He finishes his round.
1642 - John Dickson receives a licence as ball-maker for Aberdeen.
1659 - Golf is banned from the streets of Albany, New York-the first reference
to golf in America.
1682 - In the first recorded international golf match, the Duke of York and
John Paterstone of Scotland defeat two English noblemen in a match played
on the links of Leith.
Andrew Dickson, carrying clubs for the Duke of York, is the first recorded
caddy.
1687 - A book by Thomas Kincaid, Thoughts on Golve, contains the first references
on how golf clubs are made.
1721 - Earliest reference to golf at Glasgow Green, the first course played
in the west of Scotland.
1724 - "A solemn match of golf" between Alexander Elphinstone and
Captain John Porteous becomes the first match reported in a newspaper. Elphinstone
fights and wins a duel on the same ground in 1729.
1743 - Thomas Mathison's epic The Goff is the first literary effort devoted
to golf.
1744 - The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers is formed, playing at Leith
links. It is the first golf club.
The Royal Burgh of Edinburgh pays for a Silver Cup to be awarded to the annual
champion in an open competition played at Leith. John Rattray is the first
champion.
1754 - Golfers at St. Andrews purchase a Silver Cup for an open championship
played on the Old Course. Bailie William Landale is the first champion.
The first codified Rules of Golf published by the St. Andrews Golfers (later
the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews).
1759 - Earliest reference to stroke-play, at St. Andrews. Previously, all play
was match.
1764 - The competition for the Silver Club at Leith is restricted to members
of the Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers.
The first four holes at St. Andrews are combined into two, reducing the round
from twenty-two holes (11 out and in) to 18 (nine out and in). St. Andrews
is the first 18-hole golf course, and sets the standard for future courses.
1766 - The Blackheath Club in London becomes the first golf club formed outside
of Scotland.
1767 - The score of 94 returned by James Durham at St. Andrews in the Silver
Cup competition sets a record unbroken for 86 years.
1768
- The Golf House at Leith is erected. It is the first golf
clubhouse.
1773 - Competition at St. Andrews is restricted to members of the Leith and
St. Andrews societies.
The Royal Burgess Golfing Society of Edinburgh is formed.
1774 - Thomas McMillan offers a Silver Cup for competition at Musselburgh,
East Lothian. He wins the first championship.
The first part-time golf course professional (at the time also the greenkeeper)
is hired, by the Edinburgh Burgess Society.
1780 - The The Society of Golfers at Aberdeen (later the Royal Aberdeen Golf
Club) is formed.
1783 - A Silver Club is offered for competition at Glasgow.
1786 - The South Carolina Golf Club is formed in Charleston, the first golf
club outside of the United Kingdom.
The
Crail Golfing Society is formed.
1787 - The Bruntsfield Club is formed.
1788 - The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers requires members to wear
club uniform when playing on the links.
1797 - The Burntisland Golf Club is formed.
The town of St. Andrews sells the land containing the Old Course (known then
as Pilmor Links), to Thomas Erskine for 805 pounds. Erskine was required to
preserve the course for golf.
1806 - The St. Andrews Club chooses to elect its captains rather than award
captaincy to the winner of the Silver Cup. Thus begins the tradition of
the Captain "playing himself into office," by hitting a single
shot before the start of the annual competition.
1810 - Earliest recorded reference to a women's competition at Musselburgh.
1820 - The Bangalore Club is formed.
1824 - The Perth Golfing Society is formed, later Royal Perth (the first club
so honored).
1826 - Hickory imported from America is used to make golf shafts.
1829 - The Dum Dum Golfing Club, later Calcutta Golf Club (and later still
Royal Calcutta) is formed.
1832 - The North Berwick Club is founded, the first to include women in its
activities, although they are not permitted to play in competitions.
1833 - King William IV confers the distinction of "Royal" on the
Perth Golfing Society; as Royal Perth it is the first Club to hold the distinction.
The St. Andrews Golfers ban the stymie, but rescind the ban one year later.
1834 - William IV confers the title "Royal and Ancient" on the Golf
Club at St. Andrews.
1836 - The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers abandons the deteriorating
Leith Links, moving to Musselburgh.
The longest driver ever recorded with a feathery ball, 361 yards, is achieved
by Samuel Messieux at Elysian Fields.
1842 - The Bombay Golfing Society (later Royal Bombay) is founded.
1844 - Blackheath follows Leith in expanding its course from five to seven
holes. North Berwick also had seven holes at the time, although the trend
toward a standard eighteen had begun.
1848 - Invention of the "guttie," the gutta-percha ball. It flies
farther than the feathery and is much less expensive. It contributes greatly
to the expansion of the game.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_golf_history_%281353-1850%29"
1945
Byron
Nelson wins 18 tournaments in a calendar year to set an
all-time PGA TOUR record-including a record 11 in a row
and a record 19 consecutive rounds under 70. His total
prize earnings during his 11-win streak, $30,000, is less
than last place money for the PGA TOUR Championship by
1992.
The Tam
O'Shanter Open offers a then-record purse of $60,000.
1946
Sam Snead
travels to St.Andrews to compete in the first post-war
British Open, and is victorious, winning by four shots
from Johnny Bulla and Bobby Locke.
Lloyd
Mangrum wins the U.S.Open in a second playoff, after three
players - Mangrum, Byron Nelson and Vic Ghezzi - all tie
with 72 in the first playoff.
The U.S.
Women's Open is instituted. Patty Berg is the first winner.
1947
Mildred "Babe" Zaharias
becomes the first American to win the British Women's Open,
at Gullane.
Golf
is televised for the first time, in a local St. Louis telecast
of the U.S. Open.
Lew Worsham
wins a playoff for the U.S.Open against Sam Snead. The
playoff ends in controversy as Worsham asks officials to
measure which ball is closest to the hole, just as Snead
is about to putt. The measure proves Snead is to putt first,
but he misses, and Worsham holes his putt for victory.
Amateur
Frank Stranahan finishes runner-up at both the US Masters
(two shots behind Jimmy Demaret), and the British Open
(a shot behind Fred Daly). Leading amateur players would
continue to make occasional forays onto the leaderboards
of major championships (excepting the PGA, for obvious
reasons) until the early 1960s, since when it has become
extremely rare for an amateur to finish in the top-ten.
Jim Ferrier
becomes the first Australian to win a major championship,
when he defeats Chick Harbert 2 and 1 in the final of the
PGA Championship.
"Golf
World" magazine is founded.
1948
Henry
Cotton wins his third British Open, at the age of 41.
Ben Hogan
wins eleven tournaments during the season, including both
the U.S.Open and PGA championships.
Club
professional Claude Harmon - invited after finishing twentieth
in the previous year's U.S. Open - wins the Masters championship.
Bobby
Locke sets a PGA TOUR record with a 16-stroke winning margin
in the Chicago Victory National Championship.
Herbert
Warren Wind's authoritative "The Story of American
Golf" is published.
The U.S.
Junior Amateur is instituted. Ken Venturi loses to Dean
Lind in the first final.
The "USGA
Golf Journal" is founded.
1949
In February,
Ben Hogan is involved in a terrible car accident that nearly
kills him, and leaves him unable to walk, let alone play
golf, for the whole season. In his absence, Sam Snead enjoys
his finest season, winning the Masters, the PGA championship
and finishing second at the U.S. Open to Cary Middlecoff.
Bobby
Locke becomes the first South African to win the British
Open.
Louise
Suggs wins the U.S. Women's Open by a record margin of
14 strokes.
Marie
Roke of Wollaston, MA aces a 393 yard (359 m) hole—the
longest ace ever recorded by a woman.
The US
side defeat Great Britain and Ireland 7-5 to win the Ryder
Cup at Ganton, in Yorkshire. The following week, the team
stay in England to accept invites to the British PGA Matchplay
championship; here, however, they are unable to take the
trophy, for although Lloyd Mangrum reaches the semi-final,
the eventual winner is Welshman Dai Rees.
1950
The LPGA is founded, replacing the ailing Women's Professional Golf Association.
Ben Hogan,
only weeks after returning to the PGA TOUR following a
near-fatal auto accident, wins the U.S. Open at Oakland
Hills.
1951
Francis
Ouimet becomes the first American Captain of the R & A.
The USGA
and the R & A, in a conference, complete a newly revised
Rules of Golf. Although in 1951 the R & A and the USGA
continue to differ over the size of the golf ball, all
other conflicts are resolved in this momentous conference.
The center-shafted putter is legalized world-wide. The
out-of-bounds penalty is standardized at stroke-and-distance,
and the stymie is finally and forever abolished.
"Golf
Digest" is founded, with Bill Davis as editor.
On February
10, Al Brosch became the first PGA player to shoot a round
of 11 under par. Brosch set the record in the third round
of the Texas Open at Brackenridge Park Golf Course in San
Antonio, Texas.
Despite
competing in only 5 events in a playing schedule severely
curtailed following his car crash, Ben Hogan finishes fourth
on the US Tour money list. From his five starts, Hogan
wins the Masters, the U.S. Open and the World Championship
of Golf. He finishes 2nd and 4th in his other two events
- the Seminole Pro-Am and the Colonial Invitational.
1952
Marlene
Hagge wins the Sarasota Open when she is 18 years 14 days
old—an LPGA record.
Patty
Berg shoots an LPGA-record of 64 for an 18-hole round.
The National
Hole-in-One Clearing House is established by Golf Digest.
1953
Tommy
Armour's "How to Play Your Best Golf All the Time" is
published and becomes the first golf book ever to hit the
best-seller lists.
Ben Hogan
wins the first three legs of the modern Grand Slam (The
Masters, U.S. Open, and British Open), but does not compete
in the final leg, the PGA Championship.
The Tam
O'Shanter World Championship becomes the first tournament
to be nationally televised. Lew Worsham holes a 104 yard
(95 m) wedge shot on the final hole for eagle and victory
in one of the most dramatic finishes ever.
The Canada
Cup is instituted, the first event that brings together
teams from all over the world. After 1966 the tournament
is known as the World Cup. The inaugural tournament is
won by Argentina, whose two-man team of Roberto de Vicenzo
and Antonio Cerda beats a 9-team field that includes a
United States team of Julius Boros and Jim Turnesa. Within
a couple of years, more than 30 nations are represented
at the event, which becomes one of the most important fixtures
on golf's calendar.
1954
Sam Snead
defeats Ben Hogan 70-71 in a playoff for the US Masters
Peter
Thomson wins the British Open, the first of five victories
he will achieve in the event.
Architect
Robert Trent Jones, upon receiving complaints that he has
made the par-3 fourth hole at Baltusrol too hard for the
upcoming U.S. Open, plays the hole to see for himself and
records a hole-in-one.
The U.S.
Open is nationally televised for the first time.
The Tam
O'Shanter World Championship offers the first $100,000
purse for a golf tournament. Bob Toski wins the $50,000
first prize. Toski's three other tournament victories on
the PGA Tour this year earn him a total of $8,000.
"All-Star
Golf," a filmed series of matches, debuts on network
television.
Babe
Zaharias returns to the LPGA Tour following cancer surgery
and wins the U.S. Women's Open.
The first
PGA Merchandise Show is held in a parking lot in Dunedin,
Florida, outside the PGA National Golf Club. Salesmen work
the show out of the trunks of their cars. The Show goes
on to become one of the main events on the golfing calendar
- by 1994 it grows to over 30,000 attendees, four days,
and has become the single largest tenant of the Orange
County Convention Center in Orlando, spilling over 220,000
square feet (20,000 m²) of exhibit space.
1955
Ben Hogan,
chasing a record fifth U.S. Open title, surprisingly loses
a playoff to rookie Jack Fleck.
On February
17, Mike Souchak began one of the most spectacular four-day
performances in PGA history with a round of 60. In winning
the Texas Open at the Brackenridge Park Golf Course in
San Antonio, Texas, three days later Souchak set a 72-hole
record by finishing 27 under par. His rounds of 60-68-64-65
resulted in a total of 257. Souchak's record withstood
the challenges of nearly 2,000 PGA events before Mark Calcavecchia
finally broke it in 2001.
1956
Cary
Middlecoff, winner of the Masters the previous year, wins
the U.S.Open title, by a shot from Ben Hogan and Julius
Boros. Peter Thomson, who would go on to win a third consecutive
British Open championship, finishes fourth.
Jack
Burke wins both the Masters and the USPGA, his Masters
victory coming after third-round leader, amateur Ken Venturi,
stumbles with an 80 in the final round.
The current
yardage guides for par are adopted by the USGA.
1957
The Great
Britain and Ireland team wins the Ryder Cup Matches at
Lindrick, ending a drought that dates back to 1935.
E. Harvie
Ward loses his amateur status for accepting expenses from
sponsors for golf tournaments. The ruling is reversed in
1958.
Ben Hogan's
Five Lessons is published.
1958
Arnold
Palmer is allowed a controversial free drop to save par
in the final round of The Masters, and he goes on to defeat
Ken Venturi.
1959
Art Wall
enjoys his finest season, winning the US Masters and topping
the U.S.Tour Money list following three further victories.
The year also marks the arrival as major champions of Gary
Player, winner of the British Open, and Billy Casper, winner
of the U.S. Open.
Bill
Wright, in winning the U.S. Amateur Public Links, becomes
the first African-American to win a national championship.
"Golf
Magazine" is founded, with Charles Price as the first
editor.
1960
Arnold Palmer comes back from six shots down in the final round to win the
US Open, with 20-year-old Amateur Jack Nicklaus finishing runner-up. With
his victory, Palmer completes the first two legs of the modern Grand Slam
after winning The Masters in April, the first player to win both since
Ben Hogan in 1953. He goes on to finish second to Australian Kel Nagle
in the British Open to end his bid for the Grand Slam. Palmer's entry in
the British Open is credited with reviving American interest in the championship,
which had rarely attracted America's leading players since World War Two.
Palmer went on to win the British Open in both 1961 and 1962.
Lifting,
cleaning, and repairing ballmarks is allowed on the putting
green for the first time.
1961
Gary
Player becomes the first foreign player to win The Masters.
Caucasians-only
clause stricken from the PGA constitution, and at the Greater
Greensboro Open Charlie Sifford becomes the first black
golfer to play in a PGA co-sponsored tournament in the
South.
1962
Dr. Joseph
Boydstone records 11 aces in one calendar year. Three were
recorded in one round, at Bakersfield C.C., Calif.
Jack
Nicklaus wins his first professional tournament, the U.S.
Open, making him (among his many other notable records)
one of very few players to win the U.S. Open as their first
pro victory (Orville Moody and Jerry Pate would later emulate
the feat).
Painted
lines are first utilized to mark water hazards at the U.S.
Open.
1963
Arnold
Palmer becomes the first professional to earn over $100,000
in official prize money in one calendar year.
Mickey
Wright wins a record 13 events on the LPGA Tour in one
year.
Bob Charles
becomes the first New Zealander to win a major championship,
winning the British Open after a playoff with American
Phil Rodgers.
The casting
method for irons is first employed.
1964
PGA National
opens, in Palm Beach, Fla.
Mickey
Wright sets the LPGA 18-hole record with a 62 at Hogan
Park GC in the Tall City Open.
Norman
Manley, an amateur from Long Beach, Calif., scores holes-in-one
on two successive par-4s at Del Valley CC, Calif. It is
the first and only time this feat has been accomplished.
Tony
Lema, the colourful US professional, wins the British Open
at St. Andrew's. It would be Lema's greatest triumph before
he was killed in an air crash in 1966, aged just 32.
Mark
McCormack establishes the World Matchplay Championship
at Wentworth, which brings together the year's four major
winners, and other invited leading players of the year
from the British and American tours. The inaugural event
is won by Arnold Palmer, who defeats Britain's Neil Coles
in the final. Gary Player would come to dominate the event
for the following decade with five wins, twice defeating
Jack Nicklaus in the final.
1965
Sam Snead
wins the Greater Greensboro Open, his 81st TOUR victory,
a record (the total was later revised to 82). His victory
is the eighth in the Greensboro event, also a record. Finally,
he wins at the age of 52, also a PGA TOUR record.
Jack
Nicklaus sets a tournament record of 271 in winning The
Masters.
Gary
Player wins the U.S. Open championship after a playoff
with Australian Kel Nagle, to complete a career "Grand
Slam" of the four major professional titles. He becomes
only the third player (Gene Sarazen and Ben Hogan were
the first two) to accomplish the feat.
Peter
Thomson wins a fifth Open Championship, and in so doing
proves that he can beat a field that includes the leading
U.S.Tour professionals of the day, many of whom had ignored
the event for his wins in the 1950s. On the final day,
Thomson overtook Tony Lema, Bruce Devlin and Arnold Palmer
to win.
Dave
Marr wins the PGA Championship, by two shots from Jack
Nicklaus and Billy Casper. Although Marr would never win
another major title as a player, he would go on to become
one of the most popular and well-respected TV commentators
on the game.
Mrs.
William Jenkins Sr. of Baltimore, Md., double-eagles the
par-five 12th hole at Longview GC, the longest ever recorded
by a woman.
PGA TOUR
Qualifying School is inaugurated at PGA National, with
17 golfers of the 49 applicants winning their playing cards.
1966
Arnold
Palmer blows a six-shot lead in the final round of the
US Open, dropping back into a playoff, which he loses,
to a surging Billy Casper at Olympic. Although he remained
one of the world's leading players for another decade,
and one of its most influential and charismatic figures
for the rest of his career, Palmer would never win another
major championship.
Jack
Nicklaus wins his first British Open championship, to become
the fourth player to complete a career "Grand Slam",
just a year after Gary Player became the third. It would
be another 34 years before a fifth player (Tiger Woods)
accomplished the feat.
1967
After
six finishes in the top three without a victory, Argentine
Roberto de Vicenzo wins a popular British Open victory
at Hoylake, by two shots from Jack Nicklaus and by six
from Gary Player and local favourite Clive Clark.
A year
after losing the same event in a playoff to Jack Nicklaus,
Gay Brewer wins the Masters.
Charlie
Sifford, by winning the Greater Hartford Open, becomes
the first African-American to win a PGA TOUR event.
Catherine
Lacoste becomes the first amateur to win the U.S. Women's
Open.
The Canada
Cup changes its name to the World Cup.
1968
Arnold
Palmer passes the $1 million mark in career PGA earnings.
The PGA
of America and the PGA TOUR officially split, with the
tournament professionals forming a breakaway group known
as the Association of Professional Golfers. The breach
is eventually healed, and a Tournament Players Division
of the PGA is formed. Joe Dey is elected the next year
as the first PGA TOUR commissioner.
Roberto
DeVicenzo "ties" Bob Goalby after regulation
play in The Masters, but signs an incorrect scorecard (that
showed him having scored a 4 on the 17th hole instead of
the 3 he actually took) and so loses the event by that
stroke without a playoff. The sad decision is announced
to incredulous spectators only after officials and tournament
advisors including Bobby Jones do everything they can to
scour the rulebook for a possible loophole.
Canada
win the "World Cup of Golf" - the event previously
known as the "Canada Cup", which ironically they
never won - in Italy. Their 2-man team of Al Balding and
George Knudson beat US team Lee Trevino and Julis Boros
by two shots.
Tommy
Moore, age 6 years 1 month, 1 week, becomes the youngest
player to score a hole-in-one. Moore also becomes, in 1975,
the youngest player ever to score a double-eagle.
1969
Ollie
Bowers of Gaffney, S.C. completes a record 542 rounds (9,756
holes) in one calendar year.
Tony
Jacklin becomes the first home player to win the British
Open for 18 years, with a two-shot victory over Bob Charles
at Royal Lytham.
Jack
Nicklaus concedes Tony Jacklin's final putt and Britain
ties the U.S. in the Ryder Cup Matches, after five consecutive
defeats. The gesture is often hailed as "the greatest
act of sportsmanship in history."
The trendsetting
Harbour Town Golf Links opens on Hilton Head Island, S.C.,
designed by Pete Dye with assistance from Jack Nicklaus.
1970
So often disappointed in final-round battles at Augusta, Billy Casper finally
wins a Masters championship, after a playoff against fellow veteran Gene
Littler.
Tony
Jacklin becomes the first British winner of the U.S. Open
for almost 50 years, at Hazeltine. As of 2006, he is the
last European to win this event.
Jack
Nicklaus wins a playoff against Doug Sanders to win the
British Open at St.Andrew's. Sanders, three times before
a runner-up in major championships, missed a short putt
on the final hole of regulation play to secure the title.
Bill
Burke, with a 57 at Normandie C.C., sets the all-time official
record for low 18-hole score.
Thad
Doker of Durham, N.C., records a record two-under par 70
in the World One Club Championship at Lochmere CC.
1971
Laura
Baugh wins the US Women's Amateur at 16 years 2 months
of age.
Alan
Shepard hits a six-iron at "Fra Mauro Country Club" on
the moon.
Lee Trevino
enjoys an astonishing summer, winning the U.S. Open, the
Canadian Open, and then the British Open Championship,
in quick succession. He becomes the first player to win
the U.S and British Opens in the same year since Ben Hogan
in 1953. His British Open victory comes after a final-round
duel with immediate crowd favourite Lu Liang-Huan, from
Taiwan - "Mr Lu" - the first time any oriental
golfer had finished in the top three of a major title.
Jack
Nicklaus wins the PGA championship - unusually played in
February in 1971 - but then surprisingly loses the Masters,
beaten in the final round by unheralded playing partner
Charles Coody. Nicklaus would then lose a playoff for the
U.S.Open to Lee Trevino.
1972
Carolyn
Gidone wins the US Senior Women's Amateur for a record
fifth consecutive time.
Dick
Kimbrough completes 364 holes in 24 hours at the 6,068
North Platte CC in Nebraska.
Tom Doty
records 10-under-par in four holes at Brookwood CC, Illinois.
His streak includes a double-eagle, two holes-in-one, and
an eagle.
Spalding
introduces the first two-piece ball, the Top-Flite.
Jack
Nicklaus completes the first two legs of the modern Grand
Slam winning the Masters and the US Open (at Pebble Beach),
but like Arnold Palmer in 1960, falters in the British
Open by finishing second (to Lee Trevino). Nicklaus was
also the holder of the 1971 PGA Championship, and so would
have become the first golfer to hold all four titles at
the same time. Trevino's one-shot victory at Muirfield
comes after he holes seemingly impossible chip shots from
off the green at both the 16th and 18th holes in the third
round, and then again at the 17th in the final round -
snatching the tournament from under the nose of playing
partner and home favourite Tony Jacklin, who is so stunned
he proceeds to three-putt the 17th from 15 feet then bogey
the last as well, to miss out on even second place. The
young Jacklin would never again challenge seriously in
a major championship.
1973
Ben Crenshaw
wins the NCAA title for a record 3rd consecutive time.
Later in the year, after earning his PGA TOUR card, he
wins the first event he plays as a PGA TOUR member, the
San Antonio Open.
Johnny
Miller fires a record 63 in the final round to win the
US Open at Oakmont.
Tom Weiskopf
enjoys his most successful season, with four U.S. tour
victories capped by a victory in the British Open.
Tommy
Aaron, the player whose mistakenly recorded 4 on Roberto
de Vicenzo's card in 1968 was not noticed in time to prevent
disaster, wins the U.S. Masters. Britain's young player
Peter Oosterhuis leads after 3 rounds but finishes third,
the closest any British player had come to victory at Augusta
at that time.
The graphite
shaft is invented.
The classic
golf book Golf in the Kingdom. by Michael Murphy, is published.
Jack
Nicklaus wins the PGA Championship and breaks Bobby Jones'
record for most major victories with his 14th. Nicklaus
wins seven times in total on the U.S.Tour, for the second
year in succession, to top the annual U.S. Money List for
a sixth time, taking him clear of the record number of
five that he had shared with Ben Hogan.
1974
Deane
Beman is elected as the second PGA TOUR commissioner.
Gary
Player, aged 39, enjoys arguably his most successful season,
winning both the Masters Championship and the British Open.
Meanwhile, on the U.S. tour, Johnny Miller wins eight times,
the most by any player in a single season since Arnold
Palmer in 1960.
Roberto
DeVicenzo scores six birdies, an eagle, and three more
birdies for a record 11-under par for ten holes, at Valla
Allende GC, Argentina.
Jerry
Pate wins the U.S. Amateur at Ridgewood C.C. in New Jersey,
beating Curtis Strange in the semi-final. The pair would
go on to win 3 U.S.Open titles between them in distinguished
careers.
The World
Golf Hall of Fame is opened in Pinehurst, North Carolina.
Mike
Austin hits a 515 yard (471 m) drive at the 1974 National
Seniors Open in Las Vegas, Nev., the longest drive ever
recorded in competition.
Jack
Nicklaus' "Golf My Way" is published and rapidly
becomes one of the best-selling sports books of all time.
Tom Weiskopf
strikes a 420 yard (384 m) drive in the greenside bunker
on the 10th hole at Augusta National—the longest
drive in Masters history.
Muirfield
Village Golf Club opens from a Desmond Muirhead/Jack Nicklaus
design.
The Tournament
Players Championship is inaugurated.
1975
Lee Elder
becomes the first black golfer to play in The Masters.
The event is won by Jack Nicklaus, a fifth Masters victory
which takes Jack clear of Arnold Palmer's record of four.
Both
the U.S.Open and the British Open are characterized by
well-known third-round leaders suffering poor final rounds
to allow relatively unknown players to pass them and win.
At Medinah, Frank Beard gives away a three-shot overnight
lead, and Lou Graham emerges victorious; at Carnoustie,
South Africa's Bobby Cole - winner of the individual and
team titles at the previous year's World Cup - is the victim,
allowing Tom Watson to slip past for his first major victory.
Lee Trevino,
Jerry Heard and Bobby Nichols are struck by lightning during
the 1975 Western Open. The incident prompts new safety
standards in weather preparedness at PGA events, but one
spectator is killed when struck by lightning during the
1991 U.S. Open at Hazeltine National, and one at the PGA
Championship at Crooked Stick later that summer.
1976
Nerveless
rookie Jerry Pate wins the U.S. Open championship, firing
a spectacular approach shot over a lake to within two feet
at the final hole, after playing partner John Mahaffey
had hit into the water attempting the same feat.
Judy
Rankin becomes the first LPGA professional to earn more
than $100,000 in a season.
Richard
Stanwood sets the record for fewest putts in one round—15—at
Riverside GC in Pocatello, ID.
The USGA
institutes the Overall Distance Standard—golf balls
that fly more than 280 yards (256 m) during a standard
test are banned.
1977
Al Geiberger
shoots 59 at Colonial CC in the second round of the Memphis
Classic, to set a new PGA TOUR 18-hole record.
Bing
Crosby dies after completing a round of golf in Spain.
His Bing Crosby National Pro-Am continues for several years,
but after relations sour between the PGA TOUR and the Crosby
family, AT&T takes over sponsorship of the event.
Police
receive a telephoned threat against the life of U.S. Open
leader Hubert Green as he prepares to complete his final
round. Green is informed of the threat but chooses to complete
the tournament, and goes on to win.
The "sudden-death" playoff
is used for the first time in a major championship, when
Lanny Wadkins defeats Gene Littler for the PGA Championship
played at Pebble Beach.
In what
has been described as the most exciting tournament in history,
Tom Watson defeats Jack Nicklaus by one stroke in the British
Open, at Turnberry. They were tied with each other after
two rounds, and played together for the final 36 holes,
during which they shot 65-65, and 65-66, respectively.
Runner-up Nicklaus finished ten shots clear of third place.
1978
The Legends
of Golf is inaugurated at Onion Creek C.C. in Austin, Texas.
Its popularity leads to the formation of the Senior PGA
TOUR two years later.
Gary
Player, aged 43, wins the Masters championship for his
ninth major title. As if not to be upstaged, later in the
year Jack Nicklaus wins a third British Open title, taking
his career total to fifteen.
John
Mahaffey wins the PGA championship in a playoff, after
Tom Watson lets slip a five-shot lead during the final
day. Watson, an eight-time major champion, would never
win a PGA championship to complete the career Grand Slam.
The ever-growing
LPGA Tour finds a new superstar to make headlines that
surpass even those from the men's game, as Nancy Lopez,
in her rookie season, wins five events in a row among nine
victories in all.
1979
The Ryder
Cup is reformatted to add European continent players to
the British and Irish side, making the event far more competitive.
The move is prompted in no small part by the rise of golfers
such as Severiano Ballesteros. As if to emphasise the need
for change, Ballesteros — already known simply as "Sevvy" to
an adoring British public — wins the British Open
at Lytham St Annes, becoming the first Spanish golfer to
win a major, and the first from Continental Europe to win
a major since Frenchman Arnaud Massy in 1907.
Taylor
Made introduces the first metal woods.
Ed Sneed
bogeys each of the last three holes to lose a three-shot
lead at the Masters, and drop back into a playoff which
is then won by Fuzzy Zoeller.
1980
Tom Watson is the first golfer to earn $500,000 in prize money in a single
season.
The Senior
PGA TOUR is born, with four official events. The U.S. Senior
Open is instituted. Roberto DeVicenzo is the first winner.
Jack
Nicklaus sets a record of 272 in the U.S. Open at Baltusrol.
His mark is equalled in the 1993 U.S. Open by Lee Janzen,
also at Baltusrol, and later by Tiger Woods in 2000 at
Pebble Beach and Jim Furyk in 2003 at Olympia Fields. Isao
Aoki finishes second, the highest finish by a Japanese
golfer at a major championship.
The USGA
introduces the Symmetry Standard, banning balls such as
the Polaris which correct themselves in flight.
Gary
Wright completes 18 holes in a record 28 minutes 9 seconds
at Twantin Noosa GC, Australia 6,039 yards (5,522 m).
1981
The Tournament
Players Club at Sawgrass opens, with its controversial
island green 17th hole, and immediately becomes the permanent
host of the Tournament Players Championship. The TPC at
Sawgrass becomes the prototype for a dozen "stadium" TPC
courses around the United States, built specifically to
host PGA TOUR co-sponsored events and affording better
viewing for spectators.
The USGA
institutes the U.S. Mid-Amateur for male amateur golfers
25 and older.
Kathy
Whitworth becomes the first woman to earn $1 million in
career prize money.
Bill
Rogers wins the British Open, the Australian Open, and
has victories in America and Japan.
Sol Kerzner,
the owner of the Sun City resort complex in South Africa,
creates golf's first $1m purse event - the Sun City Million
Dollar Challenge. The inaugural event (and $500,000) is
won by Johnny Miller.
Nathaniel
Crosby, son of late film star Bing, wins the U.S.Amateur
championship.
1982
Kevin
Murray double-eagles the 647 yard (592 m) second hole at
the Guam Navy GC, the longest double-eagle ever recorded.
Tom Watson
holes one of the most famous shots in U.S. Open history,
a delicate chip from the rough beside the 17th green at
Pebble Beach that helps him to defeat Jack Nicklaus. A
month later, Watson wins his fourth British Open title,
in a tournament that will be remembered for the collapse
of young American Bobby Clampett. Virtually unknown (certainly
to British fans) going into the event, Clampett began 67-66
to open up a 5-shot halfway lead. Still the leader after
three rounds, he shot a sorry 77 in the final round to
finish well down the field. Watson narrowly misses out
on a fifth US Money List crown in six years, as that honour
goes to the fiery Craig Stadler, who wins the US Masters
in his finest season.
1983
The PGA
TOUR introduces the 'all-exempt' Tour, with the top 125
players from 1982 exempt from weekly qualifying for tournaments,
as opposed to the top-60 as before. A record 34 different
players win tournaments, and no-one is able to win more
than twice, an unprecedented occurrence. One who does win
twice is 25-year-old Hal Sutton, 1982's rookie of the year,
who becomes Player of the Year with victories in the Tournament
Players' Championship and PGA Championship. Isao Aoki becomes
the first Japanese golfer to win on the U.S. Tour, with
victory in the Hawaiian Open. Aoki holes a 128-yard wedge
shot on the final hole for an eagle that allows him to
defeat Jack Renner by one stroke.
Severiano
Ballesteros wins his second US Masters, and is inspirational
as a youthful European side come agonizingly close to defeating
the United States in the Ryder Cup.
Tom Watson
wins a fifth British Open title - but his first in England
not Scotland, after a scrambling final day that with nine
holes to play saw seven players - Watson, Lee Trevino,
Graham Marsh, Andy Bean, Hale Irwin, Ray Floyd and home
favourite Nick Faldo - all within a shot of the lead. Watson
almost retains his U.S. Open crown as well, but loses by
a shot to Larry Nelson, who holes a 60-foot downhill putt
on Oakmont's 16th green on his way to victory.
1984
Desert
Highlands opens in Phoenix from a design by Jack Nicklaus
utilizing only 80 irrigated acres for 18 holes, instead
of the typical 100-150 for a major course. The success
of Nicklaus' concept of "target golf" ushers
in the era of environmentally-sensitive desert design.
Ben Crenshaw,
after five second-place finishes in Major championships,
finally wins one, as he beats his long-time friend Tom
Kite to take his first US Masters title.
Severiano
Ballesteros defeats Tom Watson in one of the most dramatic
finishes ever at the British Open at St. Andrew's. As Ballesteros
birdied the final hole to a huge roar from his adopted "home" fans,
Watson pushed his approach at the famous 17th "Road
Hole" through the green and against a wall, dropping
a crucial shot.
At the
age of 44, Lee Trevino wins a sixth major championship,
the PGA Championship. It is ten years since his last one.
48-year-old Gary Player is runner-up.
1985
Nancy
Lopez sets the LPGA 72-hole record with 268 in the Henredon
Classic.
Bernhard
Langer becomes the first German golfer to win a Major Championship,
when he wins the US Masters. Later in the summer, Sandy
Lyle becomes the first British player to win the Open Championship
for 16 years, despite a nervy finish at Sandwich. These
successes are topped off in the Autumn when Europe regains
the Ryder Cup for the first time since 1957, beating the
United States at The Belfry in England.
In one
of the most unlikely U.S. Open championships in history,
a Taiwanese, a South African and a Canadian are all narrowly
beaten by an American - one who hadn't won a tournament
for seven years. Former champion Andy North held off Tze-Chung
Chen, Denis Watson and Dave Barr for his second major victory.
Later in the year, Hubert Green, like North without a victory
for several years, also won his second major title, at
the PGA championship.
Calvin
Peete wins the Tournament Players' Championship with a
course record 72-hole score of 274. Although not a major
championship, this is the most significant tour victory
to this date by a black golfer.
The $1m
Dunhill Nations' Cup at St. Andrew's is inaugurated, a
3-man matchplay competition that aims to replace the World
Cup of Golf - a largely ignored event for several years
now - as the premier international team event. Australia
win the opening version, their three-man team of Greg Norman,
Graham Marsh and David Graham defeating a United States
side of Mark O'Meara, Ray Floyd and Curtis Strange 3-0
in the final.
The USGA
introduces the Slope System to allow golfers to adjust
their handicaps to allow for the relative difficulty of
a golf course compared to players of their own ability.
1986
Jack
Nicklaus, at the age of 46, shoots a final-round 65 at
The Masters to win his 18th professional major championship,
and 20th in all. His final-day charge takes him past virtually
all of the leading players of the generation below him,
including Greg Norman, Seve Ballesteros, Tom Watson and
Tom Kite. In June, Ray Floyd also rolls back the years
to win the U.S.Open, aged 44.
The SONY
World ranking system is introduced, the first formally-recognised
ranking system for men's golf. The first-ever number one,
in April 1986, is 1985 Masters Champion Bernhard Langer.
Bob Tway
sinks a bunker shot at the final hole to beat Greg Norman
in the PGA Championship. Norman had held the lead on Sunday
morning in each of the four major championships of 1986,
but was able to win only the British Open. Tway's stroke
began a celebrated series of miracle shots holed by various
golfers to defeat Norman in major events.
The Pete
Dye-designed PGA West opens amid great controversy concerning
the difficulty of the course.
The Panasonic
Las Vegas Invitational offers the first $1 million purse
on the USPGA Tour. The $207,000 first prize is won by Greg
Norman, who finishes the year top of both the U.S. Money
List and the World Rankings.
The PGA
TOUR Team Charity Competition debuts. By 1987, TOUR-related
contributions to charity exceed $100,000,000, and by 1992
they reach a total of $200,000,000.
1987
The Links
at Spanish Bay opens, the first true links course in the
Western United States. It is a co-design by Robert Trent
Jones, Jr., Tom Watson, and former USGA President Frank "Sandy" Tatum.
Judy
Bell becomes the first woman elected to the USGA Executive
Committee.
Larry
Mize holed a 40-yard pitch shot to defeat Greg Norman in
a play-off for the US Masters. The previous year, Norman
had beaten Mize in a playoff for the Kemper Open after
Mize hit a short pitch shot across a green and into a lake.
Norman, a 10-time winner around the globe in 1986, would
not win again on the U.S. Tour for over twelve months.
At the
British Open, Nick Faldo plays a flawless last round of
18 consecutive pars to win his first major championship.
The victory rewarded Faldo's efforts to completely re-model
his swing, that had seen him virtually leave the Tour for
two years.
Larry
Nelson wins his third major championship in six years,
defeating Lanny Wadkins in a playoff for the PGA championship.
The victory means that three of Nelson's nine career U.S.Tour
wins to date have come in majors.
Europe
win the Ryder Cup on American soil for the first time,
and rub salt into the wounds by defeating an American team
captained by Jack Nicklaus, at the Muirfield Village course
which Nicklaus designed. The result provides final confirmation
of the recent swing in global dominance away from the American
players; at the end of 1987, only one of the world's top
six (Curtis Strange, in 5th) is American, while four (Severiano
Ballesteros, Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle and Ian Woosnam
are European, while the world number one remains Greg Norman.
The Nabisco
Championships (later the TOUR Championship) debuts as a
season-ending event for the top 30 money winners. The first
winner is Tom Watson, breaking a three year victory drought.
Earlier in the year, Watson narrowly missed victory at
the U.S. Open, finishing second to unheralded Scott Simpson.
Walter
Dietz, a blind golfer, aces the 155 yard (142 m) seventh
hole at Manakiki G.C., California.
1988
Links
Magazine is founded (originally Southern Links), with Mark
Brown as editor-in-chief.
Lori
Garbacz orders a pizza between holes at the U.S. Women's
Open to protest slow play.
Square-grooved
clubs such as the PING Eye2 irons are banned by the USGA,
which claims that tests show the clubs give an unfair competitive
advantage to PING customers. The PGA TOUR also bans the
clubs in 1989. Karsten Manufacturing, maker of the clubs,
fights a costly two-year battle with both the USGA and
the PGA TOUR to have the ban rescinded after winning a
temporary injunction. Eventually both organizations drop
the ban, while Karsten acknowledges the right of the organizations
to regulate equipment and pledges to make modifications
to future designs.
Sandy
Lyle becomes the first British player to win the US Masters.
Lyle sweeps his approach shot to the last green out of
a fairway bunker to within 15 feet, and sinks the resulting
birdie putt for a one-shot victory over Mark Calcavecchia.
Severiano
Ballesteros wins his third British Open championship in
the first-ever Monday finish to the 72 holes, after the
whole of Saturday's scheduled third round at Royal Lytham
was lost to torrential rain. The victory, one of several
around the globe for Ballesteros in 1988, helps him to
finish the year on top of the SONY World Rankings.
Curtis
Strange wins the season-ending Nabisco Championships at
Pebble Beach, and his $360,000 paycheck lifts his official
1988 TOUR earnings to $1,147,644, and thus he becomes the
first player to win over $1,000,000 in a single season.
Earlier in the year Strange defeated Nick Faldo in a play-off
for his first major title, the U.S. Open.
1989
Four
golfers, Doug Weaver, Mark Wiebe, Jerry Pate and Nick Price,
hit aces on the par-three sixth hole on the same day in
the U.S. Open at Oak Hill. Curtis Strange retains his U.S.
Open crown (the first player to do so since 1951) after
Tom Kite hits a final day 78 to let slip a third round
lead.
Nick
Faldo sinks a 100 foot (30 m) birdie putt on the second
hole at Augusta National in The Masters, the longest putt
holed to date in a major tournament. Faldo goes on to win
The Masters, ironically abetted by Scott Hoch missing a
short putt to win the event - a downhill effort of little
more than 2 feet on the first playoff hole.
Mark
Calcavecchia wins the British Open in a novel 4-hole playoff
format, against Australians Wayne Grady and Greg Norman.
Calcavecchia hits a five-iron out of the rough at the final
hole to within six feet for the winning birdie.
Payne
Stewart, noted for his flamboyant dress (plus-fours and
a sponsorship deal that sees him wear the often garish
colours of the nearest NFL team) wins the PGA championship,
after a late collapse by Mike Reid.
1990
Hall Thompson of Shoal Creek GC, on the eve of the PGA Championship at Shoal
Creek, defends his club's policy of not admitting black members. Amidst
a public outcry, Shoal Creek 1990 is forced to change its policy and the
PGA TOUR and the USGA insist that in future all clubs submit to a standard
set of guidelines on membership policies. Cypress Point Club and Aronimink,
among others, decide they are unable to comply and withdraw from the professional
tournament arena.
Bill
Blue resigns after a short reign as LPGA Commissioner.
Charles Mecham is selected as his successor.
Construction
begins on Shadow Creek Golf Club, the most expensive golf
course ever built, with cost estimates ranging from $35
to $60 million as Tom Fazio creates an oasis in the Las
Vegas desert. The club in 1994 vaults into eighth place
on the Golf Digest top-100 course rankings, sparking controversy.
The R & A,
after 38 years, adopts the 1.68 inch diameter ball, and
for the first time since 1910 The Rules of Golf are standardized
throughout the world.
The initial
Solheim Cup is played at Lake Nona G.C., Orlando, commencing
a biennial USA vs. Europe competition for women, a recognition
of the growing strength of women's golf on both sides of
the Atlantic.
The Ben
Hogan Tour is launched as a minor league for the PGA TOUR,
following the increased success of mini-tours such as the
U.S. Golf Tour in 1989.
Nick
Faldo retains his US Masters title, once again in a play-off
(this time against Ray Floyd). Later in the year, he adds
the British Open, in a tournament that is effectively decided
in the third round, where Faldo shoots a 67 while co-leader
Greg Norman struggles to a 76. At the U.S. Open, however,
Faldo narrowly misses out, as 45-year-old veteran Hale
Irwin holes an unlikely 40-foot putt at the last to edge
him out by a shot. Irwin wins his third U.S. Open (eleven
years after his second) following a playoff against Mike
Donald.
Australian
Wayne Grady, who lost a playoff at the British Open in
1989, bounces back to win the PGA championship. Fred Couples,
chasing too hard, misses several short putts on the back
nine when apparently poised to snatch victory.
1991
The Ocean
Course at Kiawah Island, S.C., the first course to be awarded
the Ryder Cup Matches before the course has been completed,
is the scene of the United States' first victory in the
event since 1983. The competition comes down to a twisting
putt of seven feet (2 m) on the 18th hole missed by Bernhard
Langer in the final match (against Hale Irwin).
Unknown
John Daly wins the PGA Championship at Crooked Stick when,
as ninth alternate, a slot in the tournament opens up for
him on the night before the Championship begins. Daly wins
an army of fans overnight with his prodigious hitting from
the tees and an apparently fearless approach to putting.
The golfer who withdrew and gave Daly his place, Nick Price,
wins the PGA Championship in 1992 at Bellerive.
Phil
Mickelson, an amateur, wins the PGA TOUR's Northern Telecom
Open.
Diminutive
Welshman Ian Woosnam holds off the challenges of Tom Watson
and José María Olazábal to win The
Masters. The win is the most important in an increasing
list of tournaments that Woosnam has won around the world
since 1987, and helps him to overtake Nick Faldo at the
top of the World Rankings.
Australian
Ian Baker-Finch, who was best remembered by British fans
for being the 23-year-old player who had led the 1984 Open
Championship after three rounds before hitting a 79 on
the final day, again leads after three rounds but this
time wins the British Open in comfortable style with a
superb 66, against playing partner Mark O'Meara's 69.
Oversized
metal woods are introduced, with Callaway Golf's Big Bertha
quickly establishing itself as the dominant brand, the
Big Bertha driver becomes one of the biggest-selling clubs
of all time.
Harvey
Penick's Little Red Book becomes the all-time best selling
golf book.
1992
All three
American major championships are won by players who had
enjoyed successful U.S.Tour careers but had, until 1992,
only been able to finish runner-up at best in the majors.
First, at the Masters, Fred Couples wins after final-round
battle with Ray Floyd. Then, Tom Kite (U.S.Tour leading
money-winner as long ago as 1981) emerges victorious at
the U.S. Open after a windswept final round at Pebble Beach
that sees many of the third-round leaders shoot high scores.
And finally, Nick Price - twice a runner-up at the British
Open Championship - wins the PGA championship, the start
of a period of good form that would take him to the world
number one position by the end of 1994. The year's other
major, the British Open, is won by Nick Faldo - his fifth
major title in five years. Faldo rises to the World number
one position in 1992.
Simon
Clough and Boris Janic complete 18-hole rounds in five
countries in one day, walking each course. They played
rounds in France, Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands,
and Germany, and completed their journey in 16 hours, 35
minutes.
Brittany
Andres, age 6 years 19 days, scores an ace at the 85 yard
(78 m) second hole at the Jimmy Clay G.C. in Austin, Texas.
1993
An ownership
group led by Joe Gibbs and Arnold Palmer announce plans
for The Golf Channel, a 24-hour, 365-day cable service.
Bernhard
Langer wins his second US Masters title, but the event
is remembered for the criticism aimed by some commentators
at Chip Beck for laying up short of the water at the 15th
hole, apparently defending his second place rather than
risking all to challenge Langer's 3-shot lead.
Greg
Norman also wins a second major title, the British Open.
Playing scintillating golf, Norman's total of 267 is the
lowest ever recorded in a major championship. However,
the following month, Norman misses out on the PGA championship,
beaten in a sudden-death playoff by Paul Azinger. The defeat
means Norman has lost playoffs in each of the four majors,
a dubious honour he shares with Craig Wood, who lost playoffs
in three of them and also the 1934 USPGA (matchplay) final
in extra holes.
Men's
Golf
Major
championship results:
April - The Masters - Bernhard Langer
June - US Open - Lee Janzen
July - The Open Championship - Greg Norman
August - PGA Championship - Paul Azinger
PGA TOUR leading money winner for the year: Nick Price - $1,478,557
Senior PGA TOUR leading money winner: Dave Stockton - $1,175,944
Ryder Cup: United States team won 15-13 over the Europe team in world golf.
Women's Golf
US Women's
Open - Lauri Merten
LPGA Championship - Patty Sheehan
Betsy King: leading money winner on the LPGA tour, earning $595,992.
1994
Nick
Price enjoys a phenomenal year, leading the U.S. Money
List for the second successive season and winning both
the British Open and PGA Championships. His win at the
British Open comes courtesy of a 5-foot eagle putt at the
17th in the final round.
Greg
Norman, shoots a course-record 264 to win the Tournament
Players' Championship around the famed Pete Dye designed
Sawgrass course.
Ernie
Els wins a three-way playoff to become the second South
African winner of the U.S.Open, against Colin Montgomerie
and Loren Roberts. Jose Maria Olazabal becomes the second
Spaniard to win the US Masters, defeating third-round leader
Tom Lehman by two shots.
Tiger
Woods becomes the youngest man ever to win the U.S. Amateur,
at age 18. Several players had previously won aged 19,
including Jack Nicklaus in 1959.
Men's
Golf
Major
championship results:
April - The Masters - José María Olazábal
June - US Open - Ernie Els
July - The Open Championship - Nick Price
August - PGA Championship - Nick Price
PGA TOUR leading money winner for the year: Nick Price - $1,499,927
Senior PGA TOUR leading money winner: Dave Stockton - $1,402,519
Women's
Golf
US Women's
Open - Patty Sheehan
LPGA Championship - Laura Davies
Laura Davies: leading money winner on the LPGA tour, earning $687,201.
1995
Days
after the death of his long-time friend and mentor Harvey
Penick, Ben Crenshaw wins a second U.S.Masters championship
with an emotional victory over Davis Love III and Greg
Norman.
Norman
also narrowly misses out at the U.S.Open, finishing second
for the 7th time in a major, behind Corey Pavin.
John
Daly proves that his 1991 PGA championship was not a fluke,
as he wins the Open Championship at St. Andrew's after
a playoff with Italian Costantino Rocca. Rocca holes a
long putt at the last to force the playoff as Daly, in
the clubhouse, watches on, but Daly dominates the 4-hole
playoff.
Steve
Elkington wins a sudden-death playoff to collect his first
major at the PGA championship. Colin Montgomerie loses,
the second year in succession he had lost a playoff in
a major (a record he shares with Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer
and Tom Watson).
Men's
Golf
Major
championship results:
April - The Masters - Ben Crenshaw
June - US Open - Corey Pavin
July - The Open Championship - John Daly
August - PGA Championship - Steve Elkington
PGA TOUR leading money winner for the year: Greg Norman - $1,654,959
Senior PGA TOUR leading money winner: Jim Colbert - $1,444,386
Ryder Cup: Europe won 14 1/2 to 13 1/2 over the United States in world team
golf.
Women's Golf
US Women's
Open - Annika Sörenstam
LPGA Championship - Kelly Robbins
Annika Sörenstam: leading money winner on the LPGA tour, earning $666,533
1996
In one
of the most astonishing final rounds in the tournament's
history, Greg Norman loses a 5-shot third round lead to
lose by 6, as Nick Faldo's superb 67 contrasts with Norman's
dreadful 78.
After
a career seemingly curtailed several years previously by
a motorcycle accident, Steve Jones wins the U.S.Open. Both
Davis Love III and Tom Lehman finish just short of Jones.
Lehman (as at the 1994 Masters and 1995 U.S. Open) leads
on Saturday night but cannot hold on. At the British Open,
Lehman again leads after three rounds, but this time is
able to finish the job, winning his first major title.
The PGA championship also goes to a first-time major winner
as Mark Brooks beats Kenny Perry in a sudden-death playoff
after a two-shot swing (Perry bogeyed and Brooks birdied)
at the 72nd hole.
Tiger
Woods became the first golfer to win three consecutive
U.S. Amateur titles. This was the sixth consecutive year
in which he won a USGA championship, one short of Bobby
Jones' record of seven. In September, he turned professional.
He receives a number of sponsors' invitations to PGA Tour
events, but is still expected by most to have to return
to the qualifying school to earn a full players' card for
1997. However, in the last five regular tournaments of
the year on the PGA TOUR, his finishes were 5-3-1-3-1,
placing him among the tour's top 30 money-winners for the
year and thereby qualifying him for the season-ending TOUR
Championship. Woods was named the PGA TOUR's Rookie of
the Year.
Although
unable to win a major championship, Colin Montgomerie tops
both the World Money List and the World ranking points
list for 1996. Greg Norman however narrowly remains the
official world number one as the system takes into account
points earned over a 24-month period.
Men's
Golf
Major
championship results:
April - The Masters - Nick Faldo
June - US Open - Steve Jones
July - The Open Championship - Tom Lehman
August - PGA Championship - Mark Brooks
PGA TOUR leading money winner for the year: Tom Lehman - $1,780,159
Senior PGA TOUR leading money winner: Jim Colbert - $1,627,890
Women's Golf
US Women's
Open - Annika Sörenstam
LPGA Championship - Laura Davies
Karrie Webb is the leading money winner on the LPGA tour with earnings of $1,002,000
becoming the first ever woman to earn more than a million dollars in one golf
season.
1997
In his
first major championship as a professional, Tiger Woods
becomes the youngest-ever Masters Champion at 21 years
3 months, while setting a 72-hole scoring record of 270
(18 under par), and winning by a record margin (12 shots).
Woods wins three other tournaments in 1997 to top the U.S.Money
list in what is effectively his rookie season. Even though
Woods becomes the first player to earn more than $2m in
a season, however, his earnings are surpassed by the leading
player on the Seniors' Tour, Hale Irwin, who wins 9 times.
Ernie
Els wins a second U.S. Open, once again defeating Colin
Montgomerie in a close finish. Tom Lehman, once again,
led after three rounds, but again was unable to win the
title.
25-year-old
Justin Leonard made up a 5-shot final-round deficit with
a 65 to win his first major championship, the British Open,
by two shots from Jesper Parnevik and Darren Clarke. A
month later, Leonard finished runner-up to Davis Love III
at the PGA Championship.
Men's
Golf
Major
championship results:
April - The Masters - Tiger Woods
June - US Open - Ernie Els
July - The Open Championship - Justin Leonard
August - PGA Championship - Davis Love III
PGA TOUR leading money winner for the year: Tiger Woods - $2,066,833
Senior PGA TOUR leading money winner: Hale Irwin - $2,343,364
Ryder Cup: Europe won 14 1/2-13 1/2 over the United States in world team golf.
Women's Golf
US Women's
Open - Alison Nicholas
LPGA Championship - Christa Johnson
Annika Sörenstam: leading money winner on the LPGA tour, earning $1,236,789.
1998
At the
age of 41, Mark O'Meara wins his first major championship,
the Masters, becoming one of the few champions in history
to birdie the last hole to win. Runner-up is 26-year-old
David Duval who would win four times on the regular tour
to lead the money list, as Tiger Woods - after his meteoric
first season - wins just once. In July, O'Meara wins a
second major title - this time the British Open, after
a playoff with Brian Watts, an American golfer whose career
had mostly been played on the [[Japan Golf Tour]. Watts
is forced to play a bunker shot at the 72nd hole with only
one foot in the sand, needing a par to force the playoff,
and very nearly holes the shot. The British Open is also
notable for the remarkable tournament enjoyed by 18-year-old
amateur Justin Rose, who finishes fourth after being in
touch with the lead throughout the final round.
Lee Janzen
wins a second U.S. Open title, and as in 1993, Payne Stewart
finishes runner-up. Stewart's 20-foot putt to tie at the
last rolls across the lip but does not drop.
Fijian
Vijay Singh, a regular winner on both the European and
U.S. Tours since the early 1990s, wins the PGA Championship.
With a round to play, both player of the season Mark O'M |