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Sunday, September 1, 2013

Best 5 PGA Championships in Empire State


Best 5 PGA Championships in Empire State


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DOUG FERGUSON (AP Golf Writer) August 6, 2013AP - Sports








PITTSFORD, N.Y. (AP) -- The PGA Championship can't be accused of being only in a New York state of mind.

At least not over the long haul.

True, the inaugural PGA Championship was held at Siwanoy Country Club in Bronxville, N.Y. And yes, eight of the first 22 championships were held in the Empire State. But the PGA of America moves its major around the country. It has been held in 26 states, compared with 17 states for the U.S. Open. And while the U.S. Open has gone to New York 18 times, Oak Hill marks the 12th time the PGA Championship is in the Empire State.

Jim Barnes won at Siwanoy, 1 up over Jock Hutchison in 1916. Barnes often gets left out of conversation on the back-to-back winners of this major. He also won in 1919, after a two-year absence brought on by World War I.

Even more impressive? The PGA Championship has been held at 10 golf courses in New York, compared with eight New York courses for the U.S. Open. Oak Hill is the only New York course to hold the PGA more than once. This will be the third time.

The tough part is figuring out the best five PGA Championships played in New York. Here's one offering:

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5. JACK IS BACK

Jack Nicklaus never really went anywhere during his peak years. In his first 20 years as a professional, his longest drought was 12 majors without winning - from the 1967 U.S. Open until the 1970 British Open, during which time his father died.

Even so, he turned 40 in 1980. Tom Watson was the top player. Seve Ballesteros captured his second major at age 23 when he won the Masters, leading by 10 shots on the back nine until settling for a four-shot win.

Nicklaus picked up his 16th career major by winning the U.S. Open at Baltusrol. But it was his 1980 PGA Championship win at Oak Hill that summer that affirmed his place in the game. He became only the second player, behind Ben Hogan in 1953, to win two majors in his 40s. Mark O'Meara would join them in 1998.

Nicklaus shot 66 in the third round to take a three-shot lead, and he wound up winning by seven. The margin of victory remained a record for 33 years, until Rory McIlroy won by eight last year at Kiawah Island. Nicklaus tied Walter Hagen with his fifth Wanamaker Trophy.

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4. THE SILVER SCOT
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File-This Aug. 9, 1980 file photo shows Jack Nicklaus looking to the sky after sinking a 50-foot put …


Tommy Armour was born in Scotland and took up U.S. citizenship after World War I. He picked up his first major in 1927 at Oakmont when he won the U.S. Open.

But the odds were against him in the 1930 PGA Championship at Fresh Meadow Country Club, even though two-time champion Jim Barnes and five-time winner Walter Hagen failed qualify for match play. Armour faced Gene Sarazen, who not only was a three-time major champion, but the head professional at Fresh Meadow.

Neither player led by more than two holes during the 36-hole match. They were all square with nine holes to play, and remained tied playing the 18th. Both hit their second shots into a greenside bunker. Armour blasted out to 12 feet, and Sarazen was just inside him.

Armour holed the putt for a birdie, forcing Sarazen to match him. It would have been the first PGA Championship final to go extra holes. But it wasn't. Sarazen missed the putt, giving the Silver Scot a 1-up win and his second major. Sarazen atoned for the loss by winning a U.S. Open at Fresh Meadow two years later.

Of the three majors Armour won, he got the least amount of attention for this one. It was overshadowed by Bobby Jones winning the Grand Slam.

Armour remains the last player born in Britain to win the PGA Championship.

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File- This Aug. 17, 1997 file photo shows Davis Love III, celebrating after winning the PGA Champion …


3. LITTLE POISON AND THE BLOND BOMBER

Craig Wood was an impressive figure, known as the ''Blond Bomber'' because of his good looks and his ability to smash the ball a long way. In the final match of the 1934 PGA Championship at Park Club of Buffalo, he had his hands full against a man that seemed half his size - Paul Runyan, who went by the nickname ''Little Poison.''

Wood built a 1-up lead in the morning round, and he regained the lead in the afternoon with an eagle on the 29th hole. Runyan won back-to-back holes to take the lead, only for Wood to square the match by nearly holing his approach on the 35th hole. With the title on the line, both made birdie putts on the 36th hole to force overtime. Runyan beat him on the 38th hole by making an 8-foot par putt.

It was the first of two PGA Championship titles for Runyan, and it set the tone for Wood's career. He went on to lose the Masters, U.S. Open and British Open in extra holes. Greg Norman, another blond bomber of sorts, joined him six decades later by losing all four majors in a playoff in stroke play.

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2. SOMEWHERE OVER THE RAINBOW

Davis Love III was considered the best player to have never won a major when he arrived at Winged Foot for the 1997 PGA Championship.
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File-This Aug. 10, 1980 file photo shows Jack Nicklaus posing with the PGA Championship trophy at Oa …


He was runner-up at the Masters in 1995 by one shot to Ben Crenshaw, and his best shot at a major was a year later at Oakland Hills in the U.S. Open when he three-putted the 18th and finished one back of Steve Jones.

Love shot 66 in the third round and was tied for the 54-hole lead with Justin Leonard, a good friend who had won his first major a month earlier at the British Open. Love was always in control over the final round in what became a two-man race, and he finally pulled away late. It was fitting that Love's major would be the PGA Championship - his father was a popular club pro who died in a plane crash nine years later.

It might not have been a coincidence, then, that when Love holed an 18-foot birdie putt on the final hole of a cloudy Sunday at Winged Foot, the sun had just broken through and a massive rainbow filled the sky. It rained tears that day.

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1. THE SQUIRE AND THE HAIG

Gene Sarazen won the U.S. Open and PGA Championship in 1922, but the latter might have carried as asterisk - the great Walter Hagen didn't play the 1922 PGA Championship because he had prior engagements.

There was no doubting the Squire in the 1923 PGA Championship at Pelham Golf Club.

Hagen crushed everyone in his path - he won his opening match 10 and 9, and beat George McLean in the semifinals, 12 and 11 - to set up a championship match against Sarazen that lived up to its hype. The match was all square after the morning session, and Sarazen was 2 up late in the match until Hagen won the 34th and 35th holes to square the match again, setting up the first overtime in the PGA's short history.

On the second extra hole, Sarazen hooked a tee shot that was a few feet from going out-of-bounds. Sarazen - whose birth name was Eugenio Saraceni - later said Hagen complained there was spaghetti sauce on the ball. ''He said the greens keeper lived there and was eating spaghetti and threw the ball back out,'' Sarazen said in a 1999 interview.

From deep rough, Sarazen slashed it onto the green to 2 feet away. Hagen was in a bunker and nearly holed it. That left Sarazen a short putt, which he made to win in 38 holes for his second straight PGA title. A year later, Hagen began his run of four in a row.

Justin Rose's week starts off with a bang


Justin Rose's week starts off with a bang

PGA.COM August 6, 2013







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Justin Rose was involved in a fender-bender at the PGA Championship on Monday, and Brandt Snedeker was …



As the newly crowned U.S. Open champion, Justin Rose has had a fantastic couple of months. His challenge at the PGA Championship got off to a bit of a bumpy start on Monday, however, when he was involved in a fender-bender.

Judging by the photo - which was taken by fellow competitor Brandt Snedeker, who also put it on Twitter this evening - the wreck wasn't too serious.

At least Snedeker didn't think it was too bad.

''Which way were u going??,'' Snedeker asked on Twitter. ''Either way it was not one of your better driving performances.''

Golf-Scott aims to 'bookend' golden season at the majors


Golf-Scott aims to 'bookend' golden season at the majors

August 6, 2013








By Mark Lamport-Stokes

ROCHESTER, New York, Aug 6 (Reuters) - Adam Scottheads into this week's PGA Championship with bitter-sweet memories of his British Open finish last month and a clear-cut aim to "bookend" what has already been a golden season for him in the majors.

The Australian made a long-awaited breakthrough in golf's elite championships with a playoff win at the Masters in April, and was in good position to clinch the British Open at Muirfield before letting slip a one-shot lead with seven holes to play.

Scott's bid for the coveted Claret Jug unravelled as he recorded four consecutive bogeys from the 13th, a collapse he said was even harder to swallow than his late meltdown in the 2012 British Open at Royal Lytham.

"I was probably more disappointed at the Open this year than last," the world number five told reporters at Oak Hill Country Club on Tuesday while preparing for Thursday's opening round at the season's final major.

"I worked really hard to get myself in a position with nine holes to go because I got off to a slow start on Sunday. I felt that I had a bit of momentum going my way.

"And in the space of about 45 minutes, to go from leading to not even having a chance on the 16th tee was more disappointing, probably more so than at Lytham."

Scott squandered a four-shot lead with four holes to play in last year's British Open at Lytham, handing the title to South African veteran Ernie Els.

The Australian ended in a tie for third in this year's championship at Muirfield, four strokes behind winner Phil Mickelson, but overall Scott concedes he has performed well at the majors this season.

"It's been a good year," he smiled. "It was really pleasing to play well again at the (British) Open ... so I feel like I'm in some kind of form coming into the PGA this week.


"I'd really love to get myself in there with a chance to kind of bookend the Masters with a PGA Championship for this year."

SOARING EXPECTATIONS

Scott was especially pleased he was able to contend at the British Open after expectations had soared in his homeland following his playoff victory over Argentina's Angel Cabrera at the Masters.

"I thought I was playing good before I won the Masters and really over the last couple of years I built a mind-set that I was good enough to be a major champion and it didn't really matter that I wasn't," he said.

"Winning (the Masters) obviously was extremely satisfying and confirmed that I can do it. And I've backed it up with some decent play and a good performance in the Open, which is important, because you don't want to win the Masters and expectations go through the roof and you play poorly.

"You've got to keep pushing and I've been really conscious to do that this year so I can get myself here this week feeling like I have as good a chance to win as anyone and can keep the momentum that I've built the last couple ofyears going."

Scott likes the look of Oak Hill's lush East Course, which last staged the PGA Championship in 2003 when he tied for 23rd.

"It's presented immaculately," he said. "There's nothing fancy or tricky about it. It's just a good, genuine, fair test. The good shots will be rewarded and the bad shots will be fairly punished, depending on how bad you hit it.

"But the rough is long and that's the challenge here ... to keep it in the short stuff to give yourself a chance to score. There are some severe greens out there where it's important to keep the ball under the hole, on or off the green."

Scott will tee off in Thursday's opening round in the company of this season's other major winners - Englishman Justin Rose (U.S. Open) and American Mickelson. (Editing by Tony Jimenez)

Monday Notebook: Woodland makes it 156


Monday Notebook: Woodland makes it 156

PGA.COM August 6, 2013







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By The PGA of America

PITTSFORD, N.Y. - With his victory Sunday in the PGA Tour's Reno-Tahoe Open, Gary Woodland earned the final spot into the 156-player field for the 95th PGA Championship here at Oak Hill.

PICK THE HOLE, AT NO. 15: A reminder that for the first time ever, golf fans worldwide are able to have a direct impact on the hole location of a major championship. ThePGA Championship Pick the Hole Location Challenge Hosted by Jack Nicklaus provides unprecedented golf fan engagement and education, with fans being able to vote on PGA.com for one of four exciting and challenging final-round hole locations for the par-3, 181-yard 15th hole at Oak Hill.

Nicklaus, whose fifth and final PGA Championship victory occurred at Oak Hill in 1980, collaborated with PGA Chief Championships Officer Kerry Haigh to select the 15th hole due to the impact it will likely have on the outcome of the 95th PGA Championship. Haigh identified and selected each of four distinct Championship hole locations for fans to vote on, through Saturday, Aug. 10.

On Aug. 11, during Sunday's final-round coverage on TNT and CBS, fans will be able to see the winning hole position that will be used on the 15th green.

PGA.com, the Official Website of The PGA of America which is managed by Turner Sports, is offering video vignettes from Nicklaus that will educate golfers on how course setup impacts a golfer's strategy in playing a hole.

A sweepstakes will also be held on PGA.com in conjunction with the "Challenge," with entrants having an opportunity to win a behind-the-scenes experience for two during the 2014 PGA Championship at Nicklaus-designed Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Ky.

FANVISION OFFERS NEW VIEWS: Spectators who attend the 95th PGA Championship beginning Thursday, will have the opportunity to enjoy unprecedented live access to exclusive on-course coverage through FanVision's handheld TV device.

At the Season's Final Major, FanVision will put personalized and instant content in the hands of spectators on the East Course. Golf fans will be able to view multiple channels of in-depth audio and video coverage throughout the Championship, greatly enhancing their on-site experience. FanVision users will have access to countless hours of golf, regardless of where they are on the course.

Fans can follow their favorite players through real-time scoring, hole-by-hole cameras and much more.

FanVision devices are currently available for spectators online at http://www.fanvision.com/pgachampionship at a special pre-rental, online-only price of $20 per day and $60 for all four rounds of the Championship.


Starting Thursday morning, a limited number of complimentary FanVision devices will be available for media at the Registration Desk.

PLANTING TREES, GIVING BACK: On Sunday (Aug. 4), more than 30 volunteers from the community of Penfield, The PGA of America, Lexmark and The Nature Conservancy planted 33 trees - 18 American Elm and 15 White Swamp Oak - at Rothfuss Park in Penfield. The planting, however, did more than offset the impact of printing and paper products generated over the course of the 95th PGA Championship.

The project, the third collaborative effort between The PGA of America and Lexmark in conjunction with a PGA-sanctioned spectator championship, also restores shade to recreational participants at the park, increases native habitat, and improves storm water management by helping the soil absorb moisture during heavy rains.

Click here to read the complete release, which includes photos from the event.

DID YOU KNOW ... • Rory McIlroy, the defending PGA Champion, will host the annual Champions' Dinner, Tuesday night in the Oak Hill clubhouse. • Two-time PGA Champion Lee Trevino, who won the 1968 U.S. Open here at Oak Hill, will be recognized Wednesday night with the PGA Distinguished Service Award, the Association's highest annual honor. Media are invited to attend the ceremony, which begins at 6:30 p.m. • Tom Watson, the 2014 United States Ryder Cup Team Captain, will make his 32nd PGA Championship appearance this week, the most of any player in the field. However, Watson has not played in the PGA Championship since 2003. Watson has never won the PGA Championship but he ranks highly in several all-time PGA Championship statistical categories: Most Rounds Played (112, fourth all-time); Most Top-10 Finishes (10, second all-time); Most Top-25 Finishes (18, second all-time); Most Sub-Par Rounds (41, second all-time); Most Rounds in the 60s (27, tied for third all-time); Most Cuts Made (25, third all-time). •PGA Club Professional Kirk Hanefeld, of Acton, Mass., is in the field this week, 23 years after his first and only appearance in the PGA Championship. Hanefeld, 57, earned a berth into the 95th PGA Championship by finishing among the top 20 in the 2013 PGA Professional National Championship in June. • Peter Uihlein, who won the 2010 U.S. Amateur and is making his PGA Championship debut, is the son of Wally Uihlein, chairman and chief executive officer of the Acushnet Company.

NOT JUST ANOTHER DAY: Even without a victory, Jason Day of Australia has had two exceptional outings in the three major championships played this year. Day finished third in the Masters and tied for second in the U.S. Open. (He also tied for 32nd in the Open Championship.)

GREAT SCOTT: Fellow Aussie Adam Scott has been even more impressive, having won the Masters and tied for third at the Open Championship. (Scott tied for 45th in the U.S. Open.

DON'T FORGET PHIL: Phil Mickelson has complemented his first Open Championship with a tie for second at the U.S. Open. He also tied for 54th at the Masters.

AND JUSTIN'S TIME: Justin Rose won his first major championship, at the U.S. Open, but did not fare especially well at the other two majors held so far this year - tied for 25th at the Masters and missed the cut at the Open Championship.

TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY PRACTICE ROUND GROUNDS TICKETS AVAILABLE: Daily practice round grounds tickets for Tuesday and Wednesday are still available for purchase. All tickets for the Championship proper - Thursday through Sunday - are sold out.

95th PGA CHAMPIONSHIP ... BY THE NUMBERS: 4: Members of the World Golf Hall of Fame in the field this week (Ernie Els, Phil Mickelson, Vijay Singh and Tom Watson) 26: Most consecutive PGA Championship appearances by a player in the field this week (Mark Brooks) 74.31: Stroke average for the field in the 2003 PGA Championship at Oak Hill 74.82: Stroke average for the field in the 1980 PGA Championship at Oak Hill