Tuesday, September 3, 2013

A Golden Anniversary for the Golden Bear


A Golden Anniversary for the Golden Bear

PGA.COM August 5, 2013







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The temperatures were so hot at Dallas Athletic Clubin 1963, Jack Nicklaus had to use a towel to hold …


By T.J. Auclair, PGA.com

A Golden Anniversary will take place for the Golden Bear when the 95th PGA Championship tees off Thursday at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, N.Y.

When Jack Nicklaus won the 1963 PGA Championship at Dallas Athletic Club 50 years ago, it was the third of the Golden Bear's record 18 major titles. And -- for the purposes of this Golden Anniversary -- it was the first of five PGA Championship victories for arguably the greatest golfer in history.

With the victory, Nicklaus at age 23 joined fellow legends Gene Sarazen, Byron Nelson, and Ben Hogan as the only winners of all three American majors -- the Masters, U.S. Open and PGA Championship. Nicklaus would go on to complete the first of his three career grand slams three years later at Muirfield in the 1966 Open Championship.

Coincidentally, Oak Hill was also the host venue for the 1980 PGA Championship, where Nicklaus won the last of those five PGA Championships to tie Walter Hagen, a Rochester native, for most all time.

For several years in the 1960s, the Open Championship and the PGA Championship were played in the month of July in consecutive weeks. Imagine that -- not only back-to-back major championships, but also both contested on opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean. Travel then for top players certainly wasn't what it is today.

"In those days you didn't have the jets to get back," Nicklaus said. "So we got right back and went right straight to Dallas so I went from a 55-degree temperature to a 110-degree temperature. Big change ... a lot of the guys had a hard time with it. I didn't seem to have a hard time with it except that I knew that I absolutely soaked my clothes everyday and I remember when I picked up the trophy I couldn't pick it up. I had to take a towel. I mean you could've cooked your breakfast on the trophy sitting out there it was so hot."

That 1963 Open Championship was contested at Royal Lytham & St. Annes. Nicklaus finished third, one shot out of the 36-hole playoff won by New Zealand's Bob Charles. Though it was five decades ago, Nicklaus remembers quite well what it was like to come so close in England before the start of the PGA.

"We had just finished and I felt like gave away the British Open the week before," he said. "At the British Open I bogeyed the last two holes to lose my shot. That was a great learning experience for me ... it was just like stupidity. You know, I didn't have to do that. I just bogeyed them. I just played them dumb."


The learning experience from that bitter end at Royal Lytham & St. Annes would serve Nicklaus well at Dallas Athletic Club.

"I think that the experience I had at the British Open helped me a lot in the PGA Championship because I knew how dumb I had been," Nicklaus said. "And so I played far more intelligently coming down the stretch and I remember the 17th hole I hit it in the rough off the tee. It was a hole that went down a hill, across water, to an elevated green and I hit it in the rough.

"And instead of being stupid, I did just pitch it out. I took my medicine. I think Dave Ragan was on my tail at the time, and then I hit it up there on the green and I can't remember whether I made the putt or not but I won the tournament. Whereas, had I been there the week before, I probably would've tried to hit it out of the rough over the water, probably put it in the water and I would've lost the PGA Championship.

"But you learn from your mistakes -- that's how you learn to play golf," Nicklaus added. "You learn from your successes but you also learn from your failures. And I put the two together."

The win at Dallas Athletic Club was, of course, special. But along with the victory, Nicklaus picked up a memento that he's carried with him throughout his career from a long-drive competition he won at the PGA Championship that same week.

"I have a money clip that's in my pocket right now and it's been in my pocket for 50 years," Nicklaus explained. "It says, 'Driving Distance Winner' -- that's what it says across the PGA Championship [money clip]. That drive was 341 yards, 17 inches. I do remember that, too. That was an 11-degree wood driver, 42¾-inch shaft, Dynamic S shaft, and nobody had a preference on what golf ball was hit."

Seventeen years later in the 1980 PGA Championship at Oak Hill, Nicklaus put on a dominating performance. He was the only player to break par at the PGA Championship that year, finishing at 6-under-par 274 to win by seven shots over Andy Bean. That was a record margin of victory and it stood for just over 30 years until Rory McIlroy's eight-shot romp a year ago at Kiawah Island.

For some perspective on just how difficult a course Oak Hill is, consider this: In the previous two PGA Championships held there in 1980 and 2003, only four players finished with a 72-hole total score under par.

"I remember that was the year that I came to Oak Hill having won the U.S. Open at Baltusrol and I remember following that, I had a letdown and I had a hard time getting myself back up from a ball striking standpoint," said Nicklaus, who also finished second at Oak Hill to Lee Trevino in the 1968 U.S. Open, where they were the only two players with an under-par total.

"I was up there playing the weekend before with my son, Jack. We were playing, and I was hitting the ball fair, but I was just putting awful. And Jackie gave me a putting lesson on taking the heel of my putter through the line and breaking it off; I was breaking off my stroke. And anyway, that week, I never did hit the ball very well, but I absolutely ran the tables with my putter. Everything I drew back went in the hole. It was one of those weeks that I just turned around and I make a mistake, and all of a sudden I hole a 30 footer and I just started chuckling and I'd think, 'OK, here we go, let's keep on going.' But it was fun. I love Oak Hill."

Adams making best of time away after surgery


Adams making best of time away after surgery

PGA.COM August 5, 2013







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Blake Adams finished in the top 10 at Kiawah, but will watch on TV this year.(Getty Images)


By Stan Awtrey, PGA.com Contributor

A year ago Blake Adams fought through the difficult conditions at Kiawah Island, as well as the nerves that come along with playing in the PGA Championship, and posted his first career top-10 in a major tournament.

Adams didn't get flustered by the winds that rattled many of the more experienced players and wound up tied for seventh. That was good enough to earn him an automatic exemption into the 2013 PGA Championship.

But as the field assembles this week at Oak Hill, Adams isn't among them. He's back home in Swainsboro, Ga., impatiently recovering from hip surgery that ended his 2013 season after only four competitive rounds. Instead of teeing it up at Oak Hill, he'll be watching on his big screen.

Adams, 37, learned in 2008 that he needed hip replacement surgery, but he played through the pain thanks to a series of semiannual shots that eased the discomfort and helped with mobility. He was also told that the shots would eventually stop working, a reality that hit him this year at the Humana Challenge in Palm Springs, Calif. He tried to play the next week at Torrey Pines, but withdrew and flew to Colorado for surgery.

Dr. Marc Philippon of Vail., Colo., who operated on 2012 Tour Championship winner Brandt Snedeker, removed three bone spurs and a large cyst, and shaved and reshaped Adams' femur. He then drilled holes in the femur and filled them with stem cells that are expected to grow and replace the damage.

One doctor was amazed that Adams dealt with the pain for so long, but walking away isn't easy when you've made $3.3 million over the last three seasons and started to establish yourself as a player.

It took Adams a decade to become an overnight sensation. He played three years at Georgia before transferring to Georgia Southern, where he graduated, and turned pro in 2001. After scuffling around on the mini-tours, Adams earned a spot on the Web.com Tour.


He got his PGA Tour card in 2010 and has made steady progress. He made his first appearance in a major last year and tied for 21st at the U.S. Open. He followed that with that tie for seventh at the PGA Championship.

So just when Adams seemed poised for a breakthrough season - and possibly earn a spot in the Masters that he craves so badly - he found himself immobile. He spent eight weeks on crutches during the rehab process, learning how to do rudimentary tasks while hobbling around the house.

"It was a very humbling experience," he said. "To be playing on the PGA Tour one day and the next you can't climb stairs or carry a bowl of cereal to the table."

He's back to swinging a club again. Right now he's worked his way back up to a 5-iron and has set a goal to be playing on the Tour again in October. He's even considering a test run at a Web.com Tour event later this summer.

In the meantime, he's been busy helping start the Blake Adams Academy of Golf at the Lane Creek Golf Club outside Athens, Ga. Adams said he has dreamed of establishing a teaching center for about 10 years, and has seriously pursued it for the last two, while his career has been in full bloom.

Since his surgery in January, Adams has had a lot of time to help get the teaching center up to speed. His personal instructor, PGA Professional John Tillery, will run the academy. Tillery also works with PGA Tour winner Scott Brown. Adams has been spending a lot of time on-site. Last week he arrived every day at 7:00 a.m. and turned the lights off around 9:00 p.m.

"Having hip surgery gave me the time to dive into it," Adams said. "But I found out it is a time-consuming endeavor."

Adams has had a chance to watch some golf on television, an opportunity he rarely got when he was playing every week. He'd rather be competing, but admitted he has learned by being a spectator.

''To watch from the fan's point of view and see how guys go about their business and win a golf tournament has been really neat,'' he said. ''I've learned that golf is not a game of perfection. You're never going to be perfect all the time. You realize that the more you watch.''

LPGA: Lewis cuts into Park's lead atop rankings


LPGA: Lewis cuts into Park's lead atop rankings
The Sports Xchange August 5, 2013The SportsXchange









Stacy Lewis closed the gap a bit with her victory at the British Open on Sunday, but South Korea's Inbee Park still enjoys a comfortable lead as the No. 1 player in the Rolex World Rankings.

Park has 12.91 points, still well ahead of Lewis (9.74) despite finishing in a tie for 42nd at St. Andrews in Scotland.

Norway's Suzann Pettersen (8.26) and South Koreans Na Yeon Choi (7.94) and So Yeon Ryu (7.16) round out the top five. Choi finished in a tie for second, two shots behind Lewis, on Sunday, while Pettersen finished another shot back in a tie for fourth place. Ryu finished in a tie for 17th.

Yani Tseng, the world's top-ranked player entering the year who missed her fourth consecutive cut, remains No. 14.