Bob’s top 10 golfers of all time – #2

2. Tiger Woods (featured in this post)

An oldie, but a good one. http://www.nj.com/golf/index.ssf/2009/07/tiger_woods_claims_title_at_at.html

The best closer/door slammer of all time no one even comes close—having won over 90% of the tournaments he has lead going into the last round. When everyone is choking, he is thriving! Still, to this point, a career in the making, as he could catch Jack and become the most prolific major champion of all time.  There is no doubt that he will catch Sam Snead with the most wins to boot but he is still number 2—like Avis, he tries harder, and I do believe he eventually will become the number one golfer ever to play this great game.

 

The PGA Championship

The final major of the year is here and it promises to deliver a super show.  It carries significant favor for me since it takes place at the legendary Oak Hill Country Club in my home town of Rochester, New York.  I grew up about 10 minutes from Oak Hill, and although I never played the course, I did caddy twice there as a 15-year-old.

I remember two things distinctly: the players in the groups were making a lot of double bogeys and I was very tired after the rounds—they don’t call it Oak Hill for nothing.  It is hilly and tight.

The 1968 U.S. Open took place at Oak Hill and I was a kid in a candy factory—seeing my heroes up close was certainly a thrill—Nicklaus, Palmer, Player, Weiskopf, Littler, Casper—the list is almost endless.  I remember going to the practice tee for a while and just marveling at how well these men hit the ball. It sounds almost ridiculous, of course. They hit the ball wonderfully, but to see the greatest players on earth hit the ball the way they did it was a thrill in itself.  I actually remember seeing Bob Goalby, who had won the Masters just two months earlier, hitting mid-irons to a pin and every one was directly on target and he was carrying on a conversation with someone, at the same time—what an exhibition of ball striking!  More on the ’68  Open in a moment but first:

My two favorite holes at Oak Hill are back to back–#’s 13 and 14.  Thirteen is the only hole in major championship golf that has not been reached ever in 2. It is not that long, measuring around 596.  What is tricky and is why no one has reached it is because of a creek that runs through the fairway around 300 yards from the tee.  To carry the water you must hit your drive about 310 yards on the fly, and up to this point, the risk has not been worth the reward.  This year, however we could see it reached by Bubba, Dustin, Woodland, Garrigus or someone else—I do look for it to happen.  The 14th is the opposite –  the shortest par 4 on the course measuring around 320.  Reachable by the long hitter, but a shallow green and serious trouble over the green will make this a true risk/reward par 4.  Most players will use a longish iron off the tee and attempt to get close with a wedge.  Two great holes in major championship golf just happen to be back-to-back!

Back to the “68 Open, Lee Trevino, The Merry Mex won that Open breaking 70 all 4 days and winning in a breeze over Nicklaus by 3.  It was a week I will never forget.  For the above mentioned reasons, and just simply having a major sporting event come to my home town, an otherwise minor league sports city, hosting this great event and having such a memorable winner.  Trevino won $30,000 for his efforts that week and a lifetime exemption to play on the PGA Tour.  My, oh my have things changed. The winner this week receives just short of 1.5 million—that’s some inflation in 45 years!

Time for my picks—here goes—by the way I did pick the last two majors correctly so stick to my picks and you can’t go wrong, ha, ha, ha!

I like Matt Kuchar—I picked him early in the year to win a major and this is the one—he hits the ball so straight and at Oak Hill that is a must—he also is brilliant on the greens.  Oak Hill’s greens are tough to master as they undulate and have peeks and valleys.  I think the committee will not make the place unplayable by putting the pin positions in impossible places but turning the token over, they will not make this target practice either—so Kuchar is my first pick.

My second pick is Jason Dufner—having played very well this past week at Firestone and having lost a PGA playoff two years ago to Keegan Bradley at The Atlanta Athletic Club, Dufner is my second choice.  He comes in with momentum and I like that very much.

Third pick is Zach Johnson—who has picked up his pace the last 4 or 5 weeks and comes in with a ton of confidence.  The course fits his game—you do not have to be a “bomber” at Oak Hill ball placement and short game will provide us the winner this year—take Zach at number 3.

My last pick—out of the blue is Bo Van Pelt.  Hi best finish at the PGA was last year coming in T18.  I have no rhyme or reason to pick Van Pelt except to say that often the PGA winner comes out of the blue! He is a long time tour veteran and that does bode well in finishing a major on Sunday.

That’s the way I see it.  This 1924 Donald Ross gem is set to have 156 of the world’s greatest players descend upon its fairways and greens (they hope). I am pumped for this great major. I love seeing my old home town shine brightly in the sporting world and this year the “old Lady” should do just fine, thank you!

Send me your picks, I’d love to hear from you—good luck!

Bobby Jones – #3 in Bob’s top 10 golfers of all time

3. Bobby Jones

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/75/BobbyJonesAge14.jpg/218px-BobbyJonesAge14.jpg

 

The single most dominant player of his time and he never turned professional.

He won the grand slam in 1930—at that time the 4 majors were the British Amateur and Open and the U.S. Amateur and Open.

Upon that amazing feat, he promptly retired from active competition at the ripe old age of 28.

He had a dynamic powerful swing and backed it up with an equally adept touch.

Jones co-founded the Augusta National Golf Club and The Masters Tournament.

Did you miss the rest of the top 10 so far? Here they are: 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5 and 4.

Any guesses for #2 and #1?

Ben Hogan holds #4 on Bob’s top 10 countdown

4. Ben Hogan

Ben Hogan, 9-time Major Champion – is included as one of only 5 men who have won golf’s grand slam. Of course he’s in the top ten of all time, especially considering he overcame a near-fatal car crash to come back even more prolific.  When other golfers stop hitting balls on the range to come over to watch you hit balls – you are revered – and Ben Hogan is tops in that category.

Did you miss the rest of the top 10 so far? Here they are: 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5.

Any guesses on who #3, #2 and #1 are?

 

Gary Player – #5 in Bob’s top 10 golfers of all time

Gary Player

 

http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/dam/assets/120817044806-gary-playerbritish-open-1968-horizontal-gallery.jpg

Player is one of 5 men to win the grand slam.  9 times a major champion and golf’s first world traveler—coming from South Africa and before jet travel was the norm –  he came to America and simply won! He won over 165 tournaments worldwide believed to be the most ever won by any man or woman ever.

Player revolutionized fitness in the sport of golf where nearly all great players in today’s game spend time in the gym.  He was a “gym rat” before anyone believed in it. He is a true pioneer and champion.

Did you know Gary uses Twitter?

Who are your top 10 players?

Sam Snead takes #6 in Bob’s top 10 golfers of all time

Sam Snead.

With 82 PGA Tour events won, how could he not make this countdown?

http://i.cdn.turner.com/dr/golf/www/release/sites/default/files/article_images/sam-snead-si-cover_299x391_0.jpg

Coming it at #6, Sam Snead, the winner of 82 PGA Tour events, won every major title except the U.S. Open. That did not keep him off our top ten list—no way as Snead not only won 82 events he was competitive into his 60’s coming in 3rd in the PGA Championship at the age of 63.

Remarkable longevity and because of that longevity he is one of sports greatest athletes not just golf.

Did you miss the rest of the top 10 so far? Here they are: 10, 9, 8, 7.

Who makes it into your top 10?

It was Phil’s day, and quietly, Woody’s day, too.

What a day of golf Sunday July 21, 2013.  It will be remembered for the almost Herculean performance from Phil Mickelson finally winning the British Open a championship.

http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/Sports/ap/201307211129413944027
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/golf–lateral-hazard–phil-mickelson-s-legacy-grows-with-british-open-victory-030723530.html

In his own words, he never fully believed he could win.  Phil’s brilliant shot making and superb putting overcame a 5 shot deficit at the outset of the final round to overtake Masters Champ Adam Scott and third round leader Lee Westwood.  For Westwood, it was another bitter ending to a major—this makes a career record for the Englishman of 0-62 in the majors—he contends and falters-I do hope one day he breaks through and finally wins one—he in simply too good of a ball striker to end a career winless in majors—maybe next month at Oak Hill.

As for Scott, he failed last year, and again, this year, at The Open.  He does have the Masters on his resume, but losing majors when you have the lead is always a bitter pill to swallow.  As for Mickelson, only one major eludes him the U.S. Open—a tournament he has come in second a record 6 times.  Pinehurst next year could be the time to conquer golf’s grand slam.

You may recall what we mentioned in last week’s blog that it would take a player who had already been in the major winners circle to win at Muirfield and it did—as Phil pointed out, it was probably the best pure round of golf he had ever played! To watch him share the moment with his family, well, that is why Phil is so endeared to the public—he is American golf’s man of the people.  Congrats to Philly!

On a steamy day inMississippi,a veteran of nearly 20 years on tour, Woody Austin, regainedPGATour status with a dramatic win at the Sanderson’s Farm Championship in a 3-way playoff with Cameron Beckman and Daniel Summerhays.   Austin, who is 49 had only Web.com status and without this win, he would be back on the minor league tour, instead he is headed to the Canadian Open, ThePGAnext month and the tournament of champions next January plus a two year fully exempt status on thePGATour. An emotionalAustin, not unlike Mickelson, has no problem showing his emotions to us all—we can relate to Woody who, in his quest to get on the tour, was a public school teacher and a bank teller-well now he can visit the teller with his $540,000 first place check.  So happy for you, too, Woody, on this mid summer victory!

 What a journey, what a victory for two men one who wasn’t sure he could win a certain major and the other who wasn’t sure he could win again—period.  It is a great day in golf. July 21st, 2013.

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Arnold Palmer created an American Invasion as #7 in Bob’s top 10 golfers of all time

7. Arnold Palmer

Arnold Palmer

The winner of 7 major championships and a total of 62 PGA Tour events Palmer made golf fashionable to play and watch on television.  He came along when TV and golf were not yet united as they are today.  His charisma and charm made him a universally loved player—simply stated everyone adored Arnold Palmer.  He transcended generations and was America’s golfing hero.  In addition he revitalized the British Open as Americans had virtually stopped going over to the event but Palmer created an American invasion starting in 1960 that continues today.

It is Open Championship Week

British Open week ( I still like to call it the British Open although the name was officially changed to The Open Championship in 2011, o.k. I succumb, it’s simply The Open).

The year’s 3rd major is here and it is being contested at one of the world’s greatest golf courses—the venerable Muirfield Golf Links in Gullane, East Lothian, Scotland.  This will be the 16th time The Open Championship has been played at Muirfield and it promises to produce a truly superior major champion.  The past champions at Muirfield is a virtual golf’s who’s who—including H.H. Hilton, Harry Vardon, James Braid, Ted Ray, Walter Hagen, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Tom Watson, Nick Faldo and  the last time the Open championship was contested at Muirfield Ernie Els in 2002.

I look for some of the same this week—primed and ready is Phil Mickelson fast coming off his victory last week at the Scottish Open, a rested Tiger Woods, Masters Champ Adam Scott, and the rest of the world’s greats a list too long to complete here but the cast of characters is formidable. I do not foresee a relative unknown winning here at Muirfield—the winner will not only have to control his nerves but also the many types of differing shots required to conquer Muirfield.—no I indeed believe the winner will be a man who has already won a major championship.

Muirfield requires the golfer to be able to play right to left, left to right, high shots, low shots against the wind, with the wind, across the wind you name it and Muirfield requires it!  The front nine goes in a clockwise direction and the incoming nine goes in a counter clockwise direction making the shots completely different. The winner will truly be the Champion Golfer for the year 2013!

You may recall I did pick Justin Rose to win the U.S .Open at Merion last month so here goes on my 3 picks to take home the Claret Jug:

Charl Schwartzel, Phil Mickelson and Graeme McDowell.  All past major champions and all primed to win the world’s oldest tournament dating back to 1860 atPrestwickwon by the great Willie Park Sr.

I can’t wait until Thursday morning when the distinctive voice of the legendary starter Ivor Robson announces the names of the players on hole number 1 and the contest is on.