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Posted 4/14/03 9:57 am ET




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HOLE PAR YARDS
1 4 435
2 5 575
3 4 350
4 3 205
5 4 455
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9 4 460

Out 36 3,620

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In 36 3,650
Total 72 7,270
 

Golf's greatest years

Posted: Saturday March 31, 2001 10:17 PM
Updated: Tuesday March 26, 2002 6:22 PM

By John Boyette
The Augusta Chronicle

The task is virtually impossible.

 
History of golf
Golf traces its origins to Scotland in the 15th century, but it was more than 400 years later before the first major championship was held. Here is a look at the highlights of the majors and the top players:
Year  Event 
1860  First British Open held at Prestwick, Scotland. 
1872  Young Tom Morris wins his fourth and final British Open. His father, Tom Morris Sr., also won four British Opens. 
1875  Willie Park, winner of the first British Open, wins for the fourth time in the event. 
1888  St. Andrew's, the first permanent golf club in the United States, is established in Yonkers, N.Y. 
1895  First U.S. Open held at Newport, R.I. 
1901  Willie Anderson wins the first of four U.S. Opens he will win in a five-year span. 
1913  American amateur Francis Ouimet defeats British professionals Harry Vardon and Ted Ray in a playoff at the U.S. Open. 
1916  First PGA Championship held at Bronxville, N.Y. 
1922  Gene Sarazen wins the U.S. Open and the PGA Championship. He later adds victories in the British Open and Masters to complete the career grand slam of professional majors. 
1924  Walter Hagen wins the first of his four consecutive PGA Championships. 
1930  Bobby Jones wins the Grand Slam, capturing in succession the British Amateur, British Open, U.S. Open and U.S. Amateur. 
1933  Paul Runyan is victorious in nine tournaments. 
1934  First Masters held at Augusta National Golf Club. 
1945  Byron Nelson wins 18 victories on the PGA Tour, including 11 in a row. 
1946  Ben Hogan wins 13 tournaments. 
1949  Sam Snead counts the Masters and PGA Championship among his six victories. A year later, he wins 11 times. 
1953  Four years after a near-fatal car accident, Ben Hogan wins the Masters, U.S. Open and British Open. He completes the career grand slam. 
1960  Arnold Palmer wins the Masters and U.S. Open, along with six other events. His bid for a third straight victory in a major ends at the British, where he comes in second by one shot. 
1962  Jack Nicklaus defeats Arnold Palmer in a playoff for the U.S. Open. Four years later he completes the career grand slam. 
1965  Gary Player wins the U.S. Open, completing the career grand slam. 
1971  Lee Trevino captures U.S. Open, British Open and Canadian Open. 
1972  Jack Nicklaus wins the Masters and U.S. Open and loses the British Open by a single stroke. 
1974  Johnny Miller wins eight times on the PGA Tour. 
1983  Tom Watson claims victory in his fifth British Open. 
1986  Jack Nicklaus comes from behind to win his sixth Masters title at age 46. 
1990  Nick Faldo wins the Masters and British Open. 
1994  Nick Price wins the British Open and PGA Championship. 
1997  Tiger Woods breaks the 72-hole scoring record at the Masters with a total of 270. 
2000  Tiger Woods wins the U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship, setting scoring records in all three majors. At age 24, he is the youngest golfer to complete the career grand slam. 
 

First, sift through 140 years of golf history to sort out the very best years. Go back to the late 1800s when Brits and Scots dominated the game, revisit the early 20th century when Americans took center stage, and look now at what has become a global game.

Not the best players, not the best eras. Just the best year.

Not the good ones, like Sam Snead's 11 victories in 1950. Or Arnold Palmer hitching up his pants and winning the Masters and U.S. Open with last-day heroics in 1960. Or 1972, when Jack Nicklaus won two of the four majors in a single year, a feat matched by only a handful of golfers.

Only a select few years are left, to be sure. Bobby Jones' Grand Slam in 1930; Byron Nelson and his 11 consecutive victories, 18 overall, in 1945; Ben Hogan's Triple Crown year of 1953; and Tiger Woods' phenomenal 2000 campaign.

Not bad, not bad at all. Now choose the best.

Impossible? Maybe. But this is the kind of debate modern society lives for. One where everyone has an opinion, even if the past tends to get overlooked by the present.

Woods is the impetus for debate. His victories in the U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship a year ago opened the discussion. Now the defenders of Jones, Nelson and Hogan all want their say.

``It's a symptom of the modern age, when what happened five minutes ago is the greatest of all time,'' said Gary Van Sickle, golf writer for Sports Illustrated. ``We have no sense of history. We're in love with lists. We get caught up in the hype.''

The plot thickens when you factor in changes in equipment improvements, course maintenance, strength of field, travel and the media spotlight.

Each golfer, though, has a compelling case. Jones did what no one thought was possible, then promptly retired. Nelson set standards for winning streaks and victories in a year that may never be broken. Hogan proved that he could win the big ones on legs that ached from the pain caused by a severe car accident four years earlier. And Woods, well, he didn't just win three majors last year - he smashed, established or matched scoring records in all three.

Which of the following is the best year in golf?





View Results

``I don't think you can compare it,'' said Melanie Hauser, a columnist for Golfweb.com. ``To compare would not be fair. You just have to say they were the greatest of their era.''

Others aren't so sure.

That Jones ``called his shot'' gives him the edge, according to Jones expert Sidney L. Matthew.

``What Jones did stands light years apart from Nelson. Nelson did not set out to win 11 tournaments in a row; it simply happened,'' he said. ``Jones actually called his shot. Hogan, of course, won the three but his legs couldn't take him to the PGA. What he did was extraordinary, but he didn't win it all.

``On Tiger, I maintain he has to create a standard that he thinks will stand the test of time and announce it or at least establish it.''

Let the debate begin.


 
Related information
Stories
Golf's Greatest Years - Bobby Jones
Golf's Greatest Years - Byron Nelson
Golf's Greatest Years - Ben Hogan
Golf's Greatest Years - Tiger Woods
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