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11 Golfers Who Served In The Military

1. Billy Hurley III

A 2004 Navy graduate, Hurley was one of the top amateurs in the country, competing for the winning American squad in the 2005 Walker Cup. Hurley served five years after graduation, including a tour of duty in the Persian Gulf. Prior to his win at Congressional, Hurley had seven career top 10s on the PGA Tour.

2. Sang-Moon Bae

Sang-Moon Bae played admirably in last year’s Presidents Cup in his home country of South Korea. The event marked Bae’s last appearance before entering into a two-year stint with the South Korean military, as stipulated by the country of all men between the ages of 18-34.

3. Lloyd Mangrum

Mangrum was a three-time winner on tour when he went into World War II service. He was offered a job as club professional at a military base but declined. He was awarded two Purple Hearts, and was wounded at the Battle of the Bulge. When he returned from duty, Mangrum won the 1946 U.S. Open, and would go on to capture the Vardon Trophy twice.

4. Arnold Palmer

The golfer who directed Arnie’s Army was actually a man of the sea. Following the death of his best friend at Wake Forest, Palmer was so overcome with emotion that he left college to enlist in the Coast Guard. Palmer served three years before returning to school. “I have to say that my three years in the Coast Guard was three years that I value very highly,” Palmer said upon receiving a military honor in 2008.

5. Bobby Jones

Though he was in his 40s at the time of conflict, Jones enlisted in World War II. Initially working in aerial map analysis, Jones insisted on a more action-based engagement, and specialized in prisoner interrogation. Jones was on the front lines at Normandy, with his unit receiving heavy fire.

6. Lee Trevino

Trevino was a gunner for four years in the Marines. “The Marine Corps was the greatest thing that ever happened to me,” Trevino told Jamie Diaz in 2009. “If they told me I had to go back in the Marines now, hell, I’d love it.”

7. Herman Keiser

The Missouri Mortician, who pulled off one of the biggest Masters upsets by defeating Ben Hogan in 1946, served aboard the USS Cincinnati in World War II.

8. Larry Nelson

It was through the Army that Nelson was introduced to golf. While in the infantry in Vietnam, a fellow soldier piqued Nelson’s curiosity in the game. When he returned to America, Nelson learned the sport through Ben Hogan’s “Five Lessons” book. Despite picking up the game at age 22, Nelson would go on to win three majors.

9. Orville Moody

Moody served in the U.S. Army for 14 years, overseeing the development and maintenance of military golf courses around the world, while also teaching fellow servicemen. Nicknamed “Sarge,” Moody won the 1969 U.S. Open.

10. Ben Hogan

The leading money winner from 1940 to 1942, Hogan was drafted in 1943, initially starting as a physical trainer before becoming a flight instructor. In his first year back, Hogan again topped the tour’s money order.

11. K.J. Choi

If Bae needs a role model, Choi would be the worthy target. Serving as a rifleman in the South Korean military, Choi would practice his golf on days off.
Source: golfdigest.com
November 12, 2018/by Teesnap Developer
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November 7, 2018/by Teesnap Developer
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Justin Rose Returns to World No. 1

There was more than a little bit of stumbling and fumbling along the way, but Justin Rose eventually claimed the Turkish Airlines Open title in a playoff with Li Haotong. The pair, two-thirds of the final group on the final day, had earlier tied on 17 under par over four rounds at the Regnum Carya Golf & Spa Resort on Turkey’s southern shore.

Which sounds pretty good only until a wee bit more detailed look at the leader board reveals Rose reached 19 under par after 70 holes. And that both men were 18 under on the 72nd tee. In other words, Rose, the defending champion and needing a win to get back to World No. 1, finished bogey-bogey; Li contented himself with a dropped shot at the last, taking four shots to get down from just under 150 yards. Pretty this was not.

And it got worse.

After watching Rose two-putt for par from roughly 25 feet on their second visit to the 18th green, Li settled down over his 12-footer for birdie and what would have been his third European Tour victory. Would have been. Never online, the ball missed low and left and, not insignificantly as things turned out, ran maybe a yard past. The second putt was … how to put this … awful. Really awful, the ball missing the cup by maybe an inch on the right.

The sad thing was, over their first 16 holes, both men had put on a terrific display. Yes, each rode his luck at times, but the general standard gave no hint of the carnage that was to follow. Li’s pars at the seventh and eighth holes had more to do with good luck than good judgement. Rose’s pitch to the par-5 12th was headed well past until it struck the pin and stopped a few feet away. And one hole later his tee shot was headed for oblivion in the right trees until it hit an unfortunate individual on the left knee (yes, Rose did shout “fore!”).

Otherwise, each played some terrific stuff. Li’s highlight was a 3-wood to the par-5 15th green that pulled to a halt no more than two-feet away, the resulting eagle hauling the Chinese player into a tie for the lead on 18 under par.

Rose was his usual clinical self—at least until his last two holes in regulation. Not one bogey and five birdies dotted his card to that point.

“There were moments out there where it looked like both of us weren’t holding our nerve very well,” said Rose, who picked up €1,166,660 for what was the first successful defense of a title in his career. He also moved to third in a Race to Dubai, although he cannot win that year-long race to go with his FedEx Cup title on the PGA Tour. For reasons he was loathe to reveal—“they will become apparent next year”—Rose said rather mysteriously that he will not be playing in the season-ending DP World Tour Championship in two weeks.

“But this was a fun battle overall,” he continued. “And obviously I do have to spare a thought for Haotong. That was a tough way to finish. He hit a positive putt to try and win, but that 18th green is very tough. Getting back to No. 1 is something to be proud of. It doesn’t make you one under par on the first tee the next time you play, but it’s something to be proud of for sure.”

As for Li, who had started the day with a three-shot edge over Rose, even his broken English was up to the task of conveying exactly his understandable disappointment.

“It is a tough day for me,” said the 23-year old, who memorably outdueled Rory McIlroy down the stretch to win the Dubai Desert Classic in January. “I think I played well the whole week, but didn’t hole a few putts on the last and that was it.”

A little further down the leader board there were signs of redemption for two Grand Slam champions whose recent play has been more minor than major. Former U.S. Open and PGA champion Martin Kaymer’s closing 66, five under par and bogey-free, lifted the German into a tie for fifth alongside Lucas Bjerregaard of Denmark, one shot head of Danny Willett.

“I played very well,” confirmed Kaymer, who dropped only two shots all week. “I could have made a few more putts here and there, but the game was really spot on this week. I think I gave myself enough chances, and I needed a good finish to get into (the season ending DP World Tour Championship) in Dubai. Hopefully that was enough. But I’m really looking forward to playing next week [when the European Tour plays its next playoff event in his native South Africa]. I’m very close.”

Former Masters champion Willett had less to say about his T-7 finish, but the Englishman, one of 20 in the 78-man field, must have been encouraged by his play after so long in the doldrums. In recording his third top-10 of the season and only his fifth on the European Tour since winning at Augusta in 2016, the 31-year-old Yorkshireman hit an array of splendid shots. As with Kaymer, only his putting let him down over the closing holes.

Which was a familiar tale at the end of an ultimately strange day.

Source: golfdigest.com

November 6, 2018/by Teesnap Developer
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