Sunday, September 1, 2013

Club pros compete with best at PGA Championship


Club pros compete with best at PGA Championship


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Rod Perry hits off the 11th tee during a practice round for the PGA Championship golf tournament at Oak Hill Country Club, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013, in Pittsford, N.Y. (AP Photo/Charles Riedel)
RACHEL COHEN (AP Sports Writer) August 7, 2013AP - Sports








PITTSFORD, N.Y. (AP) -- Last time Rob Labritz checked, the YouTube video of the shot of his golfing life had more than 7,000 views.

He isn't sure that quite counts as viral, but the way he qualified for his fourth PGA Championship has Labritz seeing good omens everywhere.

Labritz is one of the PGA professionals who earned spots this week at Oak Hill by finishing in the top 20 at their national championship in Oregon in late June. He and three others were competing in a playoff for the last spot when he holed a wedge shot from 95 yards.

His wife is eight months' pregnant, his mother was declared cancer-free just last week, so why shouldn't he set a goal for a top-15 finish?

''I just want to keep riding the wave,'' Labritz said Wednesday, a day before teeing off in the first group of the PGA Championship.

For these 20 pros, golf is their job, but they often work on everything but their game. Rod Perry, who won this year's PGA Professional National Championship, estimates he maybe plays once a week.

''I might play on a Friday afternoon with one of the member's groups, or I might play in a section event maybe on a Monday or something like that,'' said the 39-year-old Perry, the head pro at Crane Lakes in Port Orange, Fla. ''But I know there was a couple stints over the winter where two or three weeks would go by and I wouldn't play at all.''

Mike Small's job carries different demands but the same conundrum - a lot of time around the course but not much playing. He's the men's golf coach at Illinois, the runner-up at this year's NCAA Championships.

Small played a practice round Wednesday with former Illini teammate Steve Stricker and one of his former players, Luke Guthrie.

Small has a much longer playing resume than many of his competitors in Oregon - he was on the PGA Tourin the 1990s and is in his ninth PGA Championship and 12th major. He was the low PGA pro in 2007 and '11.

Still, this is just Small's third tournament of the year as a player. He'd like to practice more with his Illini, but it often just doesn't work out.

Since qualifying in late June, he's held two camps and hit the road for three recruiting trips.


However rare, entering tournaments is worth it. The competition. The break from the routine of the job. The chance to learn from the best players and toughest courses.

''It's part of who I am,'' Small said.

Oh, and it doesn't hurt in recruiting.

''It differentiates us from other teams. Each program has its own niche, and this is ours,'' he said, an orange ''I'' plastered on his cap, shirt and bag.

Labritz generally plays in 10-15 events a year. The owners and members at GlenArbor in Bedford Hills, N.Y., about 45 miles north of New York City, enjoy seeing him representing the club well.

''I've got probably one of the best jobs on the planet,'' he said. ''They allow me to play and practice as much as I feel I need to keep my game at the highest level.''

But a berth in the PGA Championship looked unlikely on the second playoff hole June 26. Six players had started the playoff for three spots, and two qualified with birdies on the first hole.

Labritz then found himself with a bad lie when his tee shot landed in a fairway bunker. He had to punch out while the other three played onto the green on the par-4 11th at Sunriver.

He wound up being the only player to birdie the hole. Labritz celebrated with a swinging fist pump and leaping high-five, a clip that made its way onto ESPN.

Labritz received thousands of emails of congratulations and admiration through his website, many from people he'd never met.

The only club pro to make the cut at the 2010 PGA Championship at Whistling Straits, this acknowledged late bloomer is confident he can compete this week at age 42. He played a practice round Tuesday with Dustin Johnson, Keegan Bradley and Jason Dufner.

''You know what?'' Labritz said. ''There wasn't any difference.''

Local Knowledge with Oak Hill legend Craig Harmon


Local Knowledge with Oak Hill legend Craig Harmon

PGA.COM August 7, 2013







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Craig Harmon spent some time with defending PGA Champion Rory McIlroy during Media Day at Oak Hill in …


By T.J. Auclair, PGA.com

PGA Championship week is upon us and it's taking place at a very special and historic venue -- Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, N.Y.

Opened in 1901, Oak Hill was designed by legendary architect Donald Ross. Upon the completion of the 2008 Senior PGA Championship, Oak Hill became the only club in the United States to have hosted all six of the men's major championships that move around the country. It also hosted the 1995 Ryder Cup.

Craig Harmon -- brother to Butch, son to Claude (the 1948 Masters champion) -- has been the PGA Head Professional at Oak Hill for 41 years and counting. Craig Harmon, the 2005 PGA Professional of the Year -- the highest honor bestowed by The PGA of America on a PGA Professional -- knows Oak Hill like the back of his hand.

Recently we had a chance to chat with Harmon about Oak Hill and his legendary golf family, which also includes renowned instructors/brothers Billy and Dick (who passed away in 2006).

Craig Harmon has been around the game his entire life and had some amazing stories to tell.

PGA.com: There's no doubt that the game has meant a lot to the Harmon family. So many great moments in the game's history seem to have a tie to the Harmon family, be it your father's Masters win in 1948, Butch's success as a top instructor, etc. Can you talk a little about the Harmon family's connection to golf?

Harmon: Well, you know, back in the day, my dad was the big guy. He was the Masters Champion and to me the greatest club professional of all time and to be growing up around him and to be at Winged Foot and sit at the big table with Tommy Armour and Jackie Burke, Dave Marr ... to say we got a head start on golf is a tremendous understatement. We got just a tremendous heritage from our dad.

Now, of course, my brother Butch is the No. 1 guy in the world, and he's getting tired of being introduced as Claude Harmon's son, but I think we are getting more tired of being introduced as Butch Harmon's brother!

Now as a family, when we do get together we marvel at what we have accomplished in a nice way. We don't get together that often. When my brother (Dick) was alive, he was an outstanding PGA professional and we kind of look back on our origins; Dick and I were the same; Billy and Butch were the same. Billy and Butch were the two rebels of the family. Dick and I were more the stalwarts and straight-arrow guys.

PGA.com: So Butch was a rebel? How so?

Harmon: There are so many great stories about Butch. He went to the University of Houston on a four-year golf scholarship, playing his qualifying round in 100-degree weather, and Butch had the worst temper of all time.

It was not possible for anybody to have a worse temper than Butch. And basically, he got fed up with golf after being there for a week. He broke all his clubs. My dad gave him the irons he got his third-place finish in the U.S. Open with in 1959. Butch threw them in a lake and joined the Army. He left, went to California and joined the army. So a couple weeks go by and my dad has not heard from Butch and he calls him and says, "Butch, what are you doing?" He says, "I quit University of Houston, couldn't take it any longer. Broke all the clubs and threw them in the lake and joined the Army."

True statement, you talk about our heritage, my dad said: "Well, the least you could have done was join the Navy and get my [expletive] clubs out of the lake!"

That's a true story, and Butch will tell you that, too. And he had tremendous humor. That's how he handled a problem in life, and that's how he handled stress in situations. That's how we all came together, and like I said, if we didn't have golf, we didn't know what we were going to do anyway. But we had a good head start, I guess, and then carried the ball from there.

PGA.com: What a great story. How about you? Is there a funny story about you and your dad?

Harmon: Well, when I got the job at Oak Hill, I remember my dad coming up and said I never would have gotten the job if my name was Craig Schultz, and he might be right there, but I kept it as Craig Harmon.

And then, I remember I was playing in the 1980 PGA Championship here at Oak Hill. I lagged my putt down on the last hole and to break 90. I shot 89 with a 10 footer. I said, "I'm not going to shoot 90."


And I had to go call my dad and tell him what I shot. He was living in Florida at the time. I call him and just did not want to make this call.

"Hey, Pop."

He goes, "What did you shoot?"

It wasn't, "how are you, Craig"; it was, "what did you shoot?"

I said, "I shot 89. Pretty ticked off." He goes, "Man, that's great."

I go, "What do you mean, that's great?"

"Everybody down here bet me you couldn't break 90."

PGA.com: Craig, this will be the 11th major championship held Oak Hill, the third PGA Championship. Jack Nicklaus won the PGA there in 1980 and Shaun Micheel won in 2003. It's one of the great tests in American golf. In your opinion, having been there such a long time, why has the golf course held up so well as technology has changed and players have gotten stronger, the golf course is still so good; why is that?

Harmon: Well, it's one of the all-time great driving courses, the fairways are anywhere from 16-24 yards wide. They don't narrow it down for a major championship. We play it that way all the time.

We don't play with the high rough that's going to be there. If you hit a drive off line or if you're in the rough, it's not like at Doral where there are no trees in your way. You have these huge trees in your way, so there's a huge difference between hitting a shot out of the rough with no trees than one with trees.

I'll give you an interesting stat because I don't know how the course has held up over the test of time, other than it's a phenomenal driving course. In 1968, I have the stats for driving distance. The average driving in the 1968 U.S. Open at Oak Hill was 246 yards; Lee Trevino won the event at 244. Nicklaus was the longest hitter at 271 in the field. Now there will be nobody in the field who hits it 271.That would be too short and the course back then played about 6,900 yards long.

So the players today, they hit the same shots that Jack Nicklaus hit into the greens, as a comparison, the course will be about 8,300 yards long. Over that period of time, we have only had 10 people break par in all of the medal play championships at Oak Hill -- not 10 in one tournament, 10 total.

The course record is 6 under par, which is not a lot under par having all these great players. So you would have to say the course has stood the test of time, even though the length has changed. They have not been able to make the course that much longer, probably 20 yards longer now than in 1968.

But definitely the driving is quite unique. The greens are benign looking and just don't break like people think, so you have to have some subtleties on the greens and challenge them. So they are not overly undulating, but there is something about them where you think they are going to break and it just doesn't.

PGA.com: Last thing for you, Craig and it's about Butch and his star pupil, Phil Mickelson. Phil will enter thePGA as the latest major champion having just captured the Open at Muirfield. Phil has said in the past that he felt the Open Championship was the least likely of majors for him to win because of the style of golf the courses demand over there. Then, in a two-week stretch, he wins on two links courses -- the Scottish Open at Castle Stuart and the Open at Muirfield. What suddenly changed?

Harmon: Well, first of all, you never count Phil out of anything. He is the most resilient golfer I've ever seen in my lifetime. It's not possible for someone who drives the ball like he does to have six runner-up finishes in the U.S. Open. You would never think that would be possible. He's not a fairway-hitting machine, and yet he has. Nobody has finished runner up in the U.S. Open more than that, and for him to come back from his U.S. Open, which was just devastating to him, Butch said he's never seen him that disconsolate in his life.

And to come back and win The Open, there must have been something just about playing golf a little bit differently that he embraced, playing it on the ground versus in the air. And I know Butch was encouraging his feel for things, his vision for things: Have fun with this course; you can do this type of stuff. Look at it differently; it's not just launch it in the air. It very much looked like Phil did that.

This was one of the coolest victories I've ever seen, really to have him come down the stretch and birdie four out of the last six in a major championship, where the course was so difficult. But I think he was encouraged. He's always creative. He said, let's go create on the ground, not in the sky. He's always been creative in the sky, and I think he embraced the ground all week. He had a great ball-striking week.

Tiger Woods vs. Jack Nicklaus: Settling Who Is the Best of All Time


Tiger Woods vs. Jack Nicklaus: Settling Who Is the Best of All Time

Ryan Ballengee August 7, 2013










COMMENTARY | Who is the greatest golfer of all time: Tiger Woods or Jack Nicklaus?

Now seems like a good time to reinvigorate the debate. You might be wondering, Ryan, why would you bring that up now, before the PGA Championship?

Well, for a very good reason. This week is the last major in Woods' 38th year. His birthday is Dec. 30. What better time, then, to reevaluate where the current world No. 1 stands against the Golden Bear?

It would seem like this should be a short piece. The scoreboard reads: Jack 18, Tiger 14. Game over.

I submit, however, that there's way more to consider in declaring the G.O.A.T. (greatest of all time) than wins. After all, even the best golfers in history lost almost 75 percent of their starts. It's impossible, then, to disregard what a player does almost three quarters of the time.

So, then, here's a more nuanced rubric to determine golf's ultimate champion.

We'll compare Tiger and Jack (or is it Jack and Tiger?) as they both stand just before through the last PGA Championship before they turned 38.

For simplicity's sake, we'll award a single point for each win, splitting the point for a tie, and add them up at the end.

Majors won: Jack Nicklaus 14, Tiger Woods 14.

Nicklaus won four majors after 1977: the '78 Open Championship, the U.S. Open and PGA Championship in 1980 and, of course, the '86 Masters.

Average margin of major victory: Tiger Woods 4.14 strokes, Jack Nicklaus 2.29 strokes.

The combined margin of three of the first four majors Tiger has won is greater than the number of strokes by which Jack won all 14 of his majors to this point in his career.

Number of 54-hole leads in a major: Tiger Woods 14 (14/15), Jack Nicklaus 10 (10/12).

Final-round comebacks to win a major: Jack Nicklaus 6, Tiger Woods 0.

Top 3 finishes in majors: Jack Nicklaus 37, Tiger Woods 24.

PGA Tour wins: Tiger Woods 79 (and counting), Jack Nicklaus 64.

PGA Tour win percentage: Tiger Woods 25.99%, Jack Nicklaus 19.39%.

Top 3 finishes in PGA Tour events: Jack Nicklaus 136, Tiger Woods 126.

PGA Tour top 3 percentage: Tiger Woods 41.45%, Jack Nicklaus 41.21%.


The Players Championship titles: Jack Nicklaus 2, Tiger Woods 2.

Jack won his last Players in 1978. The event began in 1974, meaning Nicklaus won three of the first five Players ever contested. It didn't move to TPC Sawgrass, however, until 1982.

PGA Tour money list titles: Tiger Woods 9 (likely 10 after this season), Jack Nicklaus 8.

Vardon trophies (awarded to player with lowest scoring average): Tiger Woods 8, Jack Nicklaus 0*.

*Turns out that Jack Nicklaus rarely played the then-required 80 rounds to qualify for the award. If the modern standard of 60 rounds (equal to playing the PGA Tour minimum of 15 events to remain a member), then Jack would have won eight Vardon trophies.

Career PGA Tour scoring average: Tiger Woods 69.39, Jack Nicklaus 70.29

Final count: Tiger Woods 8.5, Jack Nicklaus 4.5.

If you've made it this far and either (a) hate Tiger Woods or (b) swear loyalty to Jack Nicklaus, then you're wondering how on earth I could count major wins the same as all of these other categories. Fine.

Even if Jack gets an extra point for every major Tiger doesn't have, Woods still ties him. Obviously, the Woods advantage would fall apart the more emphasis put on winning majors.

Golf isn't that simple, and a legacy isn't that easy to define.

Jack Nicklaus finished on the medal stand in a major an incredible 45 times. That's almost twice as many as Tiger, though Jack's last stand in a major was still nearly nine years away from the end of the 1977 season.

Woods, though, has been more dominant in his major wins. He often took them in style, rarely leaving much in doubt. If Woods' major-championship approach didn't evolve into a more conservative style, he likely would have proven even more dominant than his record already suggests.

Then again, Jack has been -- far and away -- better at charging on Sunday than Tiger has in majors.Nicklaus won nearly half of his 14 majors through 1977 by coming from behind. Woods has never done that.

Jack holds the edge in the majors, but Tiger is by far the best player in PGA Tour history. He wins more often and scores better than Jack by considerable margins.

There is one ding, however, in Woods' PGA Tour win record. Of Tiger Woods' 79 PGA Tour wins, 41 have come on just six venues: eight wins at Firestone C.C., Torrey Pines and Bay Hill, with another handful at Muirfield Village and a quartet at Augusta National and Doral, respectively.

That still leaves Tiger with 38 wins at other courses -- an outstanding career that almost any golfer would take.

Of course, this is just one prism through which to view two incredible careers. But the numbers don't lie: Tiger has been better than Jack.



Ryan Ballengee is a Washington, D.C.-based golf writer. His work has appeared on multiple digital outlets, including NBC Sports and Golf Channel. Follow him on Twitter @RyanBallengee.