GOLF WRITER // GENERAL EDITORIAL SPECIALIST
Cherry+Hills+1960+U.S.+Open.jpg

This Day in Golf History

A page that will list golf history, and the people and events that comprise it in the form of This Day in Golf or This Week in Golf.

This Day in Golf History: March 23

On this date in 1981, Raymond Floyd won the Players Championship (The TPC) at Sawgrass Country Club, beating Curtis Strange and Barry Jaeckel on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff. The tournament finished on a Monday due to rain.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 21

On this date in 1982, Jerry Pate won the first Players Championship played at the Stadium Course and celebrated by jumping into the 18th hole water hazard, pulling commissioner Deane Beman and architect Pete Dye in with him.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 20

Harry Vardon, the golfer from Jersey, an island in the Channel Islands, died on this date in 1937 at age 66. For more than a century, Vardon has been the leading winner of the Open Championship with six victories. He also won the 1900 U.S. Open.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 17

The great amateur Grand Slam champion of 1930 Bobby Jones was born on St. Patrick’s Day in 1902, also the same year Gene Sarazen was born. Jones, of course, was also the Georgia native who originated Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters Tournament.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 16

On this date in 1954, Hollis Stacy was born in Savannah, Georgia, and went onto a World Golf Hall of Fame career, the main feature being three victories in the U.S. Open. In her youth she won three U.S. Girls’ Juniors.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 15

On this date in 1953, the great and personable Patty Berg won the LPGA Titleholders Championship at the Augusta Country Club, winning for the fifth time, by nine shots over Betsy Rawls.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 14

A pair of single major winners were born on this date: 1963 Open champion Bob Charles, in New Zealand, in 1936, and 1968 Masters champion Bob Goalby in Belleville, Illinois, in 1929.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 13

The PGA Tour is in its Florida swing, this weekend at The Players Ch. at Ponte Vedra Beach. A University of Florida golfer, Andy Bean, was born on this date in 1953 in Lafayette, Georgia. Four of Bean’s 11 PGA Tour victories were won in Florida, including Doral three times.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 12

On this date in 1961, Mickey Wright won the Miami Open by six shots over Louise Suggs. It was part of a unique start to the LPGA season where Suggs and Wright traded off winning the first seven events of the year. Suggs won five times and Wright twice.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 10

Sandra Palmer, who played during Arnold Palmer’s productive years, was born on this date in 1943 in Fort Worth, Texas. She was often confused with being kin to Arnold but was not. She was slight in height at just 5-2 but was accurate with her fairways clubs and was good enough to win the 1975 U.S. Open, the same year she was LPGA Tour Player of the Year and leading money winner.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 9

A two-time U.S. Open winner who doesn’t get much respect was born on this date in 1950 in Thorp, Wisconsin. Andy North won the National Open in 1978 and 1985, but only won one other tour event. He now does commentary for ESPN.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 8

Raymond Floyd won the Doral Open in Miami on this date in 1992, setting up a first on the PGA Tour. After he turned 50 in early September later that year, he won the senior tour's GTE North Classic, becoming the first player to win on both tours in the same year.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 7

On this date in 1959, Tom Lehman was born in Austin, Minnesota. After attending the University of Minnesota, Lehman turned pro in 1982. He struggled on the mini tours before becoming a solid performer on the PGA Tour. He won the Open Championship in 1996 for his biggest victory.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 6

On this date in 1972, Jack Nicklaus won the rain-delayed Doral-Eastern Open on the Blue Monster Course at Doral by two over Lee Trevino and Bob Rosburg. Jack, then 32, picked up $30,000, which put him at $1,477,200.86 for his career, going ahead of Arnold Palmer’s total of $1,471,226.83. Palmer, 42, did not play at Doral and had been the all-time leader for about a decade.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 5

Dale Douglass was a minor figure on the PGA Tour, no disrespect intended. He was born on this date in 1936 in Wewoka, Oklahoma, and won three PGA events. But Douglass did a major deal as a senior player. He won the 1986 U.S. Senior Open and the lifetime exemption allowed him to take a couple longevity records away from Arnold Palmer. Arnie had played in 25 straight U.S. Senior Opens, with one victory in 1981. When he stopped in 2005 he held all the longevity records but Douglass overtook him when he stopped playing in 2011. Douglass has most appearances with 26 to Arnie’s 25 and most consecutive starts with 26 to 25.

Cliff Schrock
This Day in Golf History: March 4

On this week of the Arnold Palmer Invitational, today we highlight Peter Jacobsen, who was born on this date in 1954 in Portland, Oregon. Jacobsen won not quite 10 times on the PGA Tour, but in Arnie’s life, he’s known as The King’s most popular partner. The two played as a team 23 times, most of anyone Arnold teamed with. Sadly, they never won the competition.

Cliff Schrock