2020 Tokyo Olympics: Qualifying system for golf extended with Games moved to 2021

The golf qualifying system for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics was extended after the games were moved to 2021. Here’s what that means.

Tiger Woods was on the outside of making the U.S. golf team for the Tokyo Summer Olympics when the sport spectacle was postponed to 2021 due to the COVID-19 global pandemic.

But Woods has plenty of time to make the team.

The International Golf Federation and International Olympic Committee announced Wednesday an adjustment to the qualifying system that will accommodate the new dates. Golfers now will accumulate Olympic Golf Rankings (OGR) points through June 21, 2021, for the men, and June 28 for the women. Field sizes for both the men and women remain at 60 players.

The Tokyo 2021 Summer Games have been rescheduled for July 23-Aug. 8, with the golf competitions scheduled to be held at Kasumigaseki Country Club.

MEN’S GOLF: Latest standings for men’s golf teams
WOMEN’S GOLF: Latest standings for women’s golf team

The Olympics Golf Rankings are based on the men’s Official World Golf Rankings and the Women’s World Golf Rankings (WWGR). On March 20, however, both rankings were frozen and it has yet to be determined when each will resume.

The top 15 players at the end of the qualifying period will be eligible for the Olympics, with a limit of four players per country. After the top 15, there will be a maximum of two players per country that doesn’t already have two or more players in the top 15. The host country will be guaranteed a spot.

As it stands on the men’s side, the U.S. is one of three countries – the others being England and Australia – with two or more players ranked in the top 15.

The USA would be represented by No. 3 Brooks Koepka, No. 4 Justin Thomas, No. 5 Dustin Johnson and No. 7 Patrick Reed. Johnson, however, said he wouldn’t participate in the 2020 Summer Games, although he might change his mind after the postponement.

The next in line are No. 8 Patrick Cantlay, No. 9 Webb Simpson and then No. 11 Woods, who went to the 1984 Summer Games in Los Angeles when he was 8 and has spoken often of his desire to play in the Olympics. He’ll be 45 next summer so he’s eyeing it as his last shot of making the squad.

No. 12 Xander Schauffele and No. 13 Bryson DeChambeau are also ranked in the top 15. The USA is so loaded that No. 16 Tony Finau, No. 17 Matt Kuchar and No. 18 Gary Woodland are also within grasp of a berth.

Currently on the women’s side, the most notable name not eligible for the Olympics is Inbee Park, who won the gold medal at the 2016 Rio Games when golf returned after a 112-year absence. Park is at No. 11 in the rankings but sits as first alternate behind South Koreans Jin Young Ko, Sung Hyun Park, Sei Young Kim and Jeongeun Lee6.

The American team would be represented by Nelly Korda, Danielle Kang and Lexi Thompson. The host country, Japan, would also have three players: Nasa Hataoka, Hinako Shibuno and Ai Suzuki.

“The fairest and most equitable way to determine the qualifying athletes was to align the previous qualification system with these new dates,” said Antony Scanlon, IGF executive director. “The IGF will continue to work closely with the IOC and Tokyo 2020 to address the other areas that the postponement of the Games affects our sport and our athletes, to develop the necessary plans.”

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Golf equipment used by the top 10 players in the world

See the clubs used by PGA Tour stars such as Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas, Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson and Adam Scott in 2020.

If everything goes well, the PGA Tour might be able to resume the 2020 season in six weeks at the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.

The Official World Golf Ranking has been locked since the Players Championship was canceled in mid-March. Below is a list of clubs the golfers ranked in the top 10 on the OWGR had in their bags at the Players Championship, which should provide a good idea about what they will use when professional golf returns.

Tommy Fleetwood's irons
Tommy Fleetwood’s Srixon and TaylorMade irons (David Dusek/Golfweek)

10. Tommy Fleetwood

DRIVER: TaylorMade SIM (10.5 degrees), with Mitsubishi Kuro Kage S TiNi 70X shaft

FAIRWAY WOODS: TaylorMade M6 (15 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana DF 70 TX shaft; (18 degrees), with Mitsubishi Kuro Kage S TiNi 80TX shaft

IRONS: Srixon Z 785 (4, 5), TaylorMade P7TW (6-9), with Project X 6.5 shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM7 (48 degrees), TaylorMade Milled Grind 2 (52, 60 degrees), Titleist Vokey Design BV prototype TVD (56 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts

PUTTER: Odyssey White Hot Pro 3

BALL: Titleist Pro V1

PGA schedule update: WGC-FedEx St. Jude ‘moving forward’ with fans

Memphis’ premier golf tournament is still on and, for now, fans will be able to watch the world’s best golfers in person at TPC Southwind The World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational will take place July 30-Aug. 2, the PGA Tour announced …

Memphis’ premier golf tournament is still on and, for now, fans will be able to watch the world’s best golfers in person at TPC Southwind

The World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational will take place July 30-Aug. 2, the PGA Tour announced Thursday. It will now be scheduled a week before the PGA Championship’s rescheduled date.

“We’re moving forward that we will have a tournament with fans,” WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational executive director Darrell Smith told the Memphis Commercial-Appeal.

The tournament was moved back four weeks from its original date of July 2-5 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The PGA Tour said that its schedule would resume with its first four events closed to the public, starting with the Charles Schwab Challenge on June 11-14 in Fort Worth, Texas.
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In a statement, the Tour said it will “continually review available COVID-19-related protocols that could be implemented at PGA Tour events to ensure the health and well-being for all involved.”

Smith added that while he remains optimistic this year’s tournament will proceed in a similar fashion to last year, he will adjust to whatever guidelines are set by local and national health organizations.

“The key point is we are going to not do anything that’s not safe for our players, our sponsors, our volunteers and the community of Memphis,” Smith said. “We will be 100 percent aligned with local health department officials, CDC and World Health Organization as we move forward in the planning. We want to be responsible and thoughtful and transparent with all the different constituents as we move forward with the planning of the event.”

Last year, Brooks Koepka won by three strokes after being paired with Rory McIlroy for the final round.

Tickets remain on sale at the tournament website. Smith acknowledged the tournament would be willing to work with customers who already purchased tickets but can’t make it now due to the date change.

“It’s extremely exciting for us to know that while none of us know exactly what’s going to happen, this provides us four additional weeks of planning, four additional weeks of time,” Smith said, “and it puts us in the best position to put on a tournament that the city of Memphis and the entire surrounding area deserves.”

Evan Barnes is a staffer for the Memphis Commercial-Appeal, part of the USA Today Network. You can follow Evan Barnes on Twitter (@Evan_B) or by email at evan.barnes@commercialappeal.com

Tim Finchem, former PGA Tour commissioner, inducted into World Golf Hall of Fame

Former PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem will join Tiger Woods and Marion Hollins in the World Golf Hall of Fame.

Tim Finchem is going into the Hall.

The World Golf Hall of Fame announced Monday that the former PGA Tour commissioner will join Tiger Woods and Marion Hollins for enshrinement as part of the Class of 2021. Finchem, who served two years in the White House during the Jimmy Carter Administration as the deputy advisor to the president in the office of business affairs, became the PGA Tour’s third commissioner on June 1, 1994. He succeeded Deane Beman.

“It is the greatest honor to be elected to join golf’s most legendary players and contributors in the World Golf Hall of Fame,” Finchem said in a release. “This is a truly humbling moment, for which I am most grateful, and I look forward to celebrating with my family and friends throughout the game of golf and the many people who made this possible for me. I am especially proud to stand alongside one of the world’s all-time greats, Tiger Woods, in the Class of 2021 and look forward to what will be an exciting year ahead.”

RELATED: Marion Hollins earns Hall of Fame nod
MORE: Tiger Woods to join Class of 2021 in World Golf Hall of Fame

During Finchem’s 22-year reign, prize money went from $100 million on three tours in 1994 to more than $400 million on six tours when he retired in 2017. Under his governance, the FedExCup and the playoffs, the Presidents Cup and World Golf Championships were created. The PGA Tour and its tournaments raised more than $2 billion in charity contributions. Finchem also was instrumental in the formation of the First Tee and led efforts for golf’s return to the Olympics in 2016 in the Rio Summer Games after an absence of 112 years.

“Tim Finchem’s vision and leadership have made an indelible impact on the game of golf over the past 25 years,” PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said in a statement. Monahan succeeded Finchem on Jan. 1, 2017. “His enshrinement into the World Golf Hall of Fame will forever stand as a testament to his tireless dedication and contributions, but more importantly, so will the countless lives – whether those are the players on the PGA Tour and beyond, millions of First Tee participants, or charitable organizations around the world – impacted by his life’s work.”

The Class of 2021 was elected by the Hall of Fame’s Selection Committee, a 20-member panel co-chaired by Hall of Fame members Beth Daniel, Nick Price, Annika Sorenstam and Curtis Strange. The committee also includes media representatives and leaders of the major golf organizations.

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Tony Finau, ProjectProtect joins forces to produce 5 million hand-stitched masks

It’s an ambitious goal: Aligning 10,000 volunteers to sew more than five million medical-grade masks that can go to frontline health workers.

It’s an ambitious goal: Aligning 10,000 volunteers to sew more than 5 million medical-grade masks for frontline health workers in the battle against the global coronavirus pandemic.

That’s exactly why Tony Finau is joining forces with ProjectProtect.

In conjunction with Intermountain Healthcare, University of Utah Health and Latter-day Saint Charities in Utah, ProjectProtect aims to assist those who need personal protective equipment to combat COVID-19.

Organizers says it’s shaping up to be the largest Utah-based volunteer effort since the 2002 Olympic Winter Games.

“It means everything to us,” Finau said. “We wanted to get involved in the most meaningful way possible in our community. Our attention turned to helping those on the frontlines as I felt like the utmost importance at this time and during this pandemic. This ProjectProtect was the perfect initiative to support and to help, so it means everything for me and our foundation to be involved in this capacity to know that we are doing our part as a community, and putting our best foot forward as a community is a big deal.”

ProjectProtect also aims to produce more than 50,000 face shields as well as reusable isolation gowns.

ProjectProtect says: “The Relief Society organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has tapped into its network of thousands of volunteers from around the world.”

“My eyes have truly been opened to this whole pandemic, but to who the true heroes are during this time,” Finau said. “Not only today, but every day. Those on the frontlines are saving lives every single day, and we owe it to them as a community to do our part now.”

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Breaking down where Tiger Woods might play for the rest of 2020

Trying to determine the playing schedule of one Tiger Woods was a regular, and often futile, exercise long before the COVID-19 global pandemic changed the world – and the PGA Tour’s – order. But with the PGA Tour’s announcement Thursday of an …

Trying to determine the playing schedule of one Tiger Woods was a regular, and often futile, exercise long before the COVID-19 global pandemic changed the world – and the PGA Tour’s – order.

But with the PGA Tour’s announcement Thursday of an ambitious schedule for the rest of 2020 – its restart coming June 11-14 at the Charles Schwab Challenge at the Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas – fans naturally began to wonder when the reigning Masters champion would tee it up.

So here’s some Tiger guesswork.

Woods hasn’t played since Feb. 16 in the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club north of Los Angeles, where his final-round 77 left him in 68th and last place among those who made the cut.

Citing a stiff back, he skipped the subsequent WGC-Mexico Championship, Honda Classic, Arnold Palmer Invitational and the Players Championship, where the season came to a halt after the first round. If play resumes mid-June – and that remains far from certain due to the continuing battle against the coronavirus – there would be 24 consecutive weeks of play heading into Thanksgiving.

Woods’ health and the major circles on his calendar – the Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open and the Open Championship – have always been the key points on the compass that determines the direction his schedule takes. He also refrains from playing three consecutive weeks and rarely competes the week before a major.

Thus, if the 15-time major champion, who is looking for a record 83rd PGA Tour title, is healthy, put down as locks the three major championships that remain on the schedule: the PGA Championship at Harding Park on Aug. 6-9 in San Francisco; the U.S. Open on Sept. 17-20 at Winged Foot Golf Club in New York; and the Masters on Nov. 12-15 at Augusta National Golf Club in Georgia, where he’ll try to win a record-tying sixth green jacket.

Another lock would be the Hero World Challenge on Dec. 3-6 at Albany in the Bahamas. He hosts the tournament, and it benefits his foundation. It would be hard to imagine Woods not playing the Ryder Cup on Sept. 25-27 at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin, even with it being the week after the U.S. Open.

Just below lock status would be the Memorial on July 16-19 at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio. That’s Jack Nicklaus’ annual gathering that Woods hasn’t skipped when healthy and has won a record five times.

Put down at least one of the first two events of the FedExCup Playoffs – the Northern Trust on Aug. 20-23 at TPC Boston and the BMW Championship the following week at Olympia Fields in Illinois.

If he qualifies, he’d likely play the Tour Championship on Sept. 3-7 at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta.

Now it gets tricky. Woods has won 18 WGC events – the next person in the win total is Dustin Johnson with six – and he places these events on the importance scale along with the Players Championship and FedExCup Playoffs just below the majors.

But the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational in Memphis, with four guaranteed rounds and tons of FedExCup and world rankings points, is the week before the PGA Championship. Would Woods play in the heat of Memphis and then fly to the cooler temps in San Francisco in back-to-back weeks? The take here slants toward no.

As for the WGC-HSBC Champions on Oct. 29-Nov. 1 in Shanghai, Woods has only played it twice, the last time coming 10 years ago. So that’s a no.

In the 50-50 category is the Zozo Championship on Oct 22-25 in Chiba, Japan. Woods won his record-tying 82nd Tour title there last fall. The demands of traveling halfway across the globe and the protocols concerning COVID-19 – would he have to quarantine upon arrival? – suggest at best a 50 percent chance of playing.

Two other events fall in the 50-50 category – the first two of the hopeful restart to the season. With the sports world clamoring for any live action, Woods, who one has to believe would be chomping at the bit to knock off rust, might not pass on playing either the Charles Schwab Challenge or the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town in Hilton Head, South Carolina.

But he’s only played each tournament once, in 1997 when he tied for fourth at Colonial and in 1999 when he tied for 18th at Harbour Town.

So, to complete this latest exercise of figuring out where Tiger will play next, here’s the forecast. Woods will play nine events – the Charles Schwab Challenge, the Memorial, PGA Championship, Northern Trust, Tour Championship, U.S. Open, Ryder Cup, Masters and Hero World Challenge.

But that’s just a hunch.

PGA Tour reshuffles schedules for Korn Ferry Tour, PGA Tour Canada

The PGA Tour on Thursday announced schedule changes for its developmental leagues, the Korn Ferry Tour and the Mackenzie Tour ­- PGA Tour Canada. The changes to the developmental leagues were announced along with changes to the PGA Tour schedule, …

The PGA Tour on Thursday announced schedule changes for its developmental leagues, the Korn Ferry Tour and the Mackenzie Tour ­– PGA Tour Canada.

The changes to the developmental leagues were announced along with changes to the PGA Tour schedule, which is set to resume June 11-14 at the Charles Schwab Challenge in Texas.

The Korn Ferry Tour played six events over the winter before COVID-19 shut it down.

The tour will resume without fans in attendance June 11-14 at a new, as-yet-untitled $600,000 event at Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

The Evans Scholars Invitational, originally scheduled for May 21-24, has been postponed. Three more events were canceled: the REX Hospital Open, BMW Charity Pro-Am presented by SYNNEX Corporation and Live and Work in Maine Open. That raises to 12 the total events that were postponed or canceled on the Korn Ferry Tour.

The Mackenzie Tour canceled the first six events of its season through early July and expects to make more announcements about events in the coming weeks. The canceled tournaments are the Canada Life Open (May 28-31), the DCBank Open (June 4-7), the GolfBC Championship (June 11-14), the Lethbridge Paradise Canyon Open (June 25-28), the Prince Edward Island Pro-Am (July 2-5), and the Osprey Valley Open (July 9-12).

PGA of America offer millions of dollars in cash grants to help industry workers

The Golf Emergency Relief Fund will help individuals who work in the golf industry weather the storm caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

The PGA of America announced on Monday that it has developed the Golf Emergency Relief Fund to help individuals who work in the golf industry weather the storm caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Golf Emergency Relief Fund started with a $5 million pledge by the PGA of America with a matching fund for gifts by third parties of up to $2.5 million, raising the total to as much or more than $10 million. That money will be made available in direct payments to a wide range of the golf industry’s 1.8 million workers, not just the 29,000 PGA of America professionals. Those impacted financially by COVID-19 can apply for a share of these funds as early as Thursday.

“This is all going to individuals,” said PGA of America CEO Seth Waugh. “We tried to design it in a way that makes the most sense and gets it to the people in the most need.”

The fund will be administered by E4E Relief, an independent third-party public charity. There will be two phases, the first supplying grants of $500 to $1,500 for people in the most immediate need, then transitioning several weeks later into a second phase with grants topping out at $3,500.

Qualified applicants will include Golf Course Superintendents Association of America members, caddies who are employed through a handful of caddie companies, Association of Golf Merchandisers members, players on developmental tours and more (see the complete list of possible candidates at the bottom of this story).

The initial funding includes direct contributions from PGA of America board members and executives, and Waugh said those contributions are not yet fully determined but will reach into the high six figures. The effort also is being supported in various ways by a number of industry organizations, including the GCSAA, PGA Tour, LPGA, U.S. Golf Association, the National Golf Course Owners Association and the Association of Golf Merchandisers.

“We’ve added the Relief Fund as a next layer of defense, to pump a little adrenaline into the system in the form of cash,” Waugh said. “We’re just thinking about how to get everybody to the other side, so that’s our approach.”

Seth Waugh (Photo by Montana Pritchard/PGA of America)

Waugh estimated that with outside contributions, the fund could grow to as much as $20 million. He said the PGA of America has not been able to fully audit how much of the golf industry has been impacted by COVID-19 or to what degree, but he said “it’s a bunch of small businesses that are getting crushed” as more than half the golf courses in the U.S. are closed with 16 states banning golf altogether during the pandemic, based on a recent National Golf Foundation report.

“You go to any business with a zero-revenue model, that’s pretty hard to model, right?” Waugh said. The full impact on the golf industry “obviously depends on how long it lasts. … This is an event-driven crisis. Everything was going well. If this is a two- to three-month crisis, we probably can come back pretty much as business as usual. If it goes longer than that, there will be some failures and there will be some consolidations.”

Hence the relief fund, Waugh said, as well as delaying PGA of America membership dues and working directly with all 41 PGA sections to help them survive the pandemic.

“We’re put on earth to serve our members and the game, and what more important moment to do it than now?” said Waugh, the former CEO of Deutsche Bank Americas who took his role with the PGA of America in 2018. “You wake up every morning trying to figure out how to be smart and to be human, and the most important part is how can you be the most human. If you can do that, and prove that you have a brain as well as soul, you can come out of these things better than you went in.”

Below is the complete list of industry employees who may apply for a grant at https://relief.golf:

  • PGA of America professionals (includes members, students and associates)
  • LPGA professionals (includes members and students/apprentices)
  • Golf Course Superintendents Association of America members
  • Employed or contracted as a caddie of one of the following caddie companies (qualifying employers and their subsidiaries): Caddienow, Caddiemaster, 4C Caddies, Premier Caddies, ClubUp, CaddieU, Circuit Caddie and Caddy King
  • Association of Golf Merchandisers members
  • Players in developmental tours operated by the PGA Tour (Korn Ferry Tour, PGA Tour Latinoamérica, Mackenzie Tour – PGA Tour Canada, PGA Tour China Series)
  • Players in developmental tours operated by the LPGA (Symetra Tour)
  • Employees of United States Golf Association authorized allied golf associations
  • Employees of PGA of America sections
  • National Golf Course Owners Association members

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Coronavirus: When professional golf tours are expected to resume

The coronavirus has delayed much of the 2020 professional golf season. Here’s when the top professional tours get back in action.

Since mid-March, sports events around the United States began to get canceled or postponed due to the threat of the coronavirus pandemic.

As the weeks have rolled on and numbers of confirmed cases and deaths increased, professional golf tours have had to adjust, pushing tournaments back or knocking them off the schedule altogether, all in an attempt to salvage the rest of the 2020 season.

The British Open has been canceled, while new dates for the Masters Tournament, the PGA Championship and the U.S. Open are scheduled for later in the fall in hopes the coronavirus pandemic has subsided by then. Details on the PGA Tour’s new major dates can be found here.

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Here’s what’s next as of April 13 on the major professional golf tour schedules.

PGA Tour

The next scheduled stops are the Charles Schwab Challenge (May 21-24), Rocket Mortgage Classic (May 28-31) and The Memorial Tournament (June 4-7).

The updated 2019-20 PGA Tour schedule can be seen here.

LPGA

The next events on the LPGA calendar are the Meijer LPGA Classic for Simply Give (June 11-14), the Walmart NW Arkansas Championship (June 19-21) and the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship (June 25-28).

The updated 2019-20 LPGA schedule can be seen here.

European Tour

The next stop on the European Tour is scheduled for June 25-28 at the BMW International Open in Munich, Germany, followed by the French Open July 2-5 at Le Golf National in Paris.

The updated 2019-20 Euro Tour schedule can be seen here.

PGA Tour Champions

The next tournament on the PGA Tour Champions schedule is the American Family Insurance Championship on June 5-7 at University Ridge Golf Club in Madison, Wisconsin. The next two events after that, including the U.S. Senior Open Championship, have been canceled. The July 9-12 Bridgestone Senior Players Championship is the next listed event on the docket.

The updated 2019-20 Champions Tour schedule can be seen here.

Symetra

The Symetra Tour’s next scheduled event is June 19-21 for the Island Resort Championship at Sweetgrass Golf Club in Harris, Michigan.

The updated 2019-20 Symetra Tour schedule can be seen here.

Korn Ferry

The next stop on the Korn Ferry Tour is May 21-24 at the Evans Scholars Invitational at the Glen Club in Glenview, Illinois. In all, six KFT tournaments have been canceled and two others postponed so far in 2020.

The updated 2019-20 Korn Ferry Tour schedule can be seen here.

There’s still much to learn from the ‘Mouse’ Bob Toski

The fact is there’s nothing small about LPGA teaching legend Bob Toski. He remains a larger-than-life character with a dynamite smile.

BOCA RATON, Fla. —  It’s just after 2 p.m. on a Wednesday at Boca Rio Country Club. Bob Toski and Judy Rankin are sitting in a couple of plastic fold-up chairs on the range, reminiscing about a lesson that took place more than 50 years ago.

Rankin, then an 18-year-old pro, told Toski that if he intended to change her grip, she’d be on the next plane out of Miami.

“How much did you weigh on tour?” Toski asks.

A 93-year-old can ask that question.

Plus, Toski has a thing about weight. More on that later. Rankin, 74, said anywhere from 105 to 117 pounds.

“For your size and your weight,” continued Toski, “you were one of the better ballstrikers I’ve ever seen. You had to have one of the greatest pair of hands in the game of golf.”

“For my time,” a humble Rankin replied.

Toski, who turned pro in 1945 and won five events on the PGA Tour, lives down the road from Boca Rio. The Golf Channel coordinated this on-camera reunion during the new Gainbridge LPGA event. The pair hadn’t seen each other in more than 15 years.

Bob Toski at the 1954 Tam O’Shanter in Chicago (Edward Kitch/Associated Press)

Moments like these are priceless, and as a parade of rookies warmed up on the range, part of me wanted to head down the line and introduce them all to Toski, who in addition to Rankin taught a dozen U.S. Women’s Open winners.

History lessons are so few and far between these days. After the Rankin interview, Toski sat down in the caddie tent to escape the brisk air and talk about one of golf’s most unlikely major winners, Birdie Kim, who won the 2005 U.S. Women’s Open.

“The story you’re about to hear,” Toski begins, “you won’t believe.”

Her swing was nearly perfect when they met, he said. There was a telephone pole about 150 yards away from the practice tee at Sherbrooke Golf & Country Club in Lake Worth, Florida. Toski told Kim he was going to hit three balls at that telephone pole. He took out a 6-iron, and on the second attempt he nailed the pole. Now it was her turn.

“I had a way of testing,” he said. “They didn’t call me the godfather for nothing.” Kim hit the pole on the first swing. “I said the lesson is over,” Toski recalled. “We’re not going to the practice tee anymore. We’re going to play golf every day, and I’m going to teach you how to shoot a low number.”

And so Kim set out to learn how to play the game, much like Rankin, by watching Toski. He helped the unknown South Korean player develop what he called “a golfing mind.” Toski considered Rankin’s “golfing mind” to be her greatest attribute.

Rankin, who’d go on to win 26 times on the LPGA, spent every winter at the Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo, Florida, before she got married, playing golf with Toski five times a week. There was a par 3 on the back nine that required a 4-iron from Toski. He showed Rankin how to play the hole successfully with driver.

“Watch all the great players at the top of their backswings,” said Toski. “What’s their first move?” The lower body, he answers in step with Rankin. “Why does the lower body move first? Because your legs are heavier than your arms and hands,” he said, “and your arms would catch up to your legs, but your legs can’t catch up to your arms.”

Rankin, a World Golf Hall of Famer, nods her head in agreement. Such a practical and simple explanation of the swing sequence is vintage Toski. Rankin said she was always taught to be weary of instructors who had a theory. And anyway, Toski, a 2013 PGA Golf Professional Hall of Fame inductee, wasn’t in it to get rich. In fact, he never charged Rankin for all those lessons. Didn’t charge Kim either.

“I had empathy for people who were struggling because I struggled,” he said. “I went broke twice on Tour, and in my fifth year I was the leading money winner and I weighed 120 pounds.”

Bob Toski doesn’t accept payment for teaching PGA Tour pros – but he did ask Ken Duke to take him to Augusta National.

Players used to give Toski a hard time about his size. He starts in with a story about Lou Worsham, asks if I’d ever heard of him. Told no, he shot back with, “You need to study history.” Worsham won the 1947 U.S. Open, and every time he played with Toski, he asked how much he weighed. Every time, Toski lied and told him 127 pounds. His small size had earned him the nickname, “Mouse.”

After Toski had won the 1954 World Championship of Golf, which offered the richest prize, he was headed out to celebrate his four-win season at The Drake Hotel in Chicago. When Toski stepped out of the shower, he found Worsham and Clayton Hefner waiting on him.

“I wrapped my towel around me,” said Toski, “and said ‘What the hell are you guys doing here?’ We used profanity back in those days.” The two men picked up Toski and carried him over to the scale, which revealed his secret – 118 pounds. Worsham predicted that Toski would go down as the best lightweight player in golf history.

As if to prove that fact a million years later, Toski then rolled up his sleeve to show off his skinny wrists. “Nobody has wrists smaller than mine!” said the Mouse.

The fact is there’s nothing small about Toski. He remains a larger-than-life character with a dynamite smile.

He soon was ushered off to another interview session in the belly of the clubhouse, his storytelling still very much in demand. But not before belting out a few tunes.

Every Friday night, Toski sings the classics at Arturo’s Italian restaurant in Boca. He first learned to sing in the choir as an altar boy. “I can do a number on ‘How Great Thou Art,’ ” he said, “and you’ll cry.”

He wasn’t wrong. Gwk

This story originally appeared in Issue 1 – 2020 of Golfweek magazine.