Things to know about the Wanamaker Trophy, which goes to winner of PGA Championship

The Wanamaker Trophy is one of the largest trophies in professional sports.

Lewis Rodman Wanamaker helped establish the first all-professional golf association in the U.S., the PGA of America, and soon thereafter donated a trophy for the inaugural PGA Championship in 1916, which was held at Siwanoy Country Club in Bronxville, New York, just north of New York City.

That trophy bears the Wanamaker name and is one of the largest trophies in professional sports. It goes to the winner of the PGA Championship each year. Well, a replica goes to the winner for one year, while the original is displayed at the new home of the PGA of America in Frisco, Texas.

Check out some other interesting facts about the trophy.

[fanpower_carousel id=”212″]

‘I can’t find the hole at all’: LIV Golf’s Brooks Koepka searches for answers ahead of PGA Championship title defense

“Just keep grinding away, keep doing the work, and hopefully something will turn around,” said Koepka.

Brooks Koepka is known for his swagger and confidence, but with two weeks to go until his PGA Championship title defense, the five-time major champion isn’t feeling very good about his chances at Valhalla Golf Club for the second men’s major of the year.

While speaking with the media ahead of 2024 LIV Golf Singapore at Sentosa Golf Club this week, Koepka said he felt like he wasted time from December until last month’s Masters, where he finished T-45 at 9 over thanks to four rounds over par of 73-73-76-75.

Just keep grinding away, keep doing the work, and hopefully something will turn around,” said Koepka, who then criticized his poor putting as the main reason for his struggles.

“Ball doesn’t go in the hole, that’s usually one of them. I don’t know how else to simply put it,” he said of his woes with the flatstick. “I feel like I’m hitting good putts, they just keep burning lips. Eventually it starts to wear on you after a while. All you can do is hit a good putt and see where it goes from there. Hopefully they start falling soon.”

“I can’t find the hole at all, to be honest with you,” he added. “Something we’ve just been putting some work into, so trying to find some answers.”

Koepka switched to a mallet putter two weeks before the Masters and hasn’t touched the previous putter that he’s used for the last dozen years since.

So far this LIV Golf season, Koepka has two top-10 finishes (T-5 in the season opener in Mexico and T-9 last week in Australia) as well as a head-scratching T-45 out of 54 players in Miami.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=451198867]

PGA Championship darling Michael Block ties course record at Valhalla Golf Club

The 47-year-old club pro who forever became part of PGA Championship lore found lightning in a bottle once again.

After becoming the biggest story of the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill, Michael Block had largely retreated to a life of teaching the game at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo, California.

After his triumphant showing, Block made subsequent appearances at the Charles Schwab Challenge and RBC Canadian Open, but missed the cut in both events.

But the 47-year-old club pro — who forever became part of PGA Championship lore when he aced the 151-yard par-3 15th hole at Oak Hill on Sunday with a 7-iron — found lightning in a bottle again on Thursday when he traveled to Valhalla Golf Club in Lousiville as part of a scouting trip for next year’s tournament.

Block carded seven birdies and an eagle during the practice round on Thursday, finishing his round at 9 under and tying the course record, a mark that was set by Jose Maria Olazabal at the 2000 PGA Championship.

Block’s wild ride at the 2023 event in Upstate New York netted him nearly $300,000 as he placed him in a tie for 15th, captivating golf fans around the country in the process.

He also revealed that he had previously charged his students $150 per hour during his lessons.

During the final round, Block aced the par-3 No. 15 hole with a shot that he dunked straight into the cup, without even hitting the flagpole. The hole-in-one brought Block’s score to even-par after his up-and-down round.

Block was paired with Rory McIlroy, the No. 3 player in the Official World Golf Ranking and four-time major winner. After Block sunk his shot at 15, McIlroy went over and gave him a hug as both players smiled. Block, seemingly in disbelief, was caught on the broadcast saying: “That didn’t go in, did it? No, no. No way. No way.”

With his finish in the top 20, Block automatically earned a berth into the 2024 event at Valhalla.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451201523]

Lynch: Brooks Koepka’s major victory is being hijacked by hangers-on

For all that has changed in golf, one thing has remained constant whenever Brooks Koepka wins a major.

For all that has changed in golf, one thing has remained constant whenever Brooks Koepka wins a major championship: his ornery refusal to submit to the customary show and tell tour of television talk shows. A few hours after winning the Wanamaker Trophy on Sunday, he headed home to Florida, where he spent Monday celebrating with his buddies on a boat before taking the silverware to a Panthers game. Meanwhile, a man who tied 15th appeared on the Today show, Good Morning America and CNN.

If Koepka was uninterested in using his PGA Championship victory as a platform for point scoring, there was no shortage of scavengers eager to do so in his stead.

His swing instructor, Claude Harmon III, was first out of the blocks, exploiting the moment to air his grievances about those in media (chiefly Brandel Chamblee, with a drive-by caress of yours truly) whose criticisms of LIV Golf are at odds with his avaricious burrowing into the Saudi trough. Harmon has been an occasional friend for 20 years, but even his pals know he’s peerless in marketing himself on the accomplishments of others, a skill honed from the cradle. His attack featured all the whataboutery you’d expect from one more apt to flatter royalty than to inquire after those they torture. (In CH3’s defense, no one should be subjected to a Chamblee reply that is ungoverned by Twitter character limits).

Alert to any opportunity to remind his Saudi overlords that he’s a loyal supplicant, Phil Mickelson leapt on the Brooks bandwagon and sought to portray the win not as proof of Koepka’s brilliance but as evidence of the superiority of the circuit he helped engineer. “Love LIV or hate it, it’s the best way/Tour to be your best in the majors,” he tweeted. “Enough events to keep you sharp, fresh and ready, yet not be worn down from too many tournaments or obligations. 14 LIV events, 34 weeks left open to prepare for the 4 majors. Fact.”

That Mickelson cannot distinguish between statements of fact and opinion comes as no shock since he has long since blurred the line between fact and fiction too.

Greg Norman cheered the victory as one for LIV and organized a welcoming party for the champ at Trump National in Washington, D.C., that had all the spontaneity and genuine warmth of a Pyongyang parade honoring Dear Leader. No such theater greeted Jon Rahm when he arrived at the RBC Heritage fresh off his Masters win, but then no one was desperate to leverage the Spaniard’s success for their own interests.

[pickup_prop id=”33579″]

Even Bryson DeChambeau has been drafting on his former nemesis. “It validates everything we’ve said from the beginning. That we’re competing at the highest level, and we have the ability to win major championships,” he said, making two points, only one of which is demonstrably true, and even then only for a handful of his colleagues.

Koepka’s fifth major no more belongs to Norman or LIV than his previous four did to Jay Monahan or the PGA Tour, and in the immediate afterglow Koepka bristled at what he knew was coming. Have you heard from Norman? he was asked. “I called my wife, and that’s it,” he replied. “That’s the only person I’m really interested in talking to.”

“I definitely think it helps LIV, but I’m more interested in my own self right now,” he went on. “It’s a huge thing for LIV, but at the same time I’m out here competing as an individual at the PGA Championship.”

Koepka makes a poor patsy for LIV’s lickspittles. He was openly dismissive of regular PGA Tour events so the notion that he’s invested in 54-hole shotgun starts against the Andy Ogletrees of the world is fanciful. He was not a plaintiff in the Saudi-funded litigation, has chosen not to badmouth the tour he left, and has not been a particularly enthusiastic propagandist for the tour he joined. He gives the impression of a man checking the boxes required of him, nothing more.

But while Koepka goes about his business, his triumph is used as a smokescreen by charlatans. Criticisms about Saudi sportswashing, or about the viability of the LIV product, are not nullified because he can still deliver in majors. Sunday reminded us that Koepka is a formidable predator who chooses to swim in a shallow pond, but the days since have revealed the extent to which he is surrounded by pilot fish trying to subsist on his success.

Michael Block wasn’t the only one who had his biggest payday at the 2023 PGA Championship. His caddie did too

Caddie John Jackson did some math on the calculator app on his phone after Block finished T-15.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=]

Club pro Michael Block wasn’t the only one who cashed the biggest check of his life at the 105th PGA Championship on Sunday.

His caddie, John Jackson, did the math on the calculator app of his phone  Sunday evening after Block finished T-15, the best result by a club pro since 1986, and earned $288,333. Jackson’s take home: $20,183.31.

In a video that was posted on social media, Block looks at the figure (7 percent of Block’s winnings) on Jackson’s phone, smiles widely, slaps him five and gives him knuckles.

“It’s been unreal, surreal, literally a dream, a movie, whatever,” Jackson said Sunday as Block was honored at the 18th green for being the low finisher among the club pros. “Mike and I were pinching ourselves going down the fairways. It was weird. The whole thing is crazy.”

Jackson’s regular job is caddying for resort guests at Spyglass Hill in Pebble Beach, California, where he’s looped full-time since 2017. In college, Jackson played for the Cal State Monterey Bay Otters and was part of the NCAA Division II National Championship team in 2011.

Block was one of 20 PGA professionals to qualify for the PGA Championship. He is a 10-time Southern California PGA Player of the Year and the reigning PGA Professional of the Year. Jackson and Block met as competitors at a California State Open around 10 years ago. Block played at the TaylorMade Pebble Beach Invitational one year and Jackson got on his bag and they almost won.

Jackson had previously worked a few majors, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am – but only for amateurs – and the PGA Tour Champions Pure Insurance Open for the last 15 years. Jackson caddied for Block at the PGA at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma, last year during the practice rounds but got promoted to full status at Oak Hill.

“He called me and said, ‘Do you want to do the whole week this year?’ And we made it the whole week,” Jackson said.

Of Block’s hole-in-one, Jackson noted that he hadn’t made a putt all day. “I said, ‘Just hit it closer,’ ” Jackson recalled.

He did, flying a 7-iron at 15 directly into the cup.

“I wasn’t helping much because I was pumping him up,” Jackson said.

Initially, Jackson planned to decompress on Monday and Tuesday and get back to reality. He said he had some vacationers who had requested work. That all changed when Block was offered a sponsor exemption into the PGA Tour’s Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas, which got underway Thursday. Jackson is back on the bag for another Tour start and a chance for another gigantic payday.

“I’d do it again right now if I could,” Jackson said Sunday.

It turns out he didn’t have to wait that long.

[pickup_prop id=”33653″]

Michael Block says if he had Rory McIlroy’s length off the tee, he’d be ‘one of the best players in the world’

“Oh, my God. What I would shoot from where Rory hits it, would be stupid.”

Michael Block is golf’s feel-good story of 2023.

A PGA pro from California finishing T-15 at the PGA Championship to automatically earn himself a spot in the 2024 PGA at Valhalla. And it wasn’t just the accomplishment, it was the way he did it.

Electric on-course TV interviews, viral clips and a Sunday hole-in-one playing alongside the No. 3-ranked player in the world.

And this week, Block is in Fort Worth, Texas, to play in the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial after receiving an invite just moments after completing his final round at Oak Hill — he was also given a spot in the RBC Canadian Open in a few weeks.

Since his rise to the spotlight, Block has appeared on SportsCenter, Good Morning America, the ForePlay podcast and several other media outlets including Bob Menery’s “RipperMagoo” podcast.

During his episode, Menery asked Block about the difference between his game and Rory McIlroy’s.

“He’s a lot longer than I am. That’s what it is,” he said.

Block would go on to say: “Oh, my God. What I would shoot from where Rory hits it, would be stupid. I think I’d be one of the best players in the world.”

Watch the full clip here:

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=]

What other PGA Tour players are saying about Michael Block at Charles Schwab Challenge: ‘He’s a legend’

Other PGA Tour players have enjoyed the ride as much as fans.

FORT WORTH, Texas — A few days removed from one of the most compelling storylines of the golf season, Michael Block was still the talk of the town in Rochester, where he made history with a top-15 finish at the PGA Championship.

But the buzz has followed Block to the Dallas Metroplex, where he’s making a surprise appearance at the Charles Schwab Challenge. Block was a late addition to the field after University of Texas star Parker Coody, the grandson of 1971 Masters champ Charles Coody, withdrew from the event.

As he did at Oak Hill, Block endeared himself to the media with stories of his journey, which has included rubbing elbows with sports royalty.

And other PGA Tour players have enjoyed the ride as much as fans. Despite an impressive field at Colonial Country Club that included the likes of Max Homa, Collin Morikawa and Billy Horschel as well as Texas staples Jordan Spieth and Scottie Scheffler, many of the questions — and lengthy answers — have focused on Block and the optimism he brings to the game.

Here’s what others had to say this week:

Michael Block on appearance at PGA Tour’s Charles Schwab Challenge: ‘It’s just a dream. I’m just cruising’

“I think if I sit down and think about it too much, I’m not sure I could swing the club on Thursday.”

Shhhh, Michael Block is still sleeping — let him enjoy the rest. Although the weather is a little warmer in Texas than he’s accustomed to, a little sweat on his brow isn’t about to shake the darling of the PGA Championship from the spectacular slumber he’s currently enjoying.

On Tuesday, Block met with the media in advance of the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, where he’ll be making a surprise appearance thanks to a sponsor exemption.

And he’s simply trying to keep this magical run alive for as long as he can, using his big showing to secure invites this week and at the upcoming RBC Canadian Open.

“I’ve said it a lot, but it’s just a dream. I’m just cruising. I’m actually kind of glad that at this point I haven’t come to the reality about what’s happening so I can actually play pretty good golf,” said Block, who had to scramble to find shorts for an afternoon in the Texas heat after wearing only long, dark pants. “I think, if I sit down and think about it too much, I’m not sure I could swing the club on Thursday.”

[pickup_prop id=”33580″]

After an appearance for the ages at Oak Hill Country Club, one that earned the teaching pro a ticket to next year’s PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky, Block has been in high demand. Block shot a 1-over 71 in the final round to finish T-15 at 1 over for the tournament.

“I really apologize to all my friends and fans and PGA members out there that have texted me. I’m sorry I haven’t gotten back to you. I literally scroll and scroll and scroll, and it’s never-ending,” Block said. “I can’t even get to the bottom of any of my feeds to even see how many or who’s seeing me. So it’s been crazy.”

For example, Block exchanged texts with Michael Jordan after a performance that included an astonishing hole-in-one, part of a $288,333 payday earned when he finished tied with Tyrrell Hatton and Eric Cole.

Even for Block, the message from the former Chicago Bulls star was a special one.

“I’m a big Jordan guy my whole life. I was a little kid in Iowa saving 100 bucks for a pair of Jordans back in the day,” Block said. “Pretty darn cool, to say the least.”

But it’s not like Block hasn’t hobnobbed with sports royalty before his surprise showing last week. He befriended Albert Pujols when the slugger was plying his craft in Los Angeles, and even has an invitation to the future baseball Hall of Famer’s wedding. He’s also close with Patrick Cantlay, with whom he often plays in Southern California.

Although the 46-year-old golf instructor at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo, California, hasn’t known fame like this before, he’s been adjacent to it enough to understand it a bit.

“I’ve been around it in a weird kind of small way in little tidbits here and there over the last 10 years. So I’m somewhat comfortable with it,” he said. “It’s just weird now where I come up through a gate and the guys at the gate are screaming ‘Block Party’ when I’m going through, and the guy making me an omelet gave me knuckles and said I did awesome last week.

“I mean, that’s the part where it’s a little beyond me at this point. So it’s cool, but I’m trying to enjoy it. I feel somewhat natural with it, so it’s cool.”

Block has tried to soak in the adoration, as he spent time taking photos with fans throughout the week in Rochester and even spent time at a local watering hole after making the cut.

But even Block is a little uncertain how to handle some of the propositions he’s received in the last few days, including one person who offered him $30,000 for his 7-iron.

While he was flattered, he’ll need that club if he hopes to make another improbable charge this week. Although he finished well at Oak Hill, he missed the cut in the two previous starts he was given on the PGA Tour this season, one at the Farmers Insurance Open and the other at the American Express.

“I’ve had a couple different offers actually. It’s crazy, right? I’ve had a couple different offers, and the initial response was it was $50,000 and I’d hand deliver it. Kind of kiddingly, but I guess not really anymore,” he said.

“But I’ve had other people ask about it to maybe have it preserved in certain spots for the PGA, et cetera, stuff like that. So it’s up in the air. For right now it just needs to hit shots in there close for me, and I’ll go from there.”

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3413″ ]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=]

Gannett may earn revenue from sports betting operators for audience referrals to betting services. Sports betting operators have no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. Terms apply, see operator site for Terms and Conditions. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available. Call the National Council on Problem Gambling 24/7 at 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ, OH), 1-800-522-4700 (CO), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN). Must be 21 or older to gamble. Sports betting and gambling are not legal in all locations. Be sure to comply with laws applicable where you reside.

D’Angelo: It would be un-American to leave Brooks Koepka off Ryder Cup team

Anyone who cares about the Ryder Cup should not be happy if Brooks Koepka is not a part of the team.

What is Zach Johnson going to say now:

“It’s two weeks?”

The U.S. Ryder Cup captain had a very uncomfortable week at the PGA Championship answering questions about LIV golfers — particularly Brooks Koepka — making his team.

And when asked before the tournament, Johnson downplayed Koepka’s runner-up finish at the Masters by saying, “It’s one week.”

Then, Koepka proved he’s more than a one-week wonder and won his fifth major Sunday at Oak Hill Country Club outside of Rochester.

Although LIV golfers have been suspended by the PGA Tour, they remain members of the PGA of America, which makes them eligible to play for the U.S. in the Ryder Cup, which this year will be in September outside of Rome. The PGA of America runs the PGA Championship and the Ryder Cup.

And by winning, Koepka actually is doing Johnson a big favor. Having vaulted to No. 2 in the Ryder Cup rankings, Koepka could take that sticky decision out of Johnson’s hands. The top six in the rankings are automatically on the team. It’s the next six, selected by the captain, that will be dissected and put Johnson on the spot.

More: Brooks Koepka’s coach blasts media, bashes Brandel Chamblee for treatment of LIV Golf players

But not when it comes to Koepka if he maintains that spot in the top six. The only events remaining that will earn him Ryder Cup points are the U.S. Open and British Open.

Koepka second, first in Masters, PGA Championship

Koepka, who joined LIV 11 months ago, has played in two majors this year, the only PGA Tour events he’s eligible for, and finished second and first. Perhaps he was onto something when asked prior to the tournament what would it take to pressure Johnson to add a LIV golfer to the team.

“Go second, first, first, first,” he said about the majors. “It would be kind of tough not to pick, right?”

Not really. In fact, it would be very easy. Koepka, who held the No. 1 spot for 47 weeks, most recently in 2020, once again is the best golfer in the world. Forget what the world rankings say. Given what we’ve seen in the only two events he’s played that matter, nobody believes he’s No. 13, his current world ranking.

Koepka has two more chances to impress Johnson in majors. But even Johnson recognizes that when healthy Koepka has been the best golfer in the world over the last seven years when lights shine brightest.

Starting with his fourth-place finish at the 2016 PGA Championship, Koepka has played in 23 majors with five wins, four times as runner-up and 11 times in the top five. He finished in the top 10 more than 60 percent (14 of 23). And his worst stretch — last year when he was 55th twice and missed the cut twice — came when he wondered if he’d ever be elite again after a long recovery from major knee surgery.

“What I appreciate about Brooks is just how he goes about his work in massive tournaments,” Johnson said. “He’s a rare breed mentally where he just is able to bring out his best in the most difficult and trying of circumstances.”

Johnson understands how much chemistry matters on a team like this. The most documented example occurred in 2004 when Hal Sutton paired Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson when their relationship was frosty. They lost both their matches on opening day to kick start Europe’s easy victory.

“Chemistry is important on any team,” Johnson said. “It’s important with anything you’re trying to construct if you want to go out and win. My No. 1 goal as the leader is to go put these guys in a position to win, whatever that looks like.”

Check that one off, too. Nobody on the Tour would have an issue with Koepka, or even Dustin Johnson, being a part of the Ryder Cup team. Zach Johnson’s bigger issue may be deciding on Dustin Johnson.

After all, we’re not talking about Patrick Reed or Bryson DeChambeau, two LIV golfers who did not endear themselves to their peers during their time on the PGA Tour and certainly are not missed.

“When you talk about the LIV golfers that left the PGA Tour to go play over there, you never hear a bad word from those players about Brooks Koepka.” Golf Channel analyst Brad Faxon said on air Sunday following the PGA Championship.

“I think Brooks would be a fantastic addition to the team, particularly inside the locker room. Zach would be foolish not to consider him.”

Chamblee says including Koepka ‘slap in the face’ to those who stayed

Faxon’s fellow analyst, Brandel Chamblee, said including Koepka would be “a slap in the face to the players that didn’t go, that didn’t take the money and go to LIV, that somebody who took the money could now have their cake and eat it too?”

Koepka made his decision about a year ago to leave the PGA Tour for LIV, which is financed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, when his head was in a much different place. Now, he clearly has questioned that move.

Following the Masters, Koepka was asked if the decision to join LIV would have been more challenging had he felt this good, and were playing this good, at that time.

“Honestly, yeah, probably, if I’m being completely honest,” Koepka said. “I think it would have been. But I’m happy with the decision I made.”

Koepka cannot be happy that he is relevant four times a year and in between goes back to playing on LIV.

The debate will rage — and follow Zach Johnson — throughout the summer. But anyone who cares about the Ryder Cup should not be happy if Brooks Koepka is not a part of the team.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=]

Jena Sims had the perfect TikTok response to why she wasn’t with Brooks Koepka at his PGA Championship win

The perfect response.

It was the question golf fans were asking after Brooks Koepka won the 2023 PGA Championship, his fifth major in what’s turning out to be a pretty incredible career: Why wasn’t Jena Sims, his pregnant wife, there at Oak Hill to celebrate with him?

After celebrating with an awesome TikTok saying how proud she was, Sims had answers for anyone with that question. She used the social media platform to show a video of her getting up on a ladder in her home with Koepka and dusting off part of the large trophy case, getting it ready for the Wanamaker Trophy.

Perfect:

MORE:

[affiliatewidget_deal1]