PGA Championship: Ranking every winner by number of titles

There have been numerous stellar champions to lift the Wanamaker.

Winning the PGA Championship can be a life changer for any golfer.

A lifetime exemption into the major. A five-year PGA Tour exemption. Add in exemptions into the other majors, it’s a chance for golfers to propel their career and play on some of golf’s biggest stages.

The PGA Championship began in 1916, and from then until 1957 was contested in a match-play format. The tournament switched to stroke play in 1958. And even with the long history of the championship, only five golfers have won three or more Wanamaker Trophies.

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Here’s a list of every player who has won the PGA Championship, ranked by number of titles.

Only three rookies have ever won the Masters, Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979 being the last

First-time participants in majors rarely make much of an impact.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — First-time participants in majors rarely make much of an impact.

They are expected to show up, perhaps make the 36-hole cut and go quietly about their business. To get into contention would be a bonus.

To actually win is virtually unheard of, Ben Curtis and Keegan Bradley being the exceptions. Their victories in the 2003 British Open and 2011 PGA, respectively, were their first starts in major championships.

Frank Urban Zoeller, affectionately known as Fuzzy by his peers, paid little attention to the conventional wisdom at the Masters.

The native of New Albany, Indiana, got into contention in 1979, hung around to the end and won a historic playoff in his first visit to Augusta National Golf Club.

Zoeller joined Horton Smith and Gene Sarazen as the only men to win the Masters in their first attempts. Smith won the inaugural event in 1934, and Sarazen, already one of the game’s established stars, won a year later with his famous double eagle on the 15th hole.

Ed Sneed, who was only slightly better known than Zoeller coming into the 1979 Masters, appeared to be on his way to his first major title. His first three rounds of 68, 67 and 69 put him five shots clear of the field heading into Sunday.

And for 15 holes, Sneed appeared to be a good bet to slip on a green jacket. Despite charges by Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson, Sneed still had a three-stroke lead with three holes to play.

A three-putt for bogey cost Sneed a shot at the 16th, then he missed a short par putt on the 17th. Suddenly, his lead was down to one.

Sneed hit the fairway on the 18th, but his approach finished next to the greenside bunker. He chipped to about eight feet below the hole, then watched in disbelief as his putt hung on the lip, refusing to drop for par and the win.

Zoeller, meanwhile, had finished with 70 to join Watson and Sneed in the Masters’ first sudden-death playoff.

Like Sarazen 44 years before, Zoeller took a risk on the 15th hole to help force the playoff. He went for the green in two, even though the shot was longer than the distance he normally hit his 3-wood.

“Now, I’ll tell you exactly how far I can hit a 3-wood. I can hit it 235 yards without any wind,” Zoeller later told reporters. “I don’t know how it got there.”

The playoff began on the 10th hole, and all three men made par to advance to the 11th.

Zoeller hit the biggest drive, then watched as Sneed’s approach flew into the back bunker and Watson’s came up wide right. The Masters rookie then calmly hit his iron shot to inside 10 feet.

“Two balls right and don’t leave it short,” was caddie Jariah Beard’s advice for Zoeller, according to Ward Clayton’s book Men on the Bag, which chronicles the stories of Augusta National caddies.

After watching Sneed and Watson play, Zoeller coolly rolled his birdie putt into the cup and earned his place in history. He flung his putter into the air and jumped for joy with outstretched arms.

“I’m on cloud nine, and I guess I’ll be up there for three or four weeks,” Zoeller said afterward.

He had extra motivation for making the birdie to end the playoff on the 11th hole.

“I said if I don’t make it, we have to play No. 12, which I don’t want to do,” Zoeller told the media corps. “I’m 3-over-par there this week.”

Zoeller, who retired from Masters competition in 2009, thinks someone will come along and join him, Smith and Sarazen as Masters winners in their Augusta debut. In 2014, Jordan Spieth almost joined the club after sharing the lead going into the final round.

“You never say never,” Zoeller said. “It is amazing when you think about all the talent that has walked through from that practice range to that first tee and it hasn’t happened.

“Can I explain why? No. Will it happen again? Somebody will do it.”

Who are the 10 youngest winners in PGA Tour history? Here’s the list.

Joohyoung ‘Tom’ Kim joined the list with his victory at the 2022 Wyndham Championship.

Joohyung “Tom” Kim entered some exclusive company among the history of professional golf on the PGA Tour.

By winning the 2022 Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina, he became one of the youngest players to ever win on the PGA Tour.

The PGA Tour has been around for more than a century. Many of the youngest winners happened in the early years of the Tour, but in the past decades, three golfers, including Kim, have joined the exclusive youngest winner’s club, as well.

Here’s a look at the 10 youngest players who have been victorious on the PGA Tour:

QBE Shootout: 97-year-old Florida resident, who once caddied for Gene Sarazen, meets Bubba Watson, Lexi Thompson, and Ryan Palmer

Bubba Watson, Lexi Thompson, and Ryan Palmer all stopped to talk with Anthony Torre.

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NAPLES, Fla. — The parent company of Seascape at Naples, an assisted living center, has a program it calls its “Wow Moments” where it tries to connect its residents to something in their past or that’s an interest.

Friday, one of those happened at the QBE Shootout at Tiburón Golf Club at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort.

Anthony “Tony” Torre, a 97-year-old who has been at Seascape a few months, came to the PGA Tour event and got to meet some of the game’s stars. And some caddies.

Torre has something in common with them. He was a caddie growing up in New York, and one time got to caddie for none other than Gene Sarazen, one of five golfers to win the career Grand Slam, at the Glens Falls Open, a PGA Tour event that was played from 1929 to 1939.

According to Torre, when the tournament was coming up — back in those days, pros simply picked up their caddies at the club where the event was going to be played — there was an “A” list of caddies, and then others that the club professional submitted to the tour pros to pick from.

Torre, who grew up in Schenectady, New York, was one of the others — but not when the tournament started. He won an A list slip from one of those caddies in a craps game. And Sarazen ended up being his pro.

Tony Torre, a 97-year-old Naples resident, seated, once caddied for golf legend Gene Sarazen at a tournament in New York. Torre now lives at Seascape at Naples, and is seen chatting with PGA Tour pro Ryan Palmer (in white shirt) and his caddie James Edmondson (far right) at the QBE Shootout at Tiburon Golf Club on Friday, Dec. 10, 2021. Greg Hardwig/Naples Daily News.

Sarazen, who grew up in Harrison, New York, didn’t win the tournament, but finished second or third; he was second in 1938 and third in 1939. Torre got $50, a set of kroydon irons, and golf shoes from “The Squire” who later ended up spending the last several years of his life in Marco Island.

Friday, Torre got to meet one of the lengthier player/caddie relationships on the tour, chatting with pro Ryan Palmer and caddie James Edmondson, who have been together for 20 years. He also met Lexi Thompson and Bubba Watson.

Torre talked with Edmondson and Palmer about Sarazen coming up with the idea for the modern sand wedge.

Torre recalled having to go out and shag balls when the pros practiced.

“He started out at 60 yards, then 80 yards, then 100 yards, and then 150,” Torre said.

Gene Sarazen, in the middle with the golf club, and fellow pro Juggs McSpadden, far right, give a clinic at Bartlett Country Club in Olean, New York. Tony Torre, a 97-year-old Naples resident who caddied for Sarazen in a different tournament, is in the middle of the photo, wearing sunglasses above another man in sunglasses.

Greg Hardwig is a sports reporter for the Naples Daily News and The News-Press. Follow him on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter: @NDN_Ghardwig, email him at ghardwig@naplesnews.com. Support local journalism with this special subscription offer at https://cm.naplesnews.com/specialoffer/

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