Tiger Woods inducted into World Golf Hall of Fame

It’s been quite the game-changing journey.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Some 44 years after shuffling on to the stage of “The Mike Douglas Show” as a 2-year-old and entertaining Bob Hope, Jimmy Stewart and the host by hitting golf balls into a net and rolling a few putts, Tiger Woods was at PGA Tour headquarters Wednesday night for his rightful induction into the World Golf Hall of Fame.

It’s been quite the game-changing journey.

Woods’ 14-year-old daughter, Sam, was scheduled to introduce her father as the 164th member of the Hall of Fame.

Also inducted was former PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem and three-time U.S. Women’s Open champion Susie Maxwell Berning. Visionary and trailblazer Marion Hollins was also inducted posthumously.

“He is the rare athlete who not only exceeded the hype,” PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said of Woods, “he transcended it and continues to this day to have a massive influence on the game and the PGA Tour.”

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After winning three consecutive U.S. Junior Amateur titles and three consecutive U.S. Amateur championships, Woods, 46, turned pro in 1996. He promptly won three times on the PGA Tour in his first 10 starts.

Then he won the 1997 Masters by 12 shots, a historic victory as Woods became the first man of color to win at Augusta National Golf Club. He also, at 21, became the youngest winner of the green jacket.

Woods became the needle that moved the sport. Purses began to significantly rise, TV ratings surged upward. His presence spurred more athletic, stronger players to pick up the game. His peers followed him into the gym and the game became one featuring more power.

His influence on advertising and fashion for the sport was striking. Minorities became attracted to golf. And a generation of youngsters wanted to be like Tiger.

The list of his feats stretches out as long as one of his drives from his heyday. The record-tying 82 PGA Tour titles, the 15 major championships. A record 142 consecutive cuts made, a record 683 weeks – 13 years – atop the Official World Golf Ranking. A record 11 PGA Tour Player of the Year Awards.

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He’s the youngest player to complete the career Grand Slam, doing so at age 24 when he won the 2000 British Open at the Home of Golf, the Old Course at St. Andrews. En route to becoming the only player to win four consecutive professional major championships – known as the Tiger Slam – he won the 2000 U.S. Open by 15, the 2000 Open by 8, the 2000 PGA in a playoff, and the 2001 Masters by two. And he won on a broken leg at the 2008 U.S. Open and captured his fifth Masters in 2019 following spinal fusion surgery (his fifth back surgery, to go along with five surgeries on his left knee).

The list goes on and on and on.

“What can I say about Tiger that we haven’t said already?” world No. 1 Jon Rahm said. “Besides entertaining all of us for 20 years and doing unbelievable things, he inspired the generation of players that you’re seeing today.

“You have at the top of the world a lot of 20-some-year-olds and early 30-year-olds that grew up watching him and trying to copy him, and I think that’s why the level of the game is as high as it is right now.

“Aside from everything that he did, I think it’s a testament to what he was able to accomplish and how many people he was able to inspire.”

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Marion Hollins, the visionary behind the iconic 16th at Cypress Point, finally gets her World Golf Hall of Fame due

Hollins is finally being honored for a legacy that lives on at some of Northern California’s finest cathedrals of golf.

Marion Hollins always went for broke – in sports, golf course development, business and in life. In designing the iconic 16th of Cypress Point Club, she wanted to give golfers the most thrilling shot in golf ’s golden age. Architects Seth Raynor and Alister MacKenzie objected, but she prevailed. And now, all these years later, she is finally receiving acclaim from the golf world.

It might be argued that as an architect, developer of the first golf planned unit community, a competitive golfer and investor, Marion Hollins was among the most influential sportswomen of the 20th Century. Yet outside of golf, few know of her accomplishments.

In 1915, when Miss Marion of East Islip, N.Y., first came to the Monterey Peninsula, there was the Hotel Del Monte with its golf course, polo fields and equestrian trails. She was interested in the horse events, but the runner-up in the 1913 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship and eventual winner of the 1921 edition (5 and 4 over Alexa Stirling) returned in 1922 to work for Samuel F.B. Morse, the Del Monte Properties Co. President, as athletic director and in real estate sales.

Morse recognized that Hollins, who had founded the Women’s National Golf and Tennis Club on Long Island, could bring her well-heeled acquaintances from New York to play Pebble Beach Golf Links, which opened in 1919, and to become members of the contemplated Monterey Peninsula Country Club (MPCC) and Cypress Point Club. Her father was Harry B. Hollins, an investment banker and advisor to financier J.P. Morgan.

Morse, an alumnus of Yale University, invited Raynor, one of the leading architects of the day and who already had designed the Yale golf course, to California to design the two clubs in Del Monte Forest.

Thus, the stage was set for Hollins, standing all of 5 feet, 7 inches tall and bundled up in a wool skirt, silk blouse and tweed jacket to tour the sand dunes, pines and cypresses one day in 1925 and make an indelible mark on Northern California golf.

Marion Hollins, courtesy World Golf Hall of Fame.

Nearly a century would pass before she would be duly recognized for being a female trailblazer with selection into the World Golf Hall of Fame. Hollins is scheduled to be enshrined posthumously on March 9 during an induction ceremony that includes fellow inductees Tiger Woods, former PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem and three-time U.S. Women’s Open champion Susie Maxwell Berning. (Also being honored are Pebble Beach Co. partners Peter Ueberroth and the late Dick Ferris for lifetime achievement.)

Beyond golf, Hollins, who grew up on a 600-acre farm on Long Island, was a renowned polo player, four-in-hand driver of horse carriages – including driving a team from Buffalo to Manhattan to sell war bonds in World War I – race-car driver, equestrienne and suffragette, marching for the woman’s right to vote.

Not to minimize her many contributions to the game, but let’s circle back to arguably her signature moment at Cypress Point. Raynor and Hollins reached the coastal cliff of what would become the iconic 16th hole. We can only imagine the conversation. Raynor said “it was a pity” that a hole could not be constructed there, arguing that a 200-yard carry over the ocean was too difficult even for male golfers. Insisting that the hole’s carry would be a challenge but not impossible, she teed up a ball – the rubbery Haskell ball prominent in that era – and swung. The ball landed across the chasm precisely where Hollins envisioned placing the green. Hollins had proved her point, but Raynor never saw that green as he died a few months later of pneumonia at age 51.

Soon afterward, she recommended to Morse that MacKenzie, who had a developed a reputation for “camouflage” greens at the Old Course at St. Andrews and was constructing the Meadow Club in Fairfax, take over the Cypress Point project with his partner Robert Hunter.

“To give honor where it is due,” MacKenzie wrote in The Spirit of St. Andrews, “I must say that, except, for minor details in construction, I was in no way responsible for the hole. It was largely due to the vision of Miss Marion Hollins.”

MacKenzie’s manuscript of The Spirit of St.  Andrews  languished for 60 years before it was found and published, but in golf journals in 1928, both MacKenzie and Hunter wrote that the 233-yard 16thshould be a par-4. When the course opened, it was indeed a par-3, offering the most thrilling tee shot in golf at the time.

American amateur golfer Marion Hollins (1892 – 1944) drives off during the 2nd day of the Ladies Open Golf Championship at St Andrews, Scotland, 15th May 1929. (Photo by Puttnam/Topical Press Agency/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

MacKenzie conceded eventually that the 16th, with layup options for the less-skilled golfer, could even be played with a putter. Here is an account from his book:

“I was traveling from San Francisco to New York with a man who is affectionately known as Billy Humphrey. He said, ‘What sort of hole do you think your 16th at Cypress Point is? I don’t think a hole is a golf hole that can be played with a putter.’ On the contrary,’ I said, ‘ I don’t think an ideal hole is ideal unless it can be played with a putter, but we won’t argue about that. What is your trouble?’

“He said, ‘Well, I was playing this hole against Herbert Fleischaker for two hundred dollars. [Herbert Fleischaker has the reputation of not being able to get a ball off the ground, but he is full of brains, is a very good approacher and putter, and often outwits a more powerful opponent.] It was my honour, and I put two shots in the ocean. Then old Herbert gets his putter, takes four putts to reach the green, wins the hole and two hundred dollars.’ I am afraid I was not unduly sympathetic.”

Hollins’ great-niece Phyllis Theroux, in California and Other States of Grace, added another wrinkle to the Raynor-Hollins conversation on the cliffside. She writes that Hollins “whacked it effortlessly across the water to land on the other side. Then she did it twice more, just to prove her point.

“This is what visionaries do. They see what the rest of us can’t, and make believers out of us,” Theroux wrote. “It is what Marion Hollins did all her life.”

Hollins convinced Morse that she could successfully sell the Cypress Point Club memberships and contracted with him to buy the 150-acre property for $150,000, and she hired MacKenzie to construct the course for $100,000 (the final cost was $88,000). The golf course opened Aug. 11, 1928, with little more than a caddie shack. The clubhouse came later. All these years later, her great-nephew, Tony Grissim, received a plaque on her behalf, proclaiming her an honorary member of the American Society of Golf Course Architects during its annual meeting in November. (Grissim has created a monument near Hollins’ grave at Monterey City Cemetery, and her original head stone is now part of Hollins Terrace at Cypress Point.)

The headstone for Marion Hollins includes her recent selection to the World Golf Hall of Fame (Alex Hulanicki for Golfweek).

Hollins next moved on to her third golf development – Pasatiempo Golf Club and Estates in the hillside above Santa Cruz for a planned-unit golf community – but she needed funding to hire MacKenzie and the Olmsted Brothers, sons of Fredrick Olmsted who designed Central Park in New York City.

At the time, Hollins had partnered with several investors in what was considered a “dry” oil field in the Kettleman Hills between Paso Robles and Fresno. It turned out to be the largest oil strike in the state’s history in October 1928. The $100,000 investment turned into $10 million, with Hollins netting $2.5 million, which not only funded Pasatiempo’s construction but aided her purchase of 10,000 acres of Big Sur coast lands about 40 miles south of Monterey. With MacKenzie, who made his home on the sixth hole, and Hollins again collaborating, Pasatiempo’s layout rivaled Cypress Point.

Hollins also established the Pebble Beach Golf Championship for Women, which attracted some of the finest competitors in the land. Still, she won the tournament seven times. The competition is credited with convincing the United States Golf Association to hold its Amateur Championship at Pebble Beach Golf Links in September 1929, which drew Bobby Jones as an entrant. Jones lost in the first round, thus freeing him up to renew friendships and play an exhibition match with Cyril Tolley, Glenna Collett and Hollins on opening day at Pasatiempo.

Jones’ relationship with Hollins became key to the development of Augusta National, including Jones’ selection of MacKenzie as co-designer of the course, and using the Pasatiempo development as a blueprint for Augusta National. MacKenzie sent Hollins to Augusta as his representative and asked her to report back her impressions of the course as it was being constructed. MacKenzie was fond of travel, including trans-Atlantic voyages and ballroom dancing while on the ocean liners, so he was not as attentive as he should have been to his golf projects, including Augusta National.

Jones’ partner, Clifford Roberts, questioned MacKenzie as to whether he should be at Augusta to supervise the course development himself. MacKenzie made clear he already had the best person for the job, saying of Hollins, “I do not know of any man who has sounder ideas.”

Though she wore cashmere skirts, silk blouses and fancy hats, Hollins was a powerful force on the golf course. When she defeated Alexa Stirling, three-time defending U.S. Women’s Amateur champion in 1921at Hollywood Golf Club in Deal, N.J., Hollins’ power was praised by New York Tribune writer Ray McCarthy. And beyond her strength, McCarthy wrote, she “played splendid golf and showed wonderful gameness against a finished player who does not know what it is to quit.”

Marion Hollins at Pebble Beach, circa 1927 (Courtesy World Golf Hall of Fame).

In September 1942, Hollins played a round at Del Monte Golf Course with Betty Hicks, the reigning U.S. Women’s Amateur champion at the time. Hollins was 49 and her health was waning, while Hicks was 21. “When she walked to the first tee, I was amazed at the shapeless size of her, and then I was even more astonished when she gathered together that mountain of wool and swept into a potent, rhythmic golf swing. When we reached our drives, the national champion of 1921 had outdriven the national champion of 1941 – no short hitter herself – by 20 yards.” By the 18th tee, Hollins had won the match, Hicks wrote in the Golf Journal of July 1986.

Power and preparation were keys to Hollins’ strategy in leading America’s inaugural Curtis Cup team in 1932 to victory over the British team at the Wentworth Club in Surrey, England. Hollins took her team to the British Isles two weeks early to practice, but one of her players, Virginia Van Wie, whose play would be critical, almost didn’t make it to the dock but Lincoln Werden, golf writer of The New York Times, raced through the streets of New York to get her to the pier in the nick of time, according to David E. Outerbridge in his biography of Miss Hollins, Champion in a Man’s World. The U.S. defeated England 5-1/2 to 3-1/2 Hollins planned on passing her time at Pasatiempo with parties, enjoying Hollywood visitors such as Spencer Tracy and his wife, Louise, and working on her Big Sur property. That is until the stock market crashed and the Great Depression followed. Her fortune was lost. Then, on Dec. 2, 1937, Hollins was driving home from visiting a friend at a hospital when a drunken driver collided with her car. Head injuries hampered her activities. After Pasatiempo was sold in foreclosure, Hollins was virtually broke, but Morse brought her back to Pebble Beach, where she won one more championship in 1941. She died in a Pacific Grove nursing home on Aug. 28, 1944. She was 51.

“What makes Marion Hollins interesting, and important for our – or any –time is that she was one of those rare human beings who find reward in the achievement itself, with no further external need for confirmation or applause,” wrote Outerbridge.

But that doesn’t mean she doesn’t deserve her due. At last, she’ll be appropriately honored for a legacy that lives on at some of Northern California’s finest cathedrals of golf.

Tiger Woods is trophy hunting for his 2022 World Golf Hall of Fame induction

The Cat is back to hunting down golf trophies, just not on the course.

Tiger Woods is back to hunting down golf trophies, just not on the course.

The 82-time winner on the PGA Tour and 15-time major champion shared on Twitter that he’s seeking out his favorite trophies for his World Golf Hall of Fame exhibit and included a photo of his 1996 PGA Tour Rookie of the Year hardware.

It was 25 years ago that Woods stormed on the professional scene, winning two events in his first full season on Tour. Woods claimed the five-round Las Vegas Invitational at 27 under after a playoff with Davis Love III and two weeks later took home the Walt Disney World/Oldsmobile Classic at 21 under, one stroke ahead of Payne Stewart.

The World Golf Hall of Fame announced in December of 2020 that the induction ceremony for the 2021 class would be postponed to March 9, 2022 during the week of the Players Championship. Joining Woods in the hall will be four-time major champion and 11-time LPGA winner Susie Maxwell Berning, former PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem and female golf pioneer Marion Hollins (posthumously), bringing the total member total to 164.

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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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Opinion: Marion Hollins among the top 5 most influential women in golf

My parents have a framed print in their home of the magnificent par-3 16 th at Cypress Point Golf Club that features a quote from Arnold Palmer. It was decades before I discovered that a woman, Marion Hollins, is actually credited with designing …

My parents have a framed print in their home of the magnificent par-3 16th at Cypress Point Golf Club that features a quote from Arnold Palmer. It was decades before I discovered that a woman, Marion Hollins, is actually credited with designing that hole.

Marion who?

Hollins’ induction into the 2021 World Golf Hall of Fame class, alongside Tiger Woods, gives many the chance to become acquainted with perhaps the most influential woman in golf you’ve never heard of. In fact, I’d put Hollins among the top five most influential women in golf history.

Maybe one day there will be mass prints of the 16th at Cypress Point sold with quotes about Hollins, a one-of-a-kind, dynamite developer who earned the respect of some of the most prominent men in golf.

She was a race car driver and played polo against men. She marched with the suffragettes in New York. Won the 1921 U.S. Women’s Amateur and became the first woman to captain the American Curtis Cup team in 1932.

Born in 1892, Hollins developed the Women’s National Golf and Tennis Club at age 30, traveling to Great Britain to do architectural research.

It was Hollins who smashed a ball 200 yards over the Pacific Ocean, landing it safely into what would become the middle of the green at the 16th at Cypress, thus proving it to be a par 3 for all.

“I was in no way responsible for the hole,” wrote architect Alister MacKenzie. “It was largely due to the vision of Marion Hollins.”

One of the greatest athletes of her time, it was Hollins’ friendship with Bobby Jones that greatly influenced the decision to bring MacKenzie in as co-designer of Augusta National.

Pebble Beach founder Samuel Morse hired Hollins in 1922 as athletic director, giving her a key role in developing the Monterey Peninsula into a golf mecca. She orchestrated the Pebble Beach Championship for women, winning the first edition and later dominating what became the biggest event on the West Coast. She presented Morse with the idea of developing a private club in Pebble Beach, ultimately leading to Cypress Point.

From there she went on to own and develop Pasatiempo Golf Club near Santa Cruz, also designed by MacKenzie.

As reported in David Owen’s book “Making of the Masters,” MacKenzie sent Hollins to Augusta National in his place after co-founder Clifford Roberts felt that MacKenzie wasn’t spending enough time at the development.

“I want her views and personal impressions in regard to the way that the work is being carried out,” wrote MacKenzie, later adding, “I do not know of any man who has sounder ideas.”

While few golf fans know the name Hollins, one would be hard-pressed to find a golfer who isn’t familiar with her work. Which is why Hollins should be on any well-rounded short list of influential women in the game.

Who should join her on that list?

  1. Annika Sorenstam: The winningest player in the modern era not only dominated the LPGA but elevated everyone around her, particularly when it came to fitness. The only player in LPGA history to shoot 59, Sorenstam’s appearance on the PGA Tour at Colonial catapulted her into a new level of acclaim among sports stars.
  2. Mickey Wright: That swing. Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson called Wright’s swing the greatest they’d ever seen – man or woman. Such respect helped to elevate the women’s tour in those early days. There was time when tournaments threatened to cancel if Wright, a 13-time major winner, didn’t play.
  3. Babe Zarahias:The early LPGA was built to showcase Zaharias, one of the greatest athletes in American history. She wasn’t just a sports star, but a bona fide celebrity.
  4. Se Ri Pak: The South Korean single-handedly changed the face of the LPGA, inspiring countless others to pick up the game throughout Asia. When the LPGA faced an uncertain future a decade ago, it was the Asian market that largely propped up the tour financially.