Michael Block makes hole-in-one, finishes T-15, joins Golf Channel set, gets invite to Schwab Challenge

It is the 29th ace in the PGA Championship since 1983.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Michael Block’s fairytale week keeps getting better.

The 46-year-old club pro aced the 151-yard par-3 15th hole at Oak Hill on Sunday with a 7-iron. Block, who was playing alongside Rory McIlroy, sent his tee shot into the air at “Plateau,” the shortest hole on the course and dunked it.

“No, no way,” he said as the crowd erupted. “Are you kidding me? I’ll cause that delay anytime.”

Block, who teaches at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo, California, was the only club pro to make the 36-hole cut this week.

McIlroy smiled widely and slapped Block’s hand and gave him a congratulatory bear hug and tap to the belly.

“I’m like, ‘Why is Rory giving me a hug?'” Block said. “Rory is giving me a hug for hitting it 3, 4, 5 feet? That’s weird. I’m like, ‘I think I just made it.'”

It is the 29th ace in the PGA Championship since 1983.

The hole-in-one lifted Block back to even par for the day and the tournament.

2023 PGA Championship
Michael Block celebrates after his hole-in-one on the 15th hole during the final round of the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, New York. (Photo: Abbie Parr/Associated Press)

Block’s home club had dozens of eyes glued to the CBS telecast and the remote celebration went crazy after the ace.

“To do it on that hole on this stage was a lifelong dream,” Block said. “It can never be better. That’s it. I can retire. Good night.”

Block needed a top-15 finish to secure a return visit to the PGA in 2024 at Valhalla, and that ace certainly help.

But it was a clutch up-and-down par on the closing 18th hole that sealed it for him, as a final-round 71 punched his ticket for next year. Among the PGA Tour elite that Block’s 1-over 281 total beat this week: Xander Schauffele, Collin Morikawa, Jordan Spieth, Hideki Matsuyama, Jon Rahm, Max Homa and Dustin Johnson.

After his round, and after doing a session in the media center, he got a call from the tournament director at the Charles Schwab Challenge, who offered Block the final sponsor exemption. Block accepted the call on speaker phone and he and his wife got emotional with the good news. He also received an invite to the RBC Canadian Open.

Block topped off his day at Oak Hill by joining the set of Golf Channel’s Live From, and chopped it up with Rich Lerner, Brandel Chamblee and Brad Faxon.

For his work on the course, Block earned $288,333.

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

PGA Championship: What does Michael Block’s RAW hat mean?

Block wore a hat that said “RAW” on it, and many didn’t understand what it was referring to.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Michael Block is a 46-year-old PGA of America professional and the head pro at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo, California. This week, he is also the toast of Oak Hill Country Club and one of the most popular players in the field at the 2023 PGA Championship.

As the only one of the 20 PGA of America pros to make the cut on Friday, Block was already going to be a great story, but after shooting a third-straight round of 70, he finished the day just six shots behind the tournament’s leader, Brooks Koepka, and is playing Sunday with Rory McIlroy.

On Friday, Block wore a hat that said “RAW” on it, and many people don’t know what that means.

In this case, RAW refers to the raw steel finish of the TaylorMade Milled Grind 3 (MG3) wedges. While most irons and wedges have shiny chrome plating over the steel used to make the clubs, some brands offer raw, un-chromed versions of irons and wedges that will rust over time and with exposure to moisture. The MG3 wedges have a raw steel hitting surface but come with a sticker that covers the raw steel, so nothing rusts until the clubs are purchased.

Shortly after those clubs were released in August 2021, TaylorMade promoted them by having staff pros wear RAW hats at a few PGA Tour events, and then they made the hats available on the company’s website. Staff teaching professionals like Block often get promotional items like hats, towels, Bluetooth speakers and headcovers.

If you are looking for a RAW hat, you’re out of luck. They are listed as sold out on TaylorMade’s website and other golf retail sites. Golfweek reached out to representatives from TaylorMade, but there is no word on the brand re-releasing the hat.

[pickup_prop id=”33580″]

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

Photos: Teaching pro Michael Block’s magical run at the PGA Championship has been something to see

It’s been an incredible week for Block, the California club pro who entered the final day in a tie for eighth place.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — It’s been a magical week for Michael Block, the California club pro who entered the final day of the 105th PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club in a tie for eighth place.

Block was stunned when he found out he’d be paired with Rory McIlroy on Sunday. No golf club pro has ever placed higher than 11th in a PGA tournament.

During the second round, Block, the 46-year-old head professional at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo, California, birdied his first hole of the day to move into a tie for second place behind leader Bryson DeChambeau. He then birded his third and fifth hole.

He found himself in the company of such notables as Dustin Johnson, Justin Rose and Scottie Scheffler early in the second round of the PGA Championship and ended up shooting a second consecutive round of even-par 70 to ensure that he’d make the 36-hole cut. When his day was complete, he was tied for 13th place.

By Sunday he’d become a cult favorite of sorts, drawing crowds and cheers prior to this round.

One of the endearing features of this major is that several spots in the field are reserved for club pros like Block — and occasionally they make some noise, but rarely like Block has. He has been named the Southern California PGA Player of the Year in nine of the last 10 years (2013-2022, with the exception being 2017). He’s also a past California State Open champion.

The last PGA Professional to finish among the top 40 for the entire championship was Steve Schneiter, who tied for 40th in 2005 at Baltusrol.

Here’s a look at Block’s magical run in photos.

[pickup_prop id=”33580″]

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

Club pro Michael Block celebrates another great 2023 PGA Championship round with beers at local pub

“I’ve learned at this point to enjoy the moment, to sit back and relax and enjoy it because it goes by fast.”

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — How did PGA club pro Michael Block, the Cinderella Story of the 105th PGA Championship, celebrate another hard day’s work of shooting even-par 70 at Oak Hill? He hit the town still dressed in his golf gear and had a few pints at the Pittsford Pub with golf fans. (Hey, he doesn’t tee off until 2 p.m. ET today.)

Block, 46, who teaches at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo, California, enters the final round tied for eighth and paired with Rory McIlroy, a day after playing with former U.S. Open champ and world No. 1 Justin Rose.

“I didn’t look at Rosey’s face for the first three holes because I’m a big fan of Rosey and I’ve watched him my whole life, and I knew it could get a little too intimidating, the fact that, holy crap, I’m sitting here playing with Justin Rose, and that might get too big for me, so I literally just kind of looked down, looked at his shoes the first couple holes, and got off to a decent start and went on from there,” Block said after his round.

Only Rose, with 14, has made more birdies this week than Block’s 13. He’s doing things that a club pro, who makes his living tending to the needs of his membership and rarely has time to play let alone practice, shouldn’t be doing and has practically never done before. Block was ahead of world No. 1 and Masters champ Jon Rahm, defending champ Justin Thomas, three-time major winner Jordan Spieth and Patrick Cantlay, his buddy from back home in Southern California who gives him odds when they play. Nevertheless, Block has a chance to become the first PGA club pro to finish in the top 10 at the PGA Championship, and a whole lot more.

“I can compete against these guys, to be honest,” said Block, a 10-time Southern California PGA Player of the Year. “I can compete against them. I can hang. I can post a 3- or 4-under (Sunday).”

[pickup_prop id=”33577″]

Asked how he can stay grounded when he’s become an overnight sensation in the golf world, he said, “Have you met my wife? She will keep you down to earth more than anyone in the world. She’s an Argentinian-Italian fireball that will tell me everything you don’t want to hear, but yeah, she’ll keep me down to earth like you have no idea. It’s pretty easy for me. I grew up in St. Louis, I grew up in Iowa, kind of combination, Midwest roots. My parents would never let me get outside my box, right.

“I’m just having fun. Everyone is so cool and the people are great. We go out to dinner, everyone is so awesome, and the fans have been amazing, you guys have been great, and I’m just having a good time.”

It’s one thing to stay grounded and another to embrace the media attention that’s been showered upon him and engage in ‘walk-and-talk’ interviews with the likes of ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt and CBS’s Jim Nantz, but Block is a charismatic fellow. Asked to explain how he’s handled it all with such aplomb, he said, “It’s built-in club professional. You deal with 600 different personalities, right? You’ve got a lawyer telling you how to grow grass and you’ve got an accountant telling you that the burger wasn’t cooked right. So you’ve got to deal with it and you know how to deal with everybody under the sun.

“That’s a natural thing for me. I don’t have to try to do that. I’m just being — like I said, I’m just being myself. That’s my big goal. My wife used to give me so much crap because for the first 100 interviews of my life back in the day, not with you guys but much smaller interviews, I was very, yes, yes, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, kind of what I hear honestly with a lot of the guys here when I see them doing this. It’s just like, dude…I just became way more natural. My wife really kind of told me to do that, and it’s worked out beautifully, so she was right.”

And Block also spouted off with some deep thoughts that transcend golf. He’s a modern-day philosopher, too, a Ferris Bueller in spikes.

“I’ve learned at this point to enjoy the moment, to sit back and relax and enjoy it because it goes by fast, and life goes by fast,” he said. “Before you know it, you’re 60 years old and retired and look back at the videos on this and remember that was the best week of my life, and more than likely this is probably going to be the best week of my life. So I’m going to sit back as much as I can with my friends and family at the house we rented and watch the videos tonight and see all my new followers on Instagram. It’s been crazy, it’s been awesome.”

And there’s still one more day of the Block Party to go.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=451201144]

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

2023 PGA Championship: 5 things to know about Brooks Koepka’s bid for 5th major, Viktor Hovland’s game plan, Rory McIlroy is lurking, more

Koepka’s 66 was all the more impressive given that Oak Hill turned into Soak Hill for the third round.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. – At his home in Jupiter, Florida, Brooks Koepka has his trophies on display.

“But I only put the big ones up there just to remind myself that’s there’s plenty more big ones to win,” Koepka said in “Full Swing,” the Netflix docuseries.

On Saturday, Koepka sank a 47-foot birdie putt at 17 to post the low round at Oak Hill for the second straight day – back-to-back rounds of 66 – to grab a one-stroke advantage atop the leaderboard over Viktor Hovland and Corey Conners after 54 holes at the 105th PGA Championship. Koepka will be bidding for a fifth major — he would become the 20th player to win five or more major titles — and third Wanamaker Trophy.

“To win one would be fantastic,” Koepka said. “I was just told that I think only Tiger and Jack have won three (in the modern era), so that would be pretty special to be in a list or category with them.”

Koepka’s 66 was all the more impressive given that Oak Hill turned into Soak Hill for the third round.

“It was just relentless really, from the start of the warmup to literally as we were putting out on the last green. There was very little wind, but that doesn’t stop it playing cold and long and wet,” said Tommy Fleetwood, who recorded one of the better rounds, a 68. “As the round goes on, it just turns into a bit more survival.”

Koepka, 33, survived a 2-over 72 in the opening round and patiently has clawed his way back to the top of the leaderboard. He did so with back-to-back birdies at Nos. 4 and 5, He made his lone bogey of the day at the seventh when he tugged his drive left and had to punch out of trouble. His putter warmed up on the second nine and he made birdies at Nos. 12 and 13 before sinking the long-range bomb at 17.

“That doesn’t go in, that’s probably six, eight feet by,” said Koepka, who finished at 6-under 204.

For the second straight major, Koepka, who defected to LIV Golf last summer after missing the cut at the U.S. Open, holds the 54-hole lead. But at the Masters, he conceded he “choked” on Sunday, as Jon Rahm slipped into the Green Jacket.

“I didn’t sleep Sunday night just trying to figure out what exactly it was. Thought about it for a few days after and really honed in on what I was doing and what went wrong,” Koepka said Tuesday. “From there just never let it happen again. That’s the whole goal, right?”

Koepka refuses to share what went wrong at Augusta, but he reiterated after Saturday’s round that he won’t make the same mistake twice.

“Learning what I learned at Augusta kind of helped today,” he said. “Like I said, I won’t do it again the rest of my career.”

[pickup_prop id=”33577”]

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

Block party: PGA Club pro Michael Block makes the cut at Oak Hill and has big plans for the weekend

“As weird as it sounds, I’m going to compete. I promise you that.”

ROCHESTER, N.Y. – Michael Block has imprinted on his Titleist golf balls the words, “WHY NOT?”

Could it be that a 46-year-old Southern Cal club pro at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo shot a pair of even-par 70s in the first two rounds at Oak Hill in the 105th PGA Championship? Why not?

Could a club pro who spends the majority of his time on the lesson tee beat the likes of Jon Rahm and Rickie Fowler and even nip Patrick Cantlay, who gives him odds when they play back home, by a stroke so far? Why not?

Could it be that a PGA club pro is in the top 20 at the halfway point of the PGA Championship for just the second time in the last 20 years? Why not?

The genesis of Block’s “Why not” ball stamping goes like this: More than 15 years ago, he said he was the type of player who used to question himself over every shot, the type who’d also get ahead of himself booking hotel rooms in his mind before he made the cut or even qualified for a tournament. But one day he was on the verge of winning a tournament and simply told himself, Why not win?

Here Blockie, his nickname that is on his staff bag, picks up the thread of the story: “Why not just clip this, spin it to the right three feet, and make the putt?” he recalled. “I go, why not? I started saying that, and so to do it, they started stamping my golf balls.”

In 2007, at Bear Creek in Murrieta, California, he had a 22-footer in a playoff to get into the U.S. Open at Oakmont.

“I was behind the putt, and my caddie whispers over my ear and says, ‘If you make this, we’re in the Open.’ Out loud, while I was over the golf ball, I said, ‘Why not?’ Then I proceeded to drain it and made it into the U.S. Open at Oakmont, which is my first event I ever played in.”

Block also played in another U.S. Open at Shinnecock in 2018, and described Oak Hill as what might result if Oakmont and Shinnecock had “a baby.” He made six birdies during Thursday’s opening-round 70 and did a live walk and talk on the 14th hole with ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt that he knocked out of the park.

“I’m just your local club pro. That’s what I do. I don’t hit balls. People think I’ve got the best job in the world. I do have a great job. I have a very supportive club that lets me go play, but the amount of times I hit a bucket of balls is not even once a week,” he explained. “I always tell everybody, I practiced a lot when I was young. I’m old now, and my swing is what it is.”

The top-20 finishers in the PGA Professional Championship are exempt into the PGA and Block checked that box for the fifth time by finishing tied for second last month in the club pro championship. He had missed the cut in all six majors he’d previously played in and had made the cut in just four of 24 career starts on the PGA Tour — the last in 2015 and the best a T-69.

But why not do something special this week? After all, Block had shot an opening-round 65 at the Tour’s American Express in January and a second-round 72 in windy conditions at Southern Hills during last year’s PGA Championship. Block plays regularly back home with Tour pros Beau Hossler, who if he’s lucky will give him a shot, and Cantlay, who he plays straight up but gets odds on their bet.

“I understand how my game doesn’t quite get up to them, but I’m pretty darn close, and I can compete with them,” Block said. “I’ve been gaining that confidence from those finishes in those rounds where I’m like, why not? Why not come here and compete? Why not here at Oak Hill, make the cut? I’m not afraid of them anymore, to be honest.”

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3413″ ]

Before this week, he said his claim to fame has been leading a U.S. Open as one of the players in the first groups to make an early birdie but then he’d look at the scoreboard and faded away. On Friday, Block reeled off three birdies in the first five holes and was T-2 at 3 under. He made a bogey at 17 but bounced back with a birdie at the first. He made a sloppy bogey from 89 yards away at the par-5 fourth hole and then stepped to the tee at the 165-yard fifth tee.

“It was a nice little 8-iron, front left pin. I love hitting baby draw with my 8-iron. I’ve done it well all week,” he said.

But not this time. He hit a hosel rocket, a dead shank to the right, dare we say Block blocked it right of right that it nearly went out of bounds.

“We’ve all been there, done that,” he said, “and I’m, like, ‘Oh, my goodness.’ The ball was just going off, somehow hit the tree, almost killed somebody, and then comes off and goes in the deep rough, and I was actually fortunate enough to make a double bogey.”

“I’ve seen him hit a lot of golf shots,” said his caddie John Jackson, “but I’ve never seen him hit one like that.”

About a half hour later, two-time major winner Dustin Johnson shanked one, too, proving the dreaded shanks strike even the best of them. When his caddie told him about Johnson’s similar blunder, Block said, “Hey, that makes me feel better.”

A 45-minute lesson with Block will run you $125, but he gave a free tip on how to fix a shank.

“Your hands are getting too far out in front of you and getting too far away from you,” he said. “I played the last four holes feeling my hands a little tighter to the body through the impact zone.”

The result? “I kinda flushed all of them,” he said.

When he cleaned up for a par from the bunker at No. 9, his last hole of the day, he looked to the heavens, stretched out his arms and mouthed, “Thank you.”

Making the cut and being low club pro and being honored for that feat during the champion’s trophy ceremony, he said was the last box he needed to check in a playing career that includes being named Southern California PGA Player of the Year 10 times and the 2022 PGA Professional Player of the Year. But he’s not going to rest on his laurels.

“My game is good. I’ve got it. I’m peaking right now,” he said. “I’ve got no pressure. I’ve got a job, I’ve got a paycheck waiting for me at my club so I don’t have to make putts this week to pay my mortgage.” He added, “It’s all good from here. Nothing can go wrong from this point forward and I can’t tell you how happy that makes me.”

No club pro has ever finished in the top 10 —Tommy Aycock in 1974 and Lonnie Nielsen in 1986 share the best mark with T-11-finishes — and by day’s end Block was T-10. Why not?

What would be the ultimate “Why not” for Block this week?

“To win, by far,” he said. “As weird as it sounds, I’m going to compete. I promise you that.”

[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.

With Michael Block in contention at Oak Hill, we look back on the 10 best finishes by PGA Professionals at the PGA Championship

Block is even par through two rounds in New York.

Michael Block has a chance to make history at the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, New York.

Block, who has opened the tournament with back-to-back even-par 70s, is the PGA Head Professional at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo, California.

As of 1 p.m. ET Friday, Block was tied for 10th at Oak Hill. If he were to finish solo 11th or better, Block would hold the record for the best finish by a PGA professional at the PGA Championship.

Here are the 10 best finishes by PGA pros in the history of the PGA Championship, starting with Steve Schneiter in 2005.

Information taken from PGA.com.

Suzy Whaley makes history as first woman to captain United States men in PGA Cup, Americans victorious in England

Suzy Whaley made history Sunday.

Suzy Whaley made history Sunday.

Whaley, a PGA Honorary President from Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, captained the United States to victory in the 30th PGA Cup at Foxhills Resort and Club in Surrey, England, against Great Britain and Ireland. It is the Americans’ first overseas victory since 2009 and their second Llandudno International Trophy win. In the overall series, which dates to 1973, it’s the 19th win for the U.S.

Yet for Whaley, she’s the first woman to not only captain the men’s PGA Cup team but win it, too. She was also captain of the victorious United States Women’s PGA Cup team in its inaugural event in 2019.

“I have been able to do a lot of amazing things in my career, and this ranks right at the very top,” said Whaley.

30th PGA Cup
Captain and PGA of America Honorary President, Suzy Whaley during single matches for the 30th PGA Cup at Foxhills Golf Club on September 18, 2022 in Ottershaw, England. (Photo by Matthew Harris/PGA of America)

The PGA Cup originated in 1973 at Pinehurst Country Club in North Carolina as an outgrowth of the PGA Professional Championship. Structured after the format of the Ryder Cup, with match-play competition between the U.S. and Europe, the PGA Cup features the top PGA Club Professionals from both sides of the Atlantic.

The U.S. led 9.5-6.5 entering singles on Sunday, and American Michael Block started the day with an incredible comeback. Block, the PGA Head Professional at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club, in Mission Viejo, California, birdied five of his six final holes, including two lengthy birdie putts on Nos. 15 and 17, to win the match 1 up.

“It really set the tone for everybody else,” said Whaley, who followed Block across the back nine. “He fought so hard, and he earned us that first point. That first point is so crucial for the rest of the team. I have never seen anyone fight so hard for a point.”

PGA Life Member and Austin native Omar Uresti, a two-time PGA Professional Champion, earned the clinching point for the United States, 4 & 3 over Great Britain & Ireland’s Simon Lilly, to help secure a 15.5-10.5 road win.

“It started to get a little dicey,” admitted Whaley. “But in the end, we got it done.”

The United States holds a 19-7-4 advantage in a series. The U.S. won in 2019 at Omni Barton Creek Resort & Spa in Austin, on a miraculous final day rally.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]