Ken Morton Sr., a 60-year member of the PGA of America, receives its Master Professional Lifetime Achievement Award

“Every day I wake up, I get to do something I love.”

Ken Morton Sr. has been recognized more than Mother Teresa. He’s got more hardware than a Home Depot.

Already a PGA of America Hall of Fame member, the Sacramento native received the PGA of America Master Professional Lifetime Achievement Award on July 28 at the headquarters of the PGA of America in Frisco, Texas.

Morton, the 83-year-old longtime head professional at Haggin Oaks Golf Complex and CEO of Morton Golf Management, a golf course management company that oversees all management aspects of four Sacramento municipal golf facilities, was recognized for his award-winning career and extensive contributions to the Association.

“Every day I wake up, I get to do something I love,” Morton told NCGA Golf magazine in 2021.

Morton became just the fifth recipient of the award, which honors PGA Master Professionals who exemplify the elevated standards of the highest education designation within the Association.

A PGA of America Member since 1964, Morton got involved in the development and implementation of Association Education in 1978, initially serving as a faculty presenter. He was instrumental in the evolution and development of the Apprentice, Member, Certification and Master Professional programs.

“I can wholeheartedly state that without PGA Education, my business career would not be what it has become today,” Morton said. “Becoming a PGA Master Professional really did have a dramatic impact on my career. It’s an honor to be recognized, although I have found that the journey to earn the reward is more meaningful than the award itself. The years of being on PGA faculty and getting involved in these programs gave me the opportunity to work with some of the most talented golf professionals in the country, which was reflected in what I did when I went to work each day.”

To distill Morton’s career into awards and honors is to miss the point of his life in the sport. Growing up in Sacramento, the son of a blind father, he took a job at age 11 caddying at Del Paso Country Club. There he met head pro Frank Minch, Sr. One day, Minch asked Morton if he’d like to get better at golf. Morton said yes. Minch told him to show up every Saturday at 7:30 a.m. for lessons. Morton appreciated it but said he couldn’t afford lessons. Minch repeated his instructions.

“He changed my life,” Morton said.

Morton morphed into a golf lifer, a Northern California high school and community college golf champion who also learned how to repair, refinish and re-shaft golf clubs. Then came part two of Morton’s back story: Haggin Oaks pro Tom LoPresti told Minch he needed a club-repair guy.

Ken Morton was 18 years old in 1958 when he accepted that job from LoPresti. What followed over the next six decades has been difference-making idea after difference-making idea. Morton left his mark on player development, marketing, merchandising, junior golf, minority golf initiatives, charity, super stores, 24-hour driving ranges, civic contributions, community and family.

“He’s the Willy Wonka of golf,” said Frank LaRosa, a Sacramento radio and TV golf host.

In 1983, the Sacramento area schools made budget-fueled moves to eliminate high school golf. Morton’s response? He raised money for SAY (Sacramento Area Youth) Golf to get prep kids playing again, and form its junior partner, Little Linkers, including its core principles of honesty, integrity, discipline and respect. Recognize that concept? That’s because the First Tee, a national junior golf development program launched in 1997, consulted with Morton on how to structure its program. Morton may be proudest of the Morton Golf Foundation’s work with Black and Latino junior golfers, veterans and its college scholarship program.

“The game is so great for quality of life,” Morton said.

In 1995, Morton had a circus tent up for their annual April golf expo, but a torrential rainstorm blew through overnight and wrecked the whole thing. “My entire life’s earnings were in that tent,” Morton once said. “Gone overnight.” But he’d studied business practices in annual seminars as a faculty member of the PGA of America’s head pro program. Insurance allowed him to build the 15,000-square-foot Haggin Oaks super store.

“It’s like a Disneyland of golf,” LaRosa said.

Morton officially retired in April 2021, but he still stays involved by hosting customer-service training at Haggin Oaks. His sons, Ken Jr., and Tom, are part of the management team that run the place. Continuity is a thing. LoPresti was at Haggin Oaks 62 years. Morton bettered him by one. The next generation is in place.

“It’s a testament to my Dad’s infectiousness and passion,” Ken Jr. said. “It’s hard not to catch it.”

Morton reflected on his journey, and come to some conclusions.

“It was this thing Mr. Minch did for me that really said to me: ‘Ken, life is pretty good for you. Now you need to do for others what he did for you,’” Morton said. “That’s been my lifetime goal.”

Schupak: Four lessons on life I’ve learned from Jim Nantz

Nantz will be inducted into the PGA of America’s Hall of Fame during the 107th PGA Annual Meeting in Frisco, Texas.

I still remember the first time I called Jim Nantz for an interview.

It was 2009, and Fred Couples, Nantz’s former college roommate and teammate at the University of Houston, was prepping for Augusta National a week ahead of the Masters by making a run in their old stomping grounds at the Shell Houston Open. Who better to get a quote from than Nantz, I figured.

Only one problem: I called him while he was broadcasting the Final Four. Oops! Anyone else would’ve hit delete on my voice mail and I might have been lucky to get a call back at the earliest on Tuesday after March Madness had concluded. But not Nantz. I was calling about one of his dearest friends and so he dialed me back in between games and, pressed for time, reeled off three or four snappy quotes, a telling nugget and an anecdote that made my column for that week’s print issue. Thus was the beginning of a beautiful friendship.

On Wednesday, Nantz, who has been with CBS since 1985 and joined the network’s golf coverage in 1986, was to be inducted into the PGA of America’s Hall of Fame in the ambassador category during the 107th PGA Annual Meeting in Frisco, Texas. The honor is especially meaningful to Nantz, whose love for golf blossomed during summers spent working at Battleground Country Club in Manalapan Township, N.J., for head professional Tony Bruno.

“The greatest lesson in my life that I didn’t get from my parents was watching a PGA professional at work,” Nantz once told me.

I’ve learned a lot from Nantz over the years from our many encounters and conversations over the phone, email and text, including in August in Minnesota at a golf course being built by one of his college teammates. Here are four lessons on life I’ve learned from Nantz and one classic story he recounted from his illustrious career calling some of the great moments in men’s professional golf.

PGA of America’s 2023 Hall of Fame class includes Kathy Whitworth, Jim Nantz

The 2023 Hall of Fame induction ceremony will be in November at the PGA’s new home in Frisco, Texas.

The PGA of America’s 2023 Hall of Fame class will feature three PGA professionals, an LPGA legend, a past PGA president and a famous broadcaster.

The PGA announced its next Hall inductee list Monday, with the official ceremony set for Nov. 8, at the Omni PGA Frisco Resort in Texas.

PGA Members Robert Dolan (Middle Atlantic PGA Section), Don Wegrzyn (Illinois PGA Section) and Herb Wimberly (Sun Country PGA Section) will be inducted alongside past president Suzy Whaley, LPGA legend Kathy Whitworth and CBS Sports’ Jim Nantz at the 107th PGA Annual Meeting. The PGA’s Hall started in 1940.

“It is an incredible honor for the PGA of America to recognize and celebrate our six inductees who have made a real impact on the game of golf and the countless individuals they’ve inspired along the way,” said PGA of America President John Lindert.

Whitworth, who died on Christmas Eve in 2022, collected 88 victories during her 23-year career, the most tournament victories by a professional golfer. She was the LPGA’s leading money winner eight times, Player of the Year seven times and won the Vare Trophy (lowest scoring average) seven times.

Suzy Whaley is a Master Professional who became the first woman elected to serve as PGA President in 2018. She played on the LPGA in 1990 and 1993 and qualified for the 2003 Greater Hartford Open (now known as the Travelers Championship), becoming the first woman since Babe Zaharias in 1945 to play in a PGA Tour event.

Nantz is a member of the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame. He’s also in the Pro Football and Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fames. A three-time Emmy Award winner and five-time National Sportscaster of the Year, he’s been with CBS since 1985 and joined the network’s golf coverage in 1986.