Remembering those we lost from the world of golf in 2020

Players, course designers, coaches and photographers are among those figures in golf we lost in 2020. They won’t soon be forgotten.

The world of golf lost some real treasures in 2020.

Golfers, golf course designers, golf coaches and golf photographers are among those we lost. Pete Dye, Mickey Wright, Doug Sanders, Cullan Brown and Leonard Kamsler were among those who passed away this year.

They are among those who have left their mark on the game and won’t soon be forgotten.

From charity to triumph: The feel-good stories in golf from 2020

Even in as bleak a year as 2020, feel-good stories rose from creativity, charity and success in golf. These are a few of our favorites.

The past year in golf presented loads of opportunities for inspiration, whether through perseverance, charity, beating the odds or just finding ways to create a few laughs. As our writers chronicled the ups and downs of life on Tour, and life in general, these stories stuck with us.

You’ll read about a family that created its own “golf course” to pass the time early in the COVID lockdown and also meet some of golf’s biggest personalities and those with the biggest hearts.

Looking for some inspiration to take into 2021? It’s likely among the following stories. Happy reading, and happy new year.

A minute-by-minute look at March 11, the night Rudy Gobert tested positive for COVID-19 and changed sports

How one basketball player unexpectedly changed everything.

It’s both amazing and horrifying to think that the night a professional athlete testing positive for COVID-19 was perhaps the first time many Americans took the pandemic seriously.

But it’s true.

In the days leading up to March 11, 2020, the reported cases of COVID-19 in the United States numbered in the hundreds. Italy had announced a nation-wide lockdown the day before, and countries around the world were figuring out their strategies. Yet, up to that point, it all still felt distant for many Americans.

Then, in the span of just a few hours on that Wednesday night, everything changed in sports and culture. As 2020 comes to a close, we decided to look back on what exactly happened leading up to and after the night Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert tested positive.

The 9 best memes of 2020, from ‘Last Dance’ GIFs to ‘nature is healing’

A look back at the year of memes.

Yes, we know 2020 was mostly awful.

But we did have some really good memes that kept us amused and gave us laughs when we needed them.

We’ll include some of our favorite sports memes, which is funny because last decade, we got Crying Jordan, the GOAT that kept us amused for years … and of course, when The Last Dance was released, the GIFs and memes poured out, to the point where we’re back to using Michael Jordan images on social media. Everything that’s old is somehow new again.

So in no particular order, here are the best memes we saw in 2020.

‘Pampered f—s’ and gobshite: Golf’s best quotes of 2020

You don’t need us to tell you how unusual a year 2020 was. But it was. And it led to some incredible moments both on and off the golf course. In fact, even before the COVID-19 pandemic put the world on hold – shutting down golf for 13 weeks starting …

You don’t need us to tell you how unusual a year 2020 was.

But it was. And it led to some incredible moments both on and off the golf course.

In fact, even before the COVID-19 pandemic put the world on hold – shutting down golf for 13 weeks starting in March at The Players Championship – the year got off to a hot start with a hot-mic situation at January’s Sentry Tournament of Champions.

From “pampered f—s” and Mai-tai’s in Hawaii to gobshite and “bitch-slapped into reality,” we took a look at some of the golf world’s most memorable quotes of the year. Did we miss any of your favorites?

Golf’s best quotes of 2020

Dusek: 2020 was a rollercoaster, but it also brought a renewed love for this game we won’t soon forget

When equipment writer David Dusek first looked at the 2020 calendar, he didn’t think it could set up any better. Oh, how that changed.

Covering golf, at every level and on every tour, in 2020 was unlike anything our writers have experienced. Through the end of the year, our staff is looking back on what will forever stand out from the season of COVID – a season during which every aspect of the game we love was impacted by a global pandemic. Read the whole series here.

Everything was going just dandy until it all went to hell.   

A year ago, looking ahead to 2020, I thought it could not be set up better. Tiger Woods would be the defending champion at the Masters in April, ensuring the annual rite of spring would be electric. After that, it was off to San Francisco and TPC Harding Park for the PGA Championship and then back east to Winged Foot.

In July, Royal St. George would host the British Open before golfers would be joining other athletes at the Olympics in Tokyo in August. Then, we’d enjoy FedEx Cup playoffs and then a Ryder Cup here in the United States. Oh yeah, the U.S. Amateur was going to Bandon Dunes, the U.S. Women’s Open was slotted for Champions Golf Club in Houston, and I was researching whether I would celebrate my 50th birthday in October with a trip to Pinehurst or Sand Valley. Asking for a better setup for my golf year would be gluttonous.  

The PGA Merchandise Show gave me a great chance to catch up with friends and industry folks, even if it was so cold in Orlando last January that iguanas were falling out of trees. But flying back down to Orlando in March, I saw someone wearing a mask on my flight from Hartford. Word had started to spread about a virus in the Pacific Northwest that had come from China, but it did not affect me or anyone I knew. We were being encouraged to wash our hands a lot, so I was happy that the TSA did not confiscate the hand sanitizer bottle I had in my carry-on bag.  

When I got to Bay Hill for the Arnold Palmer Invitational, everything seemed fine, but I took note of who shook hands and who fist-bumped friends. I fist-bumped and talked with players, caddies and reps from equipment companies around the massive practice green. Billy Horschel was looking for new clubs, Rory McIlroy told me that he sometimes took cold showers before bed to encourage a better night’s rest and I was able to swipe two more handfuls of Arnold Palmer tees for my collection before boarding a mask-less flight back to Hartford on Wednesday evening.  

Arnold Palmer tees
Tees available to golfers at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

A week later, on March 11, the NBA shut down after Rudy Gobert tested positive for the coronavirus. Eighteen holes were played at TPC Sawgrass, but we wondered if spectators might be kept away from the Players Championship over the weekend. Then, on Friday, Jay Monahan made the right call in suspending The Players and the next three events, starting a hiatus for the game that would last until June.  

As I write this, about 18 million people have now tested positive for the coronavirus in the United States, and nearly 320,000 people have died. It’s heartbreaking. I hate that being safe meant my kids had to start going to school virtually, that businesses had to shut down and people lost their jobs. I hate that I was furloughed for seven weeks during the spring and summer.  

Unbelievably, however, I can make a compelling argument that COVID-19 has been massively positive for golf. As spring bloomed, people around the country played without shaking hands, paid greens fees online and kept the flagstick in the hole. Golf was proving to be one of the few things that people could enjoy safely during the pandemic, and people everywhere were re-discovering how fun it can be.  

In early May, Massachusetts became the last state to allow courses to re-open. Equipment sales boomed, tee times at courses around the country were booked solid. I talked with a pushcart company in mid-May and was told its inventory was sold out until August.

Media Center at TPC River Highlands
My workspace for the week at TPC River Highlands during the 2020 Travelers Championship. David Dusek/Golfweek)

The first PGA Tour event I attended after Bay Hill was the Travelers Championship in late June. I was tested for COVID-19 on Saturday before the tournament started, then worked at a desk surrounded by plexiglass. No talking with players. No access to the practice area. No access to the locker room or clubhouse. Press conferences were conducted via Zoom. Yes, I could go on the course, but there were no fans out there besides the homeowners watching from their backyards.  

https://www.instagram.com/p/CB6d9U9lHOp/

I was surprised to see so few players and caddies wearing masks. After all, Nick Watney had tested positive the week before in Hilton Head. After Brooks Koepka and Graeme McDowell withdrew because their caddies had tested positive, Monahan held a virtual press conference and spoke to the players through the media: Guys, take this seriously or you’re going to screw it up for everyone. The next day, Thursday, things were different. Masks were everywhere. The Tour even signed a deal with Whoop, a wearable company that makes the device that tipped off Watney that he might have contracted COVID-19. It distributed the wearables to all the players, caddies and tournament officials. 

Meanwhile, my kids discovered golf, which meant if I was willing to buy ice cream after their lessons and our range sessions, I could hit more balls. I am happy to report that 11-year-old Lindsay Dusek was the last person on the range on National Women’s Golf Day in June. 

Lindsay Dusek
My daughter, Lindsay, on the range at Lyman Orchards Golf Center at the end of National Women’s Golf Day. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

I was one of a handful of people who walked 18 holes at TPC Boston following Rory and Tiger after seeing Dustin Johnson shoot 60. I saw Bryson DeChambeau overpower Winged Foot and further spark the distance debate. I talked with Christina Kim, Ted Scott, Brittany Lincicome, Mike Davis and a host of other bright people on The Forward Press podcast.

In a year filled with sorrow and pain for so many people, in many ways, my year in golf has been a blessing. After several weeks of putting in the family room last spring, I never performed better on the greens. I’m driving the ball better too, but now my chipping stinks. That’s golf, and I will never take it for granted again.