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PGA Tour – Colorado Golf Archives https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf Tue, 24 May 2022 17:58:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/cga-favicon-150x150.png PGA Tour – Colorado Golf Archives https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf 32 32 Former Champ Returns to Pebble Beach https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2019/02/03/former-champ-returns-to-pebble-beach/ Sun, 03 Feb 2019 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2019/02/03/former-champ-returns-to-pebble-beach/ Colorado natives Wyndham Clark and Jim Knous will play the PGA Tour’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am for the first time next week on the Monterey Peninsula in California, but they are by no means the most eye-catching local player in the field.

Assuming nothing changes before Thursday’s first round, that distinction will go to Colorado Golf Hall of Famer and Colorado Sports Hall of Famer Steve Jones (left). Even though the 1996 U.S. Open champion recently turned 60, Jones is in the field at Pebble Beach.

Perhaps that has something to do with the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am being the first of Jones’ eight PGA Tour victories, coming 31 years ago. It was then that he sank a 20-foot birdie putt on the second playoff hole to defeat Bob Tway.

It will be the former University of Colorado golfer’s first PGA Tour start in over six years, since the 2013 Humana Challenge. He competed in seven PGA Tour Champions events in 2018, finishing as high as sixth place.

Other players with strong Colorado ties who are scheduled to play on the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am — in addtion to Jones, Clark and Knous — are local resident David Duval, former Colorado State University golfer Martin Laird and former Fort Collins resident Sam Saunders.

It will be the first PGA Tour start for Duval since August.

For the entire field for the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, CLICK HERE.

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Local Tour Roundup https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2019/01/20/local-tour-roundup-18/ Sun, 20 Jan 2019 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2019/01/20/local-tour-roundup-18/ Colorado Golf Hall of Famer Brandt Jobe started off the PGA Tour Champions season in typical fashion this week — which is to say, with another top-10 finish.

Jobe, who lived in Colorado from 1970 to ’99 and won a Colorado Open, three CGA Match Plays and a CGA Amateur, tied for eighth on Saturday in the Mitsubishi Electric Championship on the Big Island in Hawaii.

Jobe (left) shot three consecutive rounds in the 60s — 69-69-68 — to post a 10-under-par 206 total, which left him seven strokes back of champion Tom Lehman, who posted back-to-back 65s to close the tourament. In Saturday’s final round, Jobe made an eagle, five birdies and three bogeys.

Jobe, 53, has now recorded 21 top-10 finishes in 65 PGA Tour Champions events, which means he hits that standard nearly a third of the time. He’s finished in the top 20 in the Schwab Cup standings each of his three full seasons on the circuit. Jobe’s lone win to date on the senior circuit came in 2017 at the Principal Charity Classic in Iowa.

For all the scores from the Mitsubishi Electric Championship, CLICK HERE.

— Second Top-20 of Clark’s PGA Tour Career: Denver native Wyndham Clark recorded the second-best finish of his young PGA Tour career on Sunday by tying for 18th place in the Desert Classic in La Quinta, Calif.

Clark, who won the 2010 CGA Amateur and the 2017 Pac-12 individual title at Boulder Country Club, posted rounds of 65-67-72-68 for a 16-under-par 272 total this week, which left him 10 strokes behind winner Adam Long.

Clark would have finished much higher, but back-to-back double bogeys on his back nine in Saturday’s third round proved costly.

Nevertheless, it was by far Clark’s best showing of the 2018-19 wraparound season. In 15 PGA Tour starts for his career, his only better finish was a 17th place at the Sanderson Farms Championship in October 2017. 

For scores from the Desert Classic, CLICK HERE.

 

 

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Good Fortune in Vegas https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2018/11/04/good-fortune-in-vegas/ Sun, 04 Nov 2018 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2018/11/04/good-fortune-in-vegas/ Boulder native and former Louisville resident George Cunningham earned his Web.com Tour card earlier this year by placing second on the PGA Tour Canada money list in 2018.

But the grandson of the late Chuck Melvin, who played in six Colorado Cup matches, has aspirations beyond the Web.com Tour. And this past week, he demonstrated his mettle by sharing medalist honors in a Monday qualifier, then making the cut and finishing 36th on Sunday in the PGA Tour’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas, Nev.

Cunningham (left) is now two-for-two in making cuts on the PGA Tour, having placed 29th in the RBC Canadian Open in July.

On Sunday, Cunningham shot a 5-under-par 66, giving him a 10-under 274 total for the week. He ended up 11 strokes behind champion Bryson DeChambeau.

Cunningham wasn’t the only player with strong Colorado ties who Monday qualified into the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. Cole Nygren of Longmont also landed a spot in the event, firing a 65 in the Monday qualifier to earn his first PGA Tour start. Nygren missed the 36-hole cut in Vegas, shooting 76-68.

Cunningham won the GolfBC Championship on PGA Tour Canada in June.
 

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Chalk Up Another One https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2018/10/28/chalk-up-another-one-6/ Sun, 28 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2018/10/28/chalk-up-another-one-6/ Former Colorado State University golfer Martin Laird on Sunday notched his best finish in a non-team event on the PGA Tour since July 2017.

Despite a bogey on his final hole, Laird shared seventh place Sunday in the Sanderson Farms Championship in Jackson, Miss.

The Scotsman (left) recorded rounds of 72-67-66-70 for a 13-under-par 275 total, which left him eight strokes behind winner Cameron Champ.

The last better showing by Laird came in the 2017 Quicken Loans National, where he placed third. He also tied for seventh last April in the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, a team event where his partner was Russell Knox.

Laird now has 36 top-10 finishes in his PGA Tour career, including three wins.

Also in the Sanderson Farms Championship, part-time Denver resident Kevin Stadler made his first PGA Tour start since 2015, but missed the cut by two after rounds of 70-75. Stadler will tee it up again at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, which starts Thursday in Las Vegas. For more on Stadler’s return, CLICK HERE.
 

Jobe Back in Champions Season Finale: Colorado Golf Hall of Famer Brandt Jobe, like Stadler a product of Kent Denver High School, will advance to the final event of the PGA Tour Champions Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs.

Jobe finished 37th on Sunday in the Invesco QQQ Championship in Thousand Oaks, Calif., but easily made the field for the 36-player Charles Schwab Cup Championship, which will be held Nov. 8-11 in Phoenix.

Jobe will go into the season finale 19th on the Schwab Points list, having dropped two spots from last week.

It will be the third straight year Jobe has qualified for the Charles Schwab Cup Championship.

One player with Colorado ties who didn’t advance on Sunday — and therefore saw his season end — was former Castle Pines resident Esteban Toledo, who finished 51st in Charles Schwab Cup points.
 

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Coloradans Shine https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2018/10/07/coloradans-shine-3/ Sun, 07 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2018/10/07/coloradans-shine-3/ Jim Knous of Littleton made quite an impression in his official debut as a PGA Tour rookie. And fellow Colorado native Wyndham Clark wasn’t too shabby either.

Knous (left), a former standout golfer at the Colorado School of Mines, posted his best finish ever on the PGA Tour on Sunday by placing 10th in the season-opening Safeway Open in Napa, Calif., and earning $153,600.

And Clark, who won both the 2010 CGA Amateur and the 2017 Pac-12 individual title at Boulder Country Club, notched his second-best showing on the world’s top circuit by finishing 33rd.

Knous started the PGA Tour season with three straight birdies on Thursday, but shot a first-round 73. But he rebounded with scores of 67-69-69 to move up the scoreboard and finish at 10-under-par 278, four strokes behind champion Kevin Tway, who won a three-man playoff with Ryan Moore and Brandt Snedeker.

Clark, meanwhile, checked in at 282, following an opening-round 66 with three straight 72s. He birdied two of his last three holes on Sunday.

For more on Knous and Clark and all they’ve accomplished in Colorado and elsewhere, CLICK HERE.

(Oct. 12 Update: Golfdigest.com introduced Knous to a national audience following his showing at the Safeway Open: READ MORE)

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Visionary, Innovator https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2018/09/24/visionary-innovator/ Mon, 24 Sep 2018 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2018/09/24/visionary-innovator/

Jack Vickers, who founded both Castle Pines Golf Club and The International PGA Tour event that was held there for 21 years, passed away on Monday in Castle Pines. He was 93.

Vickers, who also made his mark on a variety of other sports in Colorado, was inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame in 1999 and the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame in 1995. As a Denver Post headline aptly called Vickers in a 2013 story, he was a “Colorado sports shaker and mover”.

“We lost a tremendous friend today in Jack Vickers — not only a friend to Barbara and me, but a great friend to the game of golf,” Castle Pines course designer Jack Nicklaus said on Facebook Monday. “I have known Jack Vickers since I was 18 years old, when I played in the 1958 Trans-Miss. at Prairie Dunes Country Club in Hutchinson, Kansas. It would be pretty hard not to remember the first time Jack and I played golf. It was at Muirfield Village Golf Club in the mid-70s — not long after it opened. Jack made a hole-in-one on the 16th that day. I think it was the first one made on the golf course.

“Jack was someone who cared deeply about the history and the traditions of the game of golf, and wanted to protect them for the future. Jack was always a huge supporter of the game — whether it was in Colorado or nationwide; whether it was the game played at the highest level or his support of grassroots programs. Simply put, Jack Vickers was very good for the game of golf. Jack was a good man, and very well-liked by all.
Jack always handled himself incredibly well, and always with integrity. He was a very good man, and I’m blessed to say he was my friend.

“When Jack got ready to do his own golf course at Castle Pines Golf Club, I was flattered and honored that he asked me to be his designer. The golf course at Castle Pines is a very good one — challenging, beautifully maintained, and located in a fantastic spot. People seem to love it and we’re proud of it. My hope is Castle Pines will forever stand as a tribute to Jack Vickers. I know that through Castle Pines, a wonderful relationship with Jack Vickers only grew. He was involved from day one and until his passing. Everyone at Castle Pines loved Jack Vickers.”

Vickers’ most visible contribution to golf in Colorado was, of course, The International at Castle Pines Golf Club, which opened in 1981. The event ran from 1986 through 2006. It featured a unique modified Stableford scoring system, which promoted aggressive play as a birdie and a bogey were worth more than two pars. The tournament produced quite a few big-name champions including including Greg Norman, Davis Love III (twice), Phil Mickelson (twice), Vijay Singh and Ernie Els.

In addition, among the competitors over the years were Tiger Woods (twice), Arnold Palmer, Nicklaus, Tom Watson, Lee Trevino, Johnny Miller, Hale Irwin, Nick Faldo, Ray Floyd, Ben Crenshaw, Payne Stewart, Bernhard Langer, Nick Price and John Daly. (Vickers and Nicklaus are pictured at left.)

“The words that come to mind (when reflecting on Vickers’ legacy) are ‘visionary’ and ‘innovation’,” said CGA executive director Ed Mate. “I have a much greater appreciation today than I did when The International started about how much courage it takes to do some of the things he did. He really pushed the envelope and tried to create something brand new and outside the box. That’s who he was.

“Those were arguably the best years in terms of the profile of golf in Colorado when we had a regular Tour stop here. Having just started working at the CGA in 1988, I just sort of assumed that that was normal. Now I’ve seen since The International has gone away that it was not normal.

“It’s a loss for sure. He was also smart enough to recognize at the end that (golf) can’t compete with football. He had very good instincts for sure.”

In an interview with the Denver Post in 2013, Vickers reflected fondly on The International. The event formally went into the history books in early February 2007, when PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem and Vickers announced the event’s demise at a Denver-based news conference. The end came due in large part to the lack of a title sponsor, with Woods’ often bypassing the tournament being another significant issue.

“I miss it,” Vickers told the Post in 2013 regarding The International. “I still think about The International a lot. If I got involved and there were the right circumstances, I’d like to revive it. I belong to a lot of clubs around the country, and I’ll put (Castle Pines) up against any of them. If I did another tournament tomorrow, it would go right on and it would be first-class.” (Vickers is pictured at left, in a red tie, at a 90th birthday celebration for journalist Kaye Kessler, who’s sporting a beige pullover.)

Beyond the entertainment The International produced, over the years its non-profit arm donated about $14 million to charities in Colorado and elsewhere.

“The other thing The International did that I was always appreciative of was that they became a very big sponsor of the CGA,” Mate said. “The Boys & Girls Clubs were always talked about (as beneficiaries), but they also made annual contributions to the CGA that (Vickers) was responsible for which led to a nice junior golf endowment fund, which now has about $300,000 in it that we use for junior golf. A good chunk of that money came from The International. And when we started our newsletter, The International sponsored it. They did a lot of great things for us for sure.”

Vickers’ contributions to the PGA Tour were acknowledged in 2014 when he became the 11th recipient of the PGA Tour Lifetime Achievement Award on Sept. 4 during the BMW Championship that Cherry Hills Country Club hosted that year.

The Tour’s Lifetime Achievement Award honors individuals “who have made outstanding contributions to the PGA Tour over an extended period of time through their performances on the golf course as well as their actions off the course in serving as ambassadors of the game.”

Prior recipients had included some of golf’s biggest names: Gene Sarazen (1996), Byron Nelson (1997), Palmer (1998), Sam Snead (1998), Jack Burke (2003), Pete Dye (2005), Deane Beman (2007), Nicklaus (2008), President George H.W. Bush (2009), and Gary Player (2012).

“Jack Vickers was a gracious host of The International for 21 years and remains a great ambassador for golf with a strong commitment to charity,” Finchem said at the time. “Castle Pines’ spectacular mountain setting and the modified Stableford scoring system made The International one of the most unique tournaments on the PGA Tour schedule and a favorite among our players for its unmatched hospitality. Jack’s selection will be celebrated by everyone he touched, including the many hundreds of Tour players he befriended at his tournament.”

When the inaugural International was announced, it featured a $1 million purse, the largest in PGA Tour history at the time.

Even in its post-International days, Castle Pines Golf Club is considered one of the top courses in the U.S., currently checking it at No. 42 on Golf Digest’s list of America’s 100 greatest courses.

Golf was by no means Vickers’ only foray into sports in Colorado. He was a majority owner of the NHL’s Colorado Rockies; helped found the University of Colorado’s Flatirons Club, a major fundraiser for the school; and helped sponsor Irwin at the beginning of his professional career. He also was involved in early attempts to bring major league baseball to the Centennial State.

Besides the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame and the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame, Vickers was inducted into the Colorado Business Hall of Fame and the Colorado Tourism Hall of Fame.

Vickers also was named the 2003 Ambassador of Golf by Northeast Ohio Charities as part of the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational.

(Updated Oct. 3: Memorial services for Vickers will be held Oct. 12 at 11 a.m. at St. Thomas More Catholic Church in Englewood, 8035 S. Quebec St. Donations in Vickers’ honor can be made to Catholic Charities through the Archdiocese of Denver, 6240 Smith Road, Denver, Colorado 80216, or the Jack A. Vickers Boys & Girls Club, 3365 Holly Street, Denver, Colorado 80207.) 
 

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Local Tour Roundup https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2018/08/05/local-tour-roundup-12/ Sun, 05 Aug 2018 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2018/08/05/local-tour-roundup-12/ Former Fort Collins resident Sam Saunders has taken quite a shine to the Barracuda Championship in recent years.

Saunders, who needed a good finish to boost his chances of keeping his fully-exempt PGA Tour status for next season, tied for seventh on Sunday in the tournament in Reno, Nev.

That marks the third straight top-10 in this event for Saunders, Arnold Palmer’s grandson. He finished ninth in 2016 and eighth last year.

The Barracuda Championship utilizes a modified Stableford scoring format, like The International at Castle Pines did from 1986 through 2006. In that format, a birdie and a bogey are worth more than two pars.

Saunders (pictured) had a bad day on Sunday, accumalating a minus-1 point, but finished with 34 points for the week, 13 fewer than champion Andrew Putnam.

It was Saunders’ fourth top 10 showing of the 2017-18 PGA Tour season.

Elsewhere in major professional tour golf:

Two players with strong Colorado ties — former Louisville resident George Cunningham and former University of Colorado golfer Yannik Paul — posted top-five finishes Sunday in the PGA Tour Canada’s Syncrude Oil Country Championship in Edmonton, Alberta.

Cunningham — grandson of the late Chuck Melvin, who played in six Colorado Cup matches — placed third and Paul fifth.

Cunningham, who won a PGA Tour Canada event in June, posted rounds of 67-64-72-65 for a 16-under-par 268 total, which left him five strokes behind champion Tyler McCumber.

Paul shared the lead going into Sunday but dropped four spots on the scoreboard with a final-day 70, a round during which he was stung by a wasp. He went 70-64-66-700 for a 270 total.
 

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Local Tour Roundup https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2018/05/06/local-tour-roundup-9/ Sun, 06 May 2018 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2018/05/06/local-tour-roundup-9/ It’s less than two months until the U.S. Senior Open comes to Colorado — the state where Brandt Jobe grew up — and the Colorado Golf Hall of Famer seems to be rounding into form.

Jobe, who lived in Colorado from 1970 to ’99 before moving to Texas, finished a season-best fifth on Sunday in the PGA Tour Champions’ Insperity Invitational in The Woodlands, Texas. In his last two tour stars, Jobe has placed ninth (with Scott McCarron) in the Bass Pro Shops Legends of Golf team event and fifth at the Insperity.

Jobe (pictured) made six birdies in his Sunday round of 4-under-par 68, which left him with a 9-under 207 total. He endd up two strokes behind champion Bernhard Langer, who notched the 37th PGA Tour Champions victory of his career.

Jobe finished third in last year’s U.S. Senior Open, shooting a third-round 62 in the process. This year’s Senior Open is set for The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs June 28-July 1.

Saunders Emerges from Drought with Top 10 on PGA Tour: Former Fort Collins resident Sam Saunders had missed the cut in four of his previous six PGA Tour starts and hadn’t cracked the top 40 in an event since mid-February, but that didn’t stop him from a top-10 finish on Sunday in the Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte, N.C.

Despite playing his last five holes in 2 over par on Sunday, Saunders tied for ninth place in the event, ending up seven strokes behind winner Jason Day.

Saunders posted rounds of 70-69-68-72 for a 5-under-par 279 total.

It’s the second top-10 of the PGA Tour season for Saunders, who finished eighth at the CareerBuilder Challenge in January.

Ex-Buffs Coleman, Lee, Childs earn top-10s on Symetra Tour: Three former University of Colorado golfers recorded top-10 finishes Sunday in the Symetra Tour’s IOA Invitational in Milton, Ga.

Former LPGA Tour player Jenny Coleman rebounded from a first-round 78 to post back-to-back 69s and share sixth place. Esther Lee, who played her final three seasons at CU after transferring from Duke, and Emily Childs, who played as a freshman at CU before going to Cal, tied for 10th place.

Coleman’s even-par 216 total left her four strokes behind champion Elizabeth Szokol. In notching her best Symetra Tour showing since placing third in February 2016, Coleman made a total of nine birdies in the final two rounds.

Lee, who earned her first Symetra top-10, went 74-71-72 to check in at 217 along with Childs, who carded rounds of 75-70-72. Childs had four top-10s last year on the Symetra circuit.

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Local Tour Roundup https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2018/04/22/local-tour-roundup-7/ Sun, 22 Apr 2018 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2018/04/22/local-tour-roundup-7/ Colorado Golf Hall of Famer Brandt Jobe paired up with his former UCLA teammate Scott McCarron to post his best finish on PGA Tour Champions since August.

Jobe and McCarron (pictured) ended up ninth out of 36 teams on Sunday in the Bass Pro Shops Legends of Golf in Ridgedale, Mo. They recorded a 19-under-par 199 total, finishing five strokes behind winners Kirk Triplett and Paul Broadhurst, who beat Bernhard Langer and Tom Lehman in a playoff.

The last three days of the event were played on a par-3 layout at Top of the Rock.

Laird 11th at Valero Texas Open; ex-Buff Creel Makes Cut in First PGA Tour Event: Former Colorado State University golfer Martin Laird recorded his third top-11 finish of the PGA Tour season by placing 11th on Sunday in the Valero Texas Open in San Antonio.

Laird, the 2013 winner of the Texas Open, went 73-65-69-72 for a 9-under-par 279, leaving him eight strokes behind winner Andrew Landry.

Meanwhile, Cheyenne native Josh Creel, who started his college career at the University of Colorado before finishing up at Central Oklahoma, Monday qualified to earn a spot in the Texas Open, the first PGA Tour event of his career.

Creel not only made the field, but earned a check by making the cut. He finished 64th after rounds of 69-72-73-76 for a 290 total.

Clark, Hubbard, Knous in Top 25 at Web.com’s North Mississippi Classic: Three players who grew up in Colorado — Wyndham Clark, Mark Hubbard and Jim Knous — notched top-25 finishes Sunday in the rain-shortened North Mississippi Classic on the Web.com Tour.

Clark (71-70-71) was 17th at 4-under-par 212 while Hubbard (69-72-72) and Knous (72-66-75) shared 22nd place at 213.
 

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How Times Have Changed https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2018/04/04/how-times-have-changed/ Wed, 04 Apr 2018 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2018/04/04/how-times-have-changed/

When it comes to sheer candidness, there are few players who have won on the PGA Tour who are more forthright than Jonathan Kaye.

The former University of Colorado golfer seldom hesitates to voice his true opinions — good, bad or otherwise.

Last year, in the week in which he won his second CoBank Colorado Open title, Kaye was talking about the subject of money and purses on the PGA Tour. And he said something that was both illuminating and candid.

“I passed Jack Nicklaus (in career PGA Tour earnings) my third year on the Tour,” Kaye said. “There’s no way I should ever pass Jack Nicklaus.”

With the Masters on tap this week, we decided to take a look at where the most prominent players in the history of Colorado golf stack up in a statistic seldom mentioned anymore: career money leaders on the major professional tours.

It’s not surprising that the PGA Tour competitors in the Tiger Woods era have received a disproportionate boost in money earnings compared to their earlier counterparts. What was eye-opening was just how much an effect that had.

For instance, regarding Nicklaus and Kaye, the Golden Bear may be the greatest player of all time, with 18 majors among his 73 PGA Tour victories. Kaye, meanwhile, has won twice in his PGA Tour career.

Yet look at the PGA Tour career money list and Nicklaus is No. 271 ($5.734 million) and Kaye is No. 164 ($10.585 million, just ahead of Bernhard Langer). Many people debate whether Nicklaus or Woods is the greatest golfer ever, but on the PGA Tour’s career money list the Bear is a pauper compared to Tiger, who has won more than 19 times as much money ($111.183 million).

Hale Irwin (pictured above), a Boulder High School and University of Colorado graduate, is unquestionably the most successful golfer the Centennial State has produced from an early age, with three U.S. Open victories among his 20 PGA Tour wins. But you’d never know it by looking at all-time PGA Tour money won. The World Golf Hall of Famer checks in at No. 263 ($5.966 million).

Another former CU golfer who won the U.S. Open is just a little ahead of Irwin. Steve Jones, whose eight-win career included the 1996 U.S. Open title, is No. 249 ($6.519 million).

As for other prominent players who grew up in Colorado and have had extensive PGA Tour careers, Brandt Jobe is 195th in career money at $9 million and one-time winner Kevin Stadler is 180th at $9.698 million. Both played their high school golf at Kent Denver.

Others with strong Colorado connections in the top 200 are Evergreen resident Craig Stadler (Kevin’s dad), winner of 13 PGA Tour events including a Masters (174th at $10.022 million); former Colorado State University golfer Martin Laird, a three-time PGA Tour champion (91st at $16.155 million); and Colorado resident David Duval, winner of 13 PGA Tour events including a British Open (78th at $18.984 million).

And, the top PGA Tour career money winner with major Colorado ties is Aspen resident Justin Leonard, who owns a dozen Tour wins including a British Open (22nd at $33.885 million).

Other PGA Tour winners with strong Colorado ties made less than $1 million in their PGA Tour careers, including Paul Runyan (28 wins), Ed Dudley (15 wins), Dow Finsterwald (11 wins), Dale Douglass (3 wins), Bob Byman (1 win) and Fred Wampler (1 win).

Dave Hill made $1.13 million in a career that included 13 victories, and Mark Wiebe earned $4.314 million in a career that featured two wins.

On the LPGA Tour, part-time Colorado resident and World Golf Hall of Famer Hollis Stacy (left, with Annika Sorenstam) earned $2.58 million in winning 18 times on the LPGA circuit, including four majors. Colorado Golf Hall of Famer Jill McGill earned $2.342 million, though she didn’t win a tournament on that circuit. World Golf Hall of Famer Babe Zaharias, a Denver-area resident in the 1940s, won 41 times on the LPGA Tour but earned just $66,237. Sharon Miller, like Zaharias and McGill a member of the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame, won $164,274 on the LPGA circuit, on which she posted two victories. Lauren Howe racked up $236,084 in career LPGA money after winning once. Sorenstam, who won the 1995 U.S. Women’s Open at The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs, leads the LPGA career money list, with $22.573 million.

As for PGA Tour Champions, Irwin was a check-cashing machine for many years. The former Buff, winner of a career-record 45 PGA Tour Champions events, has won a remarkable $27.089 million on the 50-and-over circuit, putting him No. 1 all-time.

Also ranking among the top 100 in what was once know as the Senior Tour are Craig Stadler (35th at $8.979 million with nine wins); Douglass (56th at $7.019 million with 11 wins), Wiebe (73rd at $5.69 million with five wins) and R.W. Eaks (91st at $4.693 million with four wins). 

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