The 1967 US Open was Ben Hogan's last major tournament in which he played. View as a contender, even at the advanced age for a golfer of 54, he shot consistent scores of 72-72-76-72 to finish in a tie for 34th,17 strokes behind the winner, Jack Nicklaus. Earlier that year in the Masters, he finished tied for tenth.
Ben HoganPGA ChampionshipWon: 1946, 1948U.S. OpenWon: 1948, 1950, 1951, 1953The Open ChampionshipWon: 1953Achievements and awards21 more rows
Hogan shares the U.S. Open record of four career wins. He was the third to reach that number, after Willie Anderson and Bobby Jones. Jack Nicklaus is the fourth golfer with four wins in this tournament. He was the fifth golfer in tournament history to win back-to-back when he did it in 1950-51.
Perry Ellis International, Inc.Ben Hogan Golf. MIAMI, FL, August 3, 2022- Perry Ellis International, Inc. (“PEI”), as owner of the Ben Hogan® brand, acknowledges the closure of the Ben Hogan Golf Equipment Company (“Licensee”) - the entity which licensed the Ben Hogan® brand for golf clubs and accessories.
He was a very long hitter, you know. He visited Spalding one time, and they had a radar device that measured clubhead speed. Hogan with the driver clocked at 132 miles per hour, the fastest among all the pros.”
265 yardsBen Hogan hit his driver 265 yards, according to an article in the June 10, 1949 issue of Time Magazine. Even 15 years later he still hit drives that distance in a Shell's Wonderful World of Golf match against the equally long-hitting Sam Snead.
Murray Irwin "Moe" Norman (July 10, 1929 – September 4, 2004) was a Canadian professional golfer whose accuracy and ability to hit shot after shot perfectly straight gave him the nickname "Pipeline Moe".
Ben Hogan vs. Between 1945 and 1953 (Hogan's prime), Hogan won 47 events, including all nine of his major championship titles, while Snead won 32 times including five majors. Hogan and Snead combined to win nearly 40 percent of all majors played between 1945 and 1953.
On August 10, 1947 Ben made a hole in one at the 161-yard fourth hole during the final round of the Esmeralda Open played on the Indian Canyon Golf Course in Spokane Washington. The ball hit on the edge of the green and curled long across the green to drop in the hole.
Callaway, which purchased the company at auction in September 2003 for $174.4 million, retained the rights to those names as well as some others after selling the Ben Hogan brand to Perry Ellis in 2012. Some, however, transferred over to Perry Ellis and can be used.
Callaway Purchases Ben Hogan Golf Equipment In 2003 Callaway purchased Ben Hogan Golf Equipment and began selling Hogan's line of products under the Callaway name. Callaway still sells Apex irons, which were originally created by Hogan in 1972 and were among the most popular irons on Tour in the 1970s.
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In 10 years of competing in the U.S. Open (1946-56), Hogan's record was extraordinary: four firsts, two seconds, a third, a fourth and two sixths. Hogan retired with 64 tournament victories and nine career professional major championships.
Jack NicklausWho is the best golfer of all time? Based on the number of victories alone, Jack Nicklaus is hands down the best golfer of all time. He has a total of 73 PGA Tour wins, 10 Champions Tour trophies, and overall 115 worldwide wins. So, that's the answer for who is the best golf player in the world and of all time.
On August 10, 1947 Ben made a hole in one at the 161-yard fourth hole during the final round of the Esmeralda Open played on the Indian Canyon Golf Course in Spokane Washington. The ball hit on the edge of the green and curled long across the green to drop in the hole.
He also served as a Captain in the U.S. Army Air Forces. Ben Hogan passed away on July 24, 1997 at 84 years old. Ben Hogan Total Career Golf Earnings: During his career, Ben earned a total of $30,400 which is the same as around $300,000 after adjusting to today's dollars.
1951 U.S. Open: Hogan's third U.S. Open win was his sixth overall in majors. Hogan trailed by two strokes entering the final round, but his 67 in Round 4 pushed him to the two-stroke victory.
He was the fifth golfer in tournament history to win back-to-back when he did it in 1950-51. There wasn't another back-to-back winner until Curtis Strange in 1988-89. In 1953, Hogan became the third golfer (after Walter Hagen and Jim Barnes) to win wire-to-wire with no ties.
Hogan shares the U.S. Open record of four career wins. He was the third to reach that number, after Willie Anderson and Bobby Jones. Jack Nicklaus is the fourth golfer with four wins in this tournament.
Hogan's eight finishes in the Top 3 of the U.S. Open was the record (shared with Bobby Jones) until it was bettered by Nicklaus. Hogan's 10 Top 5 finishes is tied for third-best in tournament history. Hogan's 15 Top 10 finishes is third-best in tournament history.
In 1953, Hogan became the first golfer to win three professional majors in the same year, of which the U.S. Open was his middle victory (after The Masters and before the British Open). The scoring record of 276 that Hogan set in 1948 lowered the previous record of 281 (Ralph Guldalh, 1937) by five strokes.
He got off to a faltering start in U.S. Open play, missing the cut the first three times he played.
Hogan led by one over Mangrum (with Fazio further back) through 15 holes. But as Mangrum prepared to putt, an insect landed on his ball. Mangrum marked, picked up the ball and blew the bug off. According to the USGA's history, that was "an act not permitted by the Rules of Golf until 1960.".
Hogan won that 18-hole, 3-way playoff, earning his second victory in the tournament. For Hogan, it was his 54th career PGA Tour win and the fourth of his nine career wins in major championships . In the playoff, Hogan shot 69 to Lloyd Mangrum 's 73 and George Fazio's 75.
A framed print of the famous Ben Hogan 1-iron shot on the 72nd hole of the 1950 US Open. Courtesy of Amazon.com
Mangrum had a 2-stroke lead over Hogan following the third round, and a 6-stroke margin over Fazio. But Fazio posted 287 with a final-round 70, while Mangrum struggled to a 76 to match Fazio.
Hogan had numerous broken bones and suffered blood clots and spent two months in the hospital. He was originally told by doctors he would never play golf again. He suffered circulatory problems and pain in his legs for the rest of his life, and those issues greatly curtailed his ability to play many tournaments.
Hogan needed to par the final hole to get into the playoff, and he striped a 1-iron from the fairway onto the green on the very tough closing hole at Merion. (Today there is a plaque in the fairway at the spot from which that 1-iron was struck.) Hogan then 2-putted for the needed par.
On Tuesday morning at Augusta in '67, Clem Darracott, a 41-year-old freight-line salesman from Atlanta who had attended the Masters for several years, approached Hogan as he exited the clubhouse heading for the practice tee and asked if he could film his swing with an eight-millimeter home-movie camera.
Often Hogan liked to pitch-and-putt his way to success on Augusta's par 5s, but on the 13th a 4-wood approach left him within 15 feet, where he two-putted for his fourth straight birdie. "What happens with someone like that, your body goes back in time," says Venturi. "He was no longer that [54-year-old] person.
The first nine was as low key as the first 36 holes, Hogan turning in even-par 36 after escaping with a 5 on the par-5 eighth, where missed 18-inch putts had led to double bogeys Thursday and Friday. Taking the bit of better karma with him toward Amen Corner, Hogan began to peel away the years.
Hogan was a bit thicker through the middle than the Hawk of peak flight, the gritty bantam who ruled the sport in the late 1940s and early '50s, his slightly relaxed waistline befitting a 54-year-old man who spent as much time behind a desk as on a golf course.
The third round was played on a good Coppertone day, the temperature reaching 77 degrees. The larger world was busting open over war and race in the 1960s, but golf spectators generally minded their manners, didn't hoot and holler. "In those days," says Venturi, "there was no yelling and screaming, there was just applause.".
Hogan invited Darracott onto the range. From the side and down the line, he filmed Hogan as he worked through his bag while his jumpsuited caddie shagged the balls in the distance. Hogan 's setup is without tension; on many swings his shoulders rotate beneath a lit cigarette.
All but retired by '67, Hogan still struck the ball with an authority that awed fellow pros.
McGrath for having completed “the most courageous comeback in sports” during the past year when he returned to the PGA tour after missing 11 months due to injuries suffered in a car-bus crash.
In fact, that’s one reason the USGA required Medinah to redesign the 18th hole, repositioning the green, before it was awarded another U.S. Open.
Regarding his U.S. Open preparation, Hogan did play Merion for several days in the week before the Open before making the trip to Washington. But during tournament week he did not play at all Monday, played 18 holes on Tuesday, and only five holes on Wednesday leading into the tournament—probably a wise move since a 36-hole final day awaited him on Saturday.
There were no yardage books in those days, nor did players and caddies even pace the yardage. They relied on their eyes to judge the distance of shots and choose a club. Hogan was renowned as an especially good judge of distance, and in this case he was spot on: When Merion remeasured the course about a decade later, it was found to be nearly 200 yards shorter than the scorecard yardage.
Hogan won his first PGA Tour event in 1938 and a total of 64 events in the next 21 years, including his nine major championships. Hogan was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1974.
Hogan had the heels of his club heads ground so the toe was fanned open about 5 degrees, presumably because he battled a tendency to hook the ball early in his career. Hogan played with MacGregor clubs for most of his career, until he started his own club company in 1953.
After the famous 1-iron Hogan used in the 1950 U.S. Open was stolen, he stopped using it. Instead, he relied on his 2 through 9 irons, all of which had stiff, steel shafts and less-than-typical lofts that ranged from 18 degrees for the 2-iron to 42 degrees for the 9-iron.
He reportedly discovered a secret in the late 1930s that transformed him from a run-of-the-mill pro to a champion. His World Golf Hall of Fame profile suggests Hogan weakened his left hand grip and rotated his left arm clockwise during his backswing ...
Facing an approach shot of more than 200 yards, Hogan played his 1-iron, rather than his normal 4-wood, because he wasn’t hitting the wood well that day . Although the 1-iron is notoriously difficult to hit accurately, he nailed the shot onto the green, then two-putted for par. He won the playoff the next day.
His 3-wood, however, contained a slightly above average 15 degrees of loft. Hogan's set of 14 clubs also included three wedges.
Ben Hogan holds the Claret Jug after winning the 1953 British Open. Ask a panel of experts to name the greatest golfer of all time and there’s little doubt that Ben Hogan’s name would be near, or at the top, of their list. Hogan is one of five players to win each of golf’s major championships at least once, and gained six ...