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Rounds of 59 or lower in pga tour history.

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Twelve players have shot 59 or lower in PGA Tour history. The first to do so was Al Geiberger — Mr. 59 — at Memphis in 1977.

Jim Furyk not only shot 59, but also fired the only 58 in Tour history at the 2016 Travelers Championship.

Here’s a look at players to shoot golf’s magic number (or better) on Tour:

Scottie Scheffler following his round of 59 at The Northern Trust in 2020

How Many Golfers Have Shot a 59 on the PGA Tour?

Prior to the year 2010, only three golfers in PGA Tour history had recorded a 59 in an official tournament.

The first-ever 59 on the PGA Tour was recorded in 1977 during the second round of the Memphis Classic by Al Geiberger, who made 11 birdies and an eagle on the par-72 layout at Colonial Country Club to make history.

The second came 14 years later in Las Vegas from Chip Beck, who made 13 birdies in the third round at Sunrise Golf Club. And the third was fired by David Duval, who hit the magical number with 11 birdies and an eagle in the fifth and final round of the 1999 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic to take a one-stroke victory.

While still an incredible accomplishment, the 59 has become a bit more common what with the advancements in equipment, fitness, and analytics. Since 2010, eight golfers have hit the number on the PGA Tour — and that’s not including Jim Furyk’s record-setting 58 in the final round of the 2016 Travelers Championship.

However, Furyk is a two-time member of the sub-60 club as he fired a 59 in the second round of the 2013 BMW Championship at Conway Farms.

Every 59 on the PGA Tour

Scottie Scheffler following his round of 59 at The Northern Trust in 2020

Here’s a brief look at every 59 ever shot on the PGA Tour.

Have thoughts on this topic? Keep the conversation rolling in our comments section below.

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59 on tour

Golf News Net

59 Watch: Rounds of 59 or better in professional golf

In the history of professional golf, 38 players have shot rounds of 59 or better in a tournament on a major tour.

The lowest score in the history of profesional golf is 58, shot on the Canadian Tour (Jason Bohn), Japan Golf Tour (Ryo Ishikawa), the Web.com Tour (Stephan Jaeger) and the PGA Tour (Jim Furyk), Korean PGA (Kim Seong-hyeon), Challenge Tour (Alejandro del Rey) and LIV Golf (Bryson DeChambeau) once each.

Every other sub-60 round as been a 59. There is just one 59 in LPGA Tour history, and that belongs to Annika Sorenstam.

The only major tour without a single sub-60 round is the Legends Tour, formerly known as the European Seniors Tour.

Here's a look at those players, when and where they shot those rounds and how those rounds compared to their competition that week.

Round of 59 or better by category

Sub-60 rounds by tour:

  • PGA Tour -- 12
  • Korn Ferry/Web.com Tour -- 13
  • Japan Tour -- 3
  • European Challenge Tour -- 3
  • PGA Tour Canada -- 3
  • PGA Tour Champions -- 2
  • LIV Golf -- 2
  • LPGA Tour -- 1
  • DP World Tour -- 1
  • Asian Tour -- 1
  • PGA Tour Latinoamerica -- 1
  • European Seniors Tour -- 0
  • Australasian Tour -- 0

Sub-60 rounds by round:

  • First round -- 9
  • Second round -- 17
  • Third round -- 4
  • Fourth round -- 8
  • Fifth round -- 1

Sub-60 rounds by par:

  • Par 70 -- 10
  • Par 71 -- 18
  • Par 72 -- 11

Players who shot 59 who won that tournament:

Rounds of 59 or better in professional golf history

Players Who Have Broken 60 On The PGA And DP World Tours: Golf’s Most Exclusive Club

You have to play phenomenally to break 60, so it’s no surprise the PGA Tour club has just 11 members while the DP World Tour just one...

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Montage of golfers who have broken 60 on men's professional tours

In the sport of golf, 59 is the magic number.

With par usually being between 70-72, a great round on the elite men's professional tours tends to be between 62-64 and anywhere from eight-under-par to ten-under-par.

However, there are times when the world's best can go even lower - into the 50s. It's happened 12 times on the PGA Tour, with 11 scores of 59 and one at 58. On the DP World Tour, there has been one 58.

So who are the sub-60 shooters?

Players to shoot 59 on the PGA/DP World Tours

Al geiberger, 1977 memphis classic.

Al Geiberger, the original Mr 59, during his later Champions Tour career

Geiberger was the inaugural member of the 59 Club, putting his wonder score together during the second round of the 1977 Memphis Classic at Colonial Country Club.

Geiberger, who obviously became known as Mr 59, crammed 11 birdies and an eagle into his 13-under par round, and went on to win the tournament, despite not bettering 70 in his other three rounds.

Chip Beck, 1991 Las Vegas Invitational

Chip Beck plays a wood shot

Beck’s 59 came during the third round of the 1991 Las Vegas Invitational at the Sunrise Golf Course. He opened up with a 40-footer for birdie on his first hole – the 10th – and never let up, adding 12 more birdies.

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Sunrise was a late replacement for Spanish Trails, and many players felt a 59 might be possible as the course was short, flat, new and never really designed to host a tournament.

Beck didn’t mind either way as the Hilton Corp hotel chain had put up a $500,000 bonus if anyone could shoot 59, with a further half million going to junior golf and PGA Tour charities - phenomenal sums given that the typical winner’s cheque that year was $180,000.

David Duval, 1999 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic

David Duval celebrates holing a putt

Double D could play a bit in his heyday, nowhere more so than in his highly impressive 59 during the final round of the 1999 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.

Duval had already compiled 11 birdies heading into the 18th, before memorably hitting it close on the par-5 finale and rolling in the six-footer for eagle.

Most impressive of all is that Duval had birdie or eagle putts on 17 holes and only four of those were outside 10ft. He won the event by one from Steve Pate.

Paul Goydos, 2010 John Deere Classic

Paul Goydos holds up his golf ball

Goydos needed just 22 putts in his opening 59 at the 2010 John Deere Classic, shooting an eight-under par 28 on the back nine to match the lowest nine-hole score in relation to par in PGA Tour history.

Incredibly, he only led by one from Steve Stricker, the only man in PGA Tour history to shoot 60 in the first round and find himself trailing!

Stuart Appleby, 2010 Greenbrier Classic

Stuart Appleby's scorecard for the final round of the 2010 Greenbrier Classic

2010 was a vintage year for 59s with Stuart Appleby holing a curling left-to-right 15-footer to not only join the 59 Club but also claim the Greenbrier Classic in dramatic fashion.

Six-under to the turn, Appleby bagged an eagle on 12 and then a trio of birdies to close out his round and pip Jeff Overton by one.

Jim Furyk, 2013 BMW Championship

Jim Furyk holds up his ball

Furyk’s 59 came in the second round of the BMW Championship in 2013. After a solid start playing the back nine first, his round really got a lift when he holed out from 115 yards on 15 with a wedge to be six-under after six.

Remarkably, Furyk bogeyed the 5th on his homeward run, but hit the magic number with a majestic wedge approach to three feet on his final hole before calmly rolling the putt in.

Justin Thomas, 2017 Sony Open in Hawaii

Justin Thomas holds up his ball with 59 on it

Thomas made his little piece of history en route to winning the 2017 Sony Open. He put this tournament straight to bed when he shot 59 in the opening round.

He eventually won by seven shots clear of Justin Rose in second place.

Adam Hadwin, 2017 CareerBuilder Challenge

Adam Hadwin holds up his ball

The Canadian Adam Hadwin took control of the 2017 CareerBuilder Challenge in round 3 when he shot 59 just a week after Justin Thomas had his low round in Hawaii.

Unfortunately for Hadwin he shot 11 strokes worse in the final round to score a 70 – this meant he lost out on the title by a single shot to eventual winner Hudson Swafford.

Brandt Snedeker, 2018 Wyndham Championship

Brandt Snedeker celebrates raising both fists

Brandt had his 59 in the opening round of the Wyndham Championship - but he did not have the tournament all his own way, having to shoot a 65 in the final round to hold off a charging Webb Simpson.

Oliver Fisher, 2018 Portugal Masters

Oliver Fisher holds up his ball and glove

Finally Oliver Fisher became the first person to break 60 on the European Tour in 2018 when in round 2 of the 2018 Portugal Masters he had 10 birdies and an eagle to shoot 59.

This performance in round two likely had an effect on him as he shot 69 and 70 over the weekend to finish in a tie for seventh.

Kevin Chappell, 2019 A Military Tribute To The Greenbrier

Kevin Chappell holds up his golf ball

Golf is a strange sport, and this can be summed up with Kevin Chappell's performance at the 2019 A Military Tribute To The Greenbrier - he shot an opening round of 71, followed that up with a flawless 59, which included a stretch of nine consecutive birdies.

The American then failed to break 70 over the weekend to finish tied 47th.

Scottie Scheffler, 2020 The Northern Trust

Scottie Scheffler holding up his ball and scorecard

Scheffler's 59 is the most recent sub-60 round on the PGA Tour.

The American broke 60 in round two of The Northern Trust in 2020 during the FedEx Cup Playoffs. The PGA Tour rookie made six birdies on each nine for a 12-under-par total at TPC Boston to become the second player to break 60 in the FedExCup Playoffs after Jim Furyk at the 2013 BMW Championship.

He ended the week T4th, a total of 13 strokes behind Dustin Johnson who had a 60 in the second round himself.

The 58 Club

Jim furyk, 2016 travelers championship.

Jim Furyk hi fives fans

There of course has been one performance that tops the 59s - in the final round of the 2016 Travelers Championship Furyk started 16 shots behind leader Daniel Berger – having just made the cut on the number on the Friday and had a two-over-par 73 on the Saturday.

An Eagle and 10 birdies later he shot an incredible 58 and  managed to finish 5th and just three shots back from eventual winner Russel Knox. Furyk parred 5 of the final 6 holes... so it could have been lower!

Other 58s: Two other players of shot rounds of 58 in a men's professional golf tournament Ryo Ishikawa on the Japan Golf Tour in 2010 and Stephen Jager on the Web.com Tour in 2016. 

Tom Clarke joined Golf Monthly as a sub editor in 2009 being promoted to content editor in 2012 and then senior content editor in 2014, before becoming Sports Digital Editor for the Sport Vertical within Future in 2022. Tom currently looks after all the digital products that Golf Monthly produce including Strategy and Content Planning for the website and social media - Tom also assists the Cycling, Football, Rugby and Marine titles at Future. Tom plays off 16 and lists Augusta National (name drop), Old Head and Le Touessrok as the favourite courses he has played. Tom is an avid viewer of all golf content with a particularly in depth knowledge of the pro tour.

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David Duval reflects on his 59: 'The easiest round of golf I ever played'

24 Jan 1999: David Duval celebrates after a 59 score during the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic at the PGA West Palmer Country Club in La Quinta, California. Mandatory Credit: Harry How  /Allsport

It has been 22 years since David Duval became the third player in the history of the PGA Tour to shoot 59 during a PGA Tour event. He was also the first one to do it on a Sunday, and he did it in the most dramatic way possible, making an eagle 3 on the 18th hole to reach the magic number in the final round to win what was then the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.

A lot has happened in Duval’s life since then. So, does he remember much about that historic day? You bet.

“I remember everything was easy all day,” he said earlier this week en route to picking up his 15-year-old son Brady at school. “It was probably the easiest round of golf I ever played. I had 11 birdies and an eagle, and I think I made a total of 52 feet in putts.”

According to the official statistics, he made 54 feet in putts, but that’s not the point. The longest putt he made all day on the Palmer Private Course at PGA West was 10 feet—a birdie putt on the 14th hole. He birdied the first four of the course’s five par 3s, the last one at 15, when he hit his tee shot to 18 inches.

It was at that point that Jeff Maggert, one of the other two players in Duval’s group (Bob Tway was the other) said: “I didn’t realize we were playing par 2s today.”

The Hope, which is now officially called The American Express, is being played this weekend and Duval knows it’s likely if he watches on television that he’ll probably see a replay of his 18th-hole eagle at some point.

“I don’t ever plan my schedule to watch golf, I’ve got too much to do around here,” he said. “But if I have time and it’s on, I’ll watch. I’ve seen the replay of 18 a lot and, being honest, I don’t ever get tired of it. That was during a time when I was playing great golf and MOST rounds were pretty easy. That one just got to another level.”

RELATED: 7 incredible facts about Jim Furyk’s 58

Duval said he first began thinking seriously about the chance to break 60 standing on the 17th tee. He had just hit a sand wedge to six inches at the par-4 16th and was 11 under par.

“I’d never really come close to breaking 60, but I’d had a couple rounds where I had a chance,” he said. “Once, on the Nike Tour I had a chance but didn’t play well enough the last few holes. Then, a few years later at Pebble Beach, I was eight under par after seven holes. I had birdie chances lip out at eight and nine and then missed some very makeable putts going around the turn. Probably should have shot 58; ended up shooting 62.”

1066465876

PGA TOUR Archive

Standing on the 17th tee in that 1999 round in the California desert, knowing he had a short (130 yards) par 3 and a reachable par 5 left, Duval knew he had a realistic chance to break 60. And it was very much on his mind.

“It occurred to me this might be the best chance I’d ever have to break 60,” he said. “It was something I really wanted to do. Honestly, I wasn’t even thinking about winning the golf tournament. Steve Pate [the third-round leader] was six holes behind me, and I had no idea what he was going to do the rest of the way. I’d won a bunch of golf tournaments and I thought I was going to have plenty of chances to win more golf tournaments. But I had no idea if I’d ever have a chance to break 60 again.”

RELATED: Remembering Al Geiberger’s 59

Although 17 is a short hole—Duval hit 9-iron off the tee—it can be dangerous. There’s a drainage ditch that runs along the left side of the green and, with the pin back left, Duval played carefully and landed his tee shot about 22 feet right of the flag.

“It’s a fairly difficult hole,” he said. “If you land it right like I did, you’re putting towards the water. The greens were firm that day, and I knew the putt would be fast. In fact, Bob [Tway] had a similar putt and rolled it six feet past. Even watching that I STILL knocked it four feet past the hole.”

The comeback putt for par was Duval’s most nervous moment of the day. “I knew if I missed the chance for 59 was gone,” he said. “I very much wanted to play 18 still having a chance.”

He rolled in the putt to give himself that chance. He hammered his drive on 18, hitting it about 320 yards, which, back then, was a bomb. “I had 218 to the hole—5-iron,” he said. “I wanted to land the ball middle of the green and let it run up to the flag, which was in the back. When I hit it, I thought I’d hit it exactly the way I wanted to. I just stood and watched it roll towards the flag.”

The ball stopped seven feet from the cup. Duval then had to wait his turn. Maggert and Tway, understanding Duval had a chance to make history, wanted to putt out to clear the stage for him.

“They iced me,” Duval said, laughing. “They each had about a three-, four-footer and it felt like it took forever for them to finish. Seriously, what they did was very cool. They both knew what was going on.”

72560215

David Duval swings on the 16th hole during final round of the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.

Duval stood off to the side while Maggert and Tway finished. He didn’t want to even take a look at the putt until it was his turn. “I didn’t want to over-analyze it or over-think it,” he said. “I wanted to go through my normal routine, stand up there and hit it. If anything, I went a little faster than normal. [Caddie] Mitch [Knox] and I had the exact same read, on the right lip. If I putted it outside the hole at all, it wasn’t going in.”

Duval was pretty certain he’d made the putt as soon as he released it. “Two feet out, I knew it was in,” he said. “It was a great feeling.”

It was one of a handful of times in his career, that Duval dropped his stoicism, shaking his fist a few times, clearly thrilled by what he had done. He came back to earth quickly. “After the first moment there I thought, ‘You better sign your scorecard right,’” he said.

Duval’s round left him at 26-under-par 334 for what was then a 90-hole tournament. Several players behind him, notably Pate, who had led Duval by six strokes at the start of the day, still had a chance to catch him.

“I did NOT want to play off,” Duval said, laughing again. “To try to go out and play again after reaching a climactic moment like that, I honestly don’t think I could have pulled it off. I probably would have lost.”

There was no playoff. Pate needed to birdie 18 to tie but failed to do so. Earlier in the round, watching Duval’s number drop more and more under par, Pate had been heard to say, “Well how many goddamn under par is he?”

The answer, at day’s end, was 13. Pate shot a more-than-respectable 66 and still lost by one.

Two months later, Duval won the Players Championship and passed Tiger Woods to become the No. 1-ranked player in the world. He was No. 1 for a total of 15 weeks. In 2001, he won his first and, as it turned out, only major title, winning the Open Championship at Royal Lytham and St. Anne’s.

He was 29 when he won that championship and, remarkably, he never won on tour again. Injuries were definitely a factor through the years, but he readily admits that something went out of him after that victory.

“I had worked all my life to get that win,” he said several years ago. “Hours and hours of practice. When I won, it felt great, but there was a little bit of the, ‘Is that all there is?’ feeling. I thought I would feel differently about life, but I didn’t. Something went out of me after that.

“For most of seven years, golf was almost always easy for me,” he said. “Then, for the next seven years it was almost always hard. In a funny way, that’s the beauty of the game.”

In 2003, he met Susie Persichitte, fell in love and found happiness away from golf. He adopted Susie’s three children and they had two of their own, Brayden (Brady) and Sienna. Duval had one brief comeback moment when he finished tied for second—behind Lucas Glover—in the 2009 U.S. Open at Bethpage Black. But he never got close again to being the player he had been that remarkable day in 1999.

Duval has worked for Golf Channel since 2015 and will continue to do so this year. He turns 50 in November and says he hasn’t really given any serious thought as to whether he’ll try to play the senior tour (PGA Tour Champions) next year. He had surgery on two discs in his neck last summer and is just now starting to feel comfortable swinging the golf club again.

“I didn’t play at all for almost six months,” he said. “I still like to play, but I also like being at home—a lot. I went to the driving range with Brady a few weeks ago and I was starting to hit the ball a lot better. He said to me, ‘dad, do you think you’ll ever be able to hit it again as long as I hit it?’ I laughed and said, ‘No way, absolutely not.’”

Duval and Brady played together in the PNC Championship in December. Team Duval finished T-14 and the father says they should have been several places higher. “We left five or six shots out there on Sunday,” he said. “More accurately, I left five or six shots out there. I couldn’t make anything.”

Twenty-two years ago this week, Duval made everything—or, more accurately, hit it so close he almost had to make everything. Other than a par at the par-5 sixth hole, his round was close to perfect.

Al Geiberger was the first to score 59 in 1977 and Chip Beck followed in 1991. Since Duval, there have been nine other rounds on tour under 60—Jim Furyk shot a 58 and a 59 and seven other players have posted 59. Those to accomplish it include Paul Goydos, Stuart Appleby, Justin Thomas, Adam Hadwin, Brandt Snedeker, Kevin Chappell and Scottie Scheffler.

“The next barrier is for someone to shoot 14 under par,” Duval said. “No one’s done that yet. And I do mean YET. It’ll happen.”

Duval’s biggest thrill in golf was his victory at Lytham and St. Anne’s. He says the next four are hard to rank: the win at the Players (which he thinks of as a major); getting to No. 1 “in the era of Tiger”; playing on a winning Ryder Cup team in 1999, and the 59 at the Bob Hope. “It’ll always be the Hope to me,” he said. “I remember growing up, the Hope and the Crosby [at Pebble Beach] were the two tournaments you HAD to watch early in the year. To shoot 59 there AND win, well, that was really cool.”

Duval had one other thought about watching his younger self come back to life again this weekend.

“I wonder when they show the replay this weekend, if my shirt will be tucked in on 18,” he said. “I’m guessing it won’t be. Some things never change.”

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Scottie scheffler posts a historic 59 at northern trust, share this article.

59 on tour

[jwplayer YJNxSBCN-vgFm21H3]

Add another 59 to the PGA Tour record books. Scottie Scheffler logged the iconic number at TPC Boston on Friday in the second round of the Northern Trust.

There was almost a second 59 a few hours later, but Dustin Johnson came up short. More on that in a bit.

Scheffler’s round of 12-under 59 came after an opening 1-under 70. He rocketed more than 70 spots up the leaderboard, into the solo lead at 13 under.

He is the second youngest to break 60. Scheffler is 24 years and 2 months old. Justin Thomas was 23 years, 8 months and 14 days old when he shot a 59 at the 2017 Sony Open.

How big a deal was the 59, according to Scheffler? Well, it’s not new, anyway. He shot one in quarantine a few months ago.

“We were playing a socially distanced wolf game with a few of my buddies from Royal Oaks at Texas Rangers Club towards the end when things were loosening up at home,” Scheffler said. “We had a few groups that day. Went out on our individual carts and had some fun. A few of my roommates were out there playing. I didn’t know I shot 59 at the time.”

Tee times, TV info | Leaderboard  |  Best photos  |  Scheffler’s 59 | DJ’s 60

Scheffler said he made a 20-foot eagle on the 18th for the 59 during quarantine.

On Friday at TPC Boston, the former Texas player’s first birdie came at the par-5 second hole. He added birdies at Nos. 4, 5, 6, 7 and 9 to turn in 30, then kept it going on the back with birdies at Nos. 10, 11, 14, 15 and 16. For the final birdie on No. 18, he faced just more than 4 feet. He drained it make history.

“It was fun to watch Scottie and how well he did, but man, on top of that you feel like about a 9 handicap watching somebody shoot a 59 but I’m happy for him,” said Kevin Streelman, who played alongside Scheffler.

Golfers who have broken 60 in the history of pro golf

Streelman said he spent the day not bringing up the score. The men already had plans for dinner on Friday night, and now there’s something to celebrate — with Streelman likely buying.

“I’m going to probably get stuck with it, being the old guy,” he joked. “No, it would be an honor to pay for that meal.”

Scheffler’s is the 12th sub-60 score in PGA Tour history. Kevin Chappell was the last player to accomplish the feat at The Greenbrier in 2019 .

And there it is, 59 for Scottie Scheffler. pic.twitter.com/FxvE6T8dAs — David Dusek (@Golfweek_Dusek) August 21, 2020

Johnson teed off in the afternoon wave right about the time Scheffler birdied the 18th hole for his 59. Johnson started his round birdie-eagle-birdie-eagle-birdie. Two more birdies on 7 and 8 gave him a 27 at the turn.

He would get to 11 under through 11 but then parred his last six holes to finish with a 60.

But 59 – or a number even lower – had to be on his mind coming down the stretch.

“Obviously you start thinking about it but I was trying to just start playing one shot at a time,” he told Golf Channel after he was done.

The 60 is the lowest score he’s posted on the PGA Tour. He leads after 36 holes.

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Feeling like a rookie again, 50-year-old David Duval rededicating himself to competitive golf

59 on tour

For most golf fans, the number they quickly associate with David Duval is 59.

As in the 59 Duval shot in the final round of the 1999 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic — the desert's PGA event now called the American Express — a round that allowed him to come from seven shots behind to win the title with the best closing round in PGA Tour history.

But these days, the number Duval thinks about most is not 59, but 50. When Duval turned 50 in November, he was automatically the latest rookie to be eligible for the PGA Tour Champions. Duval was on hand Tuesday for the announcement of a new PGA Tour Champions event in the Coachella Valley next spring, and he was happy at the prospect of playing competitive golf in the desert again.

“It’s cool that they are adding a new event, that we are going to have another good spot on the schedule,” Duval said of the event planned for Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage. “It’s a good time of year, more than likely perfect weather out there. My wife and I have been looking forward to this and getting back to playing full time. We are just kind of learning the in’s and out’s of it again, having not done it so long.”

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Unlike some golfers looking ahead to their 50th birthday and eligibility on the PGA Tour Champions, Duval has not packed his schedule full of regular PGA Tour events to sharpen his game.  In fact, Duval has played only one tournament on the regular tour, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, in both 2020 and 2021. The last time he played as many as 10 regular tour events was in the 2013-14 wraparound season.

Injuries, which have hampered Duval’s career since just after that 1999 win in the desert, including two replaced discs in his neck in 2020, have continued to plague him as he approached 50. But he still had the PGA Tour Champions on his mind.

“I don’t know exactly for certain (when he thought about senior golf), but a few years back,” Duval said. “With some of the injuries and things that I had gone through, I was looking to get healthy and try to play 10 or 12 times a year. And as we got closer and closer, it looks like we are going to play more than that, maybe 20-plus.”

Back on a tour again

Duval has played five PGA Tour Champions events this year, with a best finish of 34th as he tries to return to competitive golf after spending nearly seven years as an analyst on Golf Channel, a position that earned him praise for his commentary on the PGA Tour and its players.  

Duval believes his game should be producing better results, but in a recent tournament, he may have discovered a key.

"It started to dawn on me recently in completion that I have been playing golf at home for eight or 10 years, playing very few golf tournaments," he said. "And I kind of recognized this last time we played in Mississippi that I’m still playing that way. I’m still playing what I call country club golf. And competitive golf, professional golf is not country club golf.

"It’s an entirely different animal and you have to really think your way around the golf course and put the ball in proper positions and be smart about that what you are doing," Duval said. "Meshing that with how I am actually physically playing is going to kind of get me going.”

As part of that commentary, Duval would at times have to talk about sub-60 rounds on the PGA Tour. No one is more qualified than Duval for that discussion since he shot just the third 59 on tour with his round in 1999. Now there have been a total of 12 sub-60 rounds, including one 58 by Jim Furyk, who also has a 59 to his credit.

Duval acknowledges people still talk about his 59 , but he has other things to say about the number than just how he shot his round.

“It gets talked about a little bit. I think more in the framework now of what sub-60 round was the best one. That’s kind of how the discussion has gone now,” he said.

Al Geiberger shot the first round of 59 in 1977 at Colonial Country Club in Memphis, and that round is often ranked ahead of Duval’s round at the Palmer Course at PGA West in La Quinta in 1999 as the best of the sub-60 rounds. While Duval accomplished far more in his career than the 59, including a British Open title, 13 PGA Tour wins and surpassing Tiger Woods to become the No. 1-ranked player in the game in 1999, the 59 discussion is still something Duval enjoys.

“I still feel like, when there were rounds like that shot, over the last number of years when I was doing TV stuff, I always kind of tried to direct it away from me and to the fact that there have only been four of the sub-60 rounds that were 13-under par,” Duval said. “I think there is a distinction there. There is a difference between shooting 11 under, 12 under or 13 under.

“That’s why I kind of direct it away,” he added. “I’m curious to see if someone can shoot 14-under par. They might. Who knows?”

Kevin Sutherland sinks 12 birdies

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ENDICOTT, N.Y. -- Kevin Sutherland was only eight holes into his round Saturday at the Dick's Sporting Goods Open and already thinking about a 59.

"You're not supposed to do that, are you?" he said.

The way this magical round went, nothing was going to stop him. Sutherland became the first player in Champions Tour history to shoot a 59, and it might have been even better except for a three-putt bogey from about 40 feet just off the 18th green.

"Thank God I didn't four-putt," he said.

Six players have shot 59 on the PGA Tour, including Paul Goydos , Sutherland's best friend on tour. Goydos was among several players who stood behind the 18th green to watch Sutherland complete a round that was practically flawless until the end.

"Honestly, the ovation I got on 18 ... I know Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer are used to that stuff, but to see all those guys behind the green, I couldn't believe it," Sutherland said. "So when they stood up, everybody stood up around the green and was clapping, I got some chills. I think that's what I'm going to remember most."

The 59 gave Sutherland a one-shot lead over Steve Lowery going into the final round. He was at 14-under 130.

Sutherland, playing in only his third Champions Tour event since turning 50 in June, recalls asking some of the players at the start of the week if anyone had ever shot 59 on the senior circuit and was surprised it had not been done.

He would not have seemed a likely candidate. Sutherland's career-low round on the PGA Tour was a 62 in the 2010 Canadian Open. Even at home in Sacramento, California, he never seriously came close to golf's magic number.

On Saturday at En-Joie Golf Club, he couldn't miss.

Sutherland opened with four straight birdies -- two of them longer than 30 feet -- and hit hybrid into 6 feet for eagle on the par-5 fifth hole. He ran off three more birdies, including a bunker shot he holed on No. 7 that hit the pin instead of rolling 10 feet away.

Sure enough, after thinking about a 59, he made par on No. 9 to go out in 27.

"When I was 9 under after eight I was like, 'That goes beyond being a good start,' " Sutherland said. "At that point I started thinking, 'What do you have to do to shoot 59.' I started thinking maybe earlier than you should be, but it worked out all right."

Not only did the gallery begin to grow, Sutherland said the players ahead would watch him hit into the green. He made a 35-foot birdie putt on No. 11 for his second straight birdie, and then settled down for three straight pars.

"It got to the point where I didn't want to disappoint them," Sutherland said. "I had a 10-footer on 13 and missed it, and you would have thought I stole their young. They were really into it."

He drove onto the par-4 16th hole for a two-putt birdie to reach 13 under, and then he stuffed his approach to tap-in distance on the 17th, leaving him a par away from 58.

"I wasn't nervous all day, but I was nervous on 18," he said. "You don't get that chance very often."

Lowery had nine birdies in his round of 65. John Cook had a 67 and was two shots behind. Cook was on the sixth tee when he heard about the 59.

"It's a phenomenal round," Cook said. "We'll try to run him down."

Scott Hoch was 11 under after a 64, and Bernhard Langer had a 67 to top the group at 10 under.

Sutherland, even though he has a piece of history, wants the trophy. His lone win on the PGA Tour was the 2002 Match Play Championship at La Costa.

"I'll try to forget tomorrow what I did today," he said. "Because that could be pretty difficult to compare."

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Arpichaya Yubol Out in Front After a 61 at the ShopRite LPGA Classic presented by Acer

Uwadia battles through the wind to grab the lead at the firekeepers casino hotel championship.

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59 on tour

Just days after her career-best finish on Tour at the U.S. Women’s Open presented by Ally, Arpichaya Yubol carried her major momentum into her second appearance at the ShopRite LPGA Classic presented by Acer to take a three-shot lead at -10 after day one. Yubol’s 61 is not only her new career-best 18-hole score, but it tied the tournament 18-hole scoring record set by Sei Young Kim and Sakura Yokomine in 2018.

The 22-year-old, who admitted struggling with her confidence heading into the U.S. Women’s Open, made it look easy on the Bay Course at Seaview, A Dolce Hotel. Starting on No. 10, Yubol made her first birdie of the day on No. 14 and continued her streak of birdies until she stepped to the 18th hole. Yubol then chipped in on the scoreable par-5, adding an eagle to the card from 16 yards out.

“On that hole I just talking with my caddie. He wanted me to play short and like landing to the hole and I think like I can land -- I can like land on the green and then the ball like can stop and then roll,” said Yubol. “I just try to hit close and then make birdie, and the ball is in the hole and then I just, okay, today is looking good, so just with keep going and keep playing.”

After the turn, Yubol made four birdies between Nos. 3-7, hitting double digits under par on No. 7 and seeking the Tour’s second-ever 59 and first since Annika Sorenstam (2001) with two holes to play. With a par on No. 8, the Thai native knocked it to 10 feet in her eagle attempt on the par-5 9th, and unfortantely missed the ensuing birdie putt to close with the first post-round lead of her Tour career.

“I feel like I just start to play golf, like happy golf like every hole. Because I feel like my confident is coming back from last week in the U.S. Women. It was the greatest week in my life and then it's make me more confident for this week. I just go to play like happy golf every hole,” said Yubol. “I didn't focus like how much I can do, like how many under today. I just focus like every shot. Like more focus like every time, every shot.”

Jenny Shin tied her career-best round, a 63, to lead the afternoon players and finish the day in solo second (-8). Shin opened with two birdies in her first three holes (Nos. 10 and 13) and carded two more before making the turn on the entertaining 17th and 18th holes. She made three-straight on Nos. 3-5, and closed birdie-bogey-birdie to sign for her best 18-hole score since the 2021 LOTTE Championship.

“The fact that every hole is birdieable, compared to last week, just helped a lot,” said Shin, who is coming off a T19 finish at the U.S. Women’s Open last week. “A little bit easier just kind of going after the pin, which I didn't do at all. So, yeah, it was fun. That was the biggest difference: it was fun.”

Narin An, in her debut at the ShopRite LPGA Classic, shot a bogey-free 64 and sits in third at -7. Six of her seven total birdies came on the last eight holes of the round. Seven players sit in a tie for fourth -6, including 2011 ShopRite LPGA Classic champion Brittany Lincicome and LPGA Tour winners Megan Khang, Wei-Ling Hsu and Nasa Hataoka. Amateur and sponsor invite Rachel Kuehn is among a six-player contingent at -5 (T11), while defending champion Ashleigh Buhai lurks at -4 overall and tied for 17th.

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Featured Groups: 2024 ShopRite LPGA Classic presented by Acer

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Kevin Sutherland shoots 1st 59 on Champions Tour

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ENDICOTT, N.Y. (AP) — Kevin Sutherland was only eight holes into his round Saturday at the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open and already thinking about a 59.

“You’re not supposed to do that, are you?” he said.

The way this magical round went, nothing was going to stop him. Sutherland became the first player in Champions Tour history to shoot a 59, and it might have been even better except for a three-putt bogey from about 40 feet just off the 18th green.

“Thank God I didn’t four-putt,” he said.

Six players have shot 59 on the PGA Tour, including Paul Goydos, Sutherland’s best friend on tour. Goydos was among several players who stood behind the 18th green to watch Sutherland complete a round that was practically flawless until the end.

“Honestly, the ovation I got on 18 ... I know Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer are used to that stuff, but to see all those guys behind the green, I couldn’t believe it,” Sutherland said. “I was nervous when I was putting.”

“Honestly, the ovation I got on 18 ... I know Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer are used to that stuff, but to see all those guys behind the green, I couldn’t believe it,” Sutherland said. “So when they stood up, everybody stood up around the green and was clapping, I got some chills. I think that’s what I’m going to remember most.”

The 59 gave Sutherland a one-shot lead over Steve Lowery going into the final round. He was at 14-under 130.

Sutherland, playing in only his third Champions Tour event since turning 50 in June, recalls asking some of the players at the start of the week if anyone had ever shot 59 on the senior circuit and was surprised it had not been done.

He would not have seemed a likely candidate. Sutherland’s career-low round on the PGA Tour was a 62 in the 2010 Canadian Open. Even at home in Sacramento, California, he never seriously came close to golf’s magic number.

On Saturday at En-Joie Golf Club, he couldn’t miss.

Sutherland opened with four straight birdies — two of them longer than 30 feet — and hit hybrid into 6 feet for eagle on the par-5 fifth hole. He ran off three more birdies, including a bunker shot he holed on No. 7 that hit the pin instead of rolling 10 feet away.

Sure enough, after thinking about a 59, he made par on No. 9 to go out in 27.

“When I was 9 under after eight I was like, ‘That goes beyond being a good start,’” Sutherland said. “At that point I started thinking, ‘What do you have to do to shoot 59.’ I started thinking maybe earlier than you should be, but it worked out all right.”

Not only did the gallery begin to grow, Sutherland said the players ahead would watch him hit into the green. He made a 35-foot birdie putt on No. 11 for his second straight birdie, and then settled down for three straight pars.

“It got to the point where I didn’t want to disappoint them,” Sutherland said. “I had a 10-footer on 13 and missed it, and you would have thought I stole their young. They were really into it.”

He drove onto the par-4 16th hole for a two-putt birdie to reach 13 under, and then he stuffed his approach to tap-in distance on the 17th, leaving him a par away from 58.

“I wasn’t nervous all day, but I was nervous on 18,” he said. “You don’t get that chance very often.”

Lowery had nine birdies in his round of 65. John Cook had a 67 and was two shots behind. Cook was on the sixth tee when he heard about the 59.

“It’s a phenomenal round,” Cook said. “We’ll try to run him down.”

Scott Hoch was 11 under after a 64, and Bernhard Langer had a 67 to top the group at 10 under.

Sutherland, even though he has a piece of history, wants the trophy. His lone win on the PGA Tour was the 2002 Match Play Championship at La Costa.

“I’ll try to forget tomorrow what I did today,” he said. “Because that could be pretty difficult to compare.”

59 on tour

59 on tour

Clint Black: 35th Anniversary Of Killin' Time Tour

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Clint Black

Latest setlist, clint black on april 28, 2024.

Killin' Time 35th Anniversary Tour 2024

Empire Polo Club, Indio, California

Korn Ferry Tour

Mac Meissner shoots 59 on Korn Ferry Tour

Mac Meissner shoots 59 on Korn Ferry Tour

Eagled his last hole for eighth sub-60 score on circuit

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Mac Meissner makes closing eagle to shoot 59 at LECOM Suncoast Classic

Mac Meissner shot a 12-under-par 59 in the second round of the Korn Ferry Tour’s LECOM Suncoast Classic at Florida’s Lakewood National Golf Club on Friday.

After signing for a 71 in the opening round, Meissner started his second round on the back nine and turned in 5-under 30 at Lakewood National’s Commander course. After pars at the first and second holes, he went 7 under for his last seven holes, including five birdies and a 15-footer for eagle at the par-5 ninth, his last of the day.

“Based on how yesterday went, I didn’t expect today to go as well as it did,” Meissner said. “Didn’t hit it great (Thursday), did not putt very well.” He laughed. “I was hoping I could just sneak in the cut and ended up shooting 59, so, I mean, definitely a little bit shocked right now.

“It’s my first one ever,” he added, “and to do it in competition is pretty insane.”

Meissner, 24, went to SMU and graduated from PGA TOUR University, which identifies the best college golfers in the United States and provides such players with playing opportunities on Tours operated under the PGA TOUR umbrella.

He plays out of Dallas, and older brother, Mitchell, is a winner on PGA TOUR Latinoamerica.

“I’ve had a few 61s, a 60, so I’ve been around there, but I’ve never had a putt for 59,” Meissner said. “So that was cool to have one there on nine. It was kind of a tough putt, and I’d just made a good-sized one on eight, so I was like, why not? And it rolled in right in the middle. So it was pretty crazy.”

Meissner said he was mistaken about his chances to break 60 because he thought the course was a par 72. Although Lakewood has four par-5s, it has five par-3s, making it a par 71.

Mac Meissner’s shot-by-shot breakdown of 59 at the LECOM Suncoast Classic

“Nine was downwind,” he said. “We were like, might as well go for a 59. We were kind of in between clubs in the fairway (for his second shot), and my caddie looked at me and was like, ‘Are we trying to shoot 59 or are we trying to shoot 60?’ So, I pulled less club and went right at it and ended up hitting it to like 15 feet and making it.

“My playing competitors didn’t realize it, either,” he added. “They both thought it was 60, as well, and when they realized (it was 59) it was pretty fun. They were pretty congratulatory.”

Meissner trailed 36-hole leader Kevin Dougherty (64-62) by four shots at the tournament’s halfway point.

USA TODAY

Alan Jackson expands Last Call: One More for the Road tour with 10 new shows: See the dates

Alan Jackson is going out with a bang. The country music icon has added a new set of shows to his ongoing Last Call: One More for the Road farewell tour.

The Country Music Hall of Famer , 65, announced Thursday his plans to continue his Last Call: One More for the Road tour, which played to standing-room-only crowds in sold-out arenas coast-to-coast in 2022.

Jackson’s 2024-2025 tour will play an initial list of 10 arenas across the U.S., with each show marking the last time he’ll ever perform in that city and surrounding areas.

“I’ve been touring for over 30 years — my daughters are all grown, we have one grandchild and one on the way," Jackson said in a statement. "I’m enjoying spending more time at home. But my fans always show up to have a good time, and I’m going to give them the best show I can for this Last Call."

The three-time CMA Entertainer of the Year will play his final tour as he continues to live with Charcot-Marie-Tooth, a chronic neuropathy condition that he first revealed in 2021 . The disorder has affected his ability to move and keep balance onstage.

“Fans know when they come to my shows, they’re going to hear the songs that made me who I am — the ones they love,” Jackson said in his tour announcement.

‘Man, I love real country music’: Alan Jackson talks 21-track album ‘Where Have You Gone’

How to get tickets to Alan Jackson's Last Call: One More for the Road tour

Tickets for the Last Call: One More for the Road tour will go on sale to the general public at 10 a.m. June 7 via Ticketmaster .

A ticket presale is available to members of Jackson's fan club, according to the singer's official website . The presale, which has already begun, is scheduled to run through June 6 .

Hailing from rural Newnan, Georgia, Jackson has sold nearly 60 million albums worldwide, ranking as one of the 10 best-selling male vocalists of all-time.

A 2018 Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee , Jackson has released more than 60 singles, notching 50 Top 10 hits and 35 chart-toppers. He has earned more than 150 major music industry awards, including 19 Academy of Country Music Awards, 17 Country Music Association Awards (including the Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award), a pair of Grammys and ASCAP’s Founders and Golden Note Awards.

Interested in going? Check out tickets at Vivid Seats , StubHub , SeatGeek , and Ticketmaster .

Purchases you make through our links may earn us and our publishing partners a commission.

ACM Honors: Alan Jackson, Carly Pearce, Keith Urban celebrate country music at the Ryman Auditorium

Alan Jackson Last Call: One More for the Road tour dates

  • Aug. 2, 2024 – Boston, MA - TD Garden
  • Aug. 24, 2024 – Grand Rapids, MI - Van Andel Arena
  • Sept. 28, 2024 – Fayetteville, AR - Bud Walton Arena
  • Oct. 26, 2024 – Kansas City, MO - T-Mobile Center
  • Nov. 16, 2024 – Salt Lake City, UT - Delta Center
  • Jan. 18, 2025 – Oklahoma City, OK - Paycom Center
  • Feb. 15, 2025 – Fort Worth, TX - Dickies Arena
  • March 7, 2025 – Orlando, FL - Kia Center
  • April 26, 2025 – Tampa, FL - Amalie Arena
  • May 17, 2025 – Milwaukee, WI - Fiserv Forum

This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Alan Jackson expands Last Call: One More for the Road tour with 10 new shows: See the dates

Alan Jackson performs during a "Coal Miner's Daughter: A Celebration of the Life & Music of Loretta Lynn" memorial concert at Grand Ole Opry House Sunday, Oct. 30, 2022 in Nashville, Tenn.

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Leslie Odom, Jr. – The Christmas Tour

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Hamlet Society presale 10 a.m. Tuesday, June 4 Elsinore email presale 10 a.m. Thursday, June 6 Leslie Odom, Jr. is a multifaceted Tony and Grammy Award-winning, three-time Emmy and two-time Academy Award-nominated vocalist, songwriter, actor, and  New York Times  bestselling author. With a career that spans all performance genres, Odom has received recognition for his excellence and achievements in Broadway, television, film, and music. Most recently, Odom made his long-awaited return to Broadway starring in, and co-producing, the new Broadway production of the classic American comedy  Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch  by the legendary Ossie Davis, which opened in September 2023 to widespread critical acclaim. Additionally, he stars in the highly anticipated sequel to the original iconic film  The Exorcist  for Blumhouse and Universal Pictures out October 6, 2023. Odom recently starred in Rian Johnson’s 2022  Knives Out  sequel,  Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery,  which broke records for Netflix and is currently streaming worldwide. In 2020, he starred as legendary singer Sam Cooke in the award-winning Amazon film adaptation of  One Night in Miami… , directed by Regina King. His critically acclaimed and highly lauded portrayal of the soul icon and musical performance of original song “Speak Now” earned him multiple awards and nominations. He also starred in  The Many Saints of Newark , a prequel to David Chase’s award-winning HBO series  The Sopranos , released in October 2021. Well known for his breakout role as ‘Aaron Burr’ in the smash hit Broadway musical  Hamilton , Odom hosted “The Tony Awards Present: Broadway’s Back!” on CBS in September 2021 (2022 Emmy nomination). Additional film and television credits include Apple TV+’s  Central Park  (2020 Emmy nomination),  Hamilton  on Disney+ (2021 Emmy nomination),  Abbott Elementary ,  The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder ,  Love in the Time of Corona ,  Harriet , and many more. Co-written with Nicolette Robinson, Odom’s first children’s book,  I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know,  was published by Feiwel & Friends on March 28, 2023. The book debuted on the  New York Times  bestseller list at #7 in its first week. Odom is a BMG recording artist and has released five full-length albums. Released in November 2023, Odom’s fifth full-length album and his first of all-new original music since 2019, When A Crooner Dies , features a collection of 10 newly penned, original tracks that mark his most personal body of music to date.

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COMMENTS

  1. 59: Golf's magic number

    59. Had six birdies on both sides to become the second player to card a 59 in the FedExCup Playoffs. Tied the PGA TOUR record with nine consecutive birdies after starting the day with a par on No ...

  2. List of golfers who have hit 59 in PGA Tour history

    Al Geiberger was the first player on the PGA Tour to shoot a 59 at the 1977 Memphis Classic. Geiberger, known as "Mr. 59," shot a 13-under 59, which featured 11 birdies and an eagle, to break the ...

  3. Our super-handy guide to all the 59s in PGA Tour (and pro golf) history

    Fisher arrived at the 2018 Portugal Masters ranked 287th in the world. He left as the first player in European Tour history to shoot 59. Amazingly, the tour had produced 19 60s before, but never a 59.

  4. Rounds of 59 or lower in PGA Tour history

    Published February 3, 2024 05:20 PM. Twelve players have shot 59 or lower in PGA Tour history. The first to do so was Al Geiberger — Mr. 59 — at Memphis in 1977. Jim Furyk not only shot 59, but also fired the only 58 in Tour history at the 2016 Travelers Championship. Here's a look at players to shoot golf's magic number (or better) on ...

  5. How Many Golfers Have Shot a 59 on the PGA Tour?

    The first-ever 59 on the PGA Tour was recorded in 1977 during the second round of the Memphis Classic by Al Geiberger, who made 11 birdies and an eagle on the par-72 layout at Colonial Country Club to make history. The second came 14 years later in Las Vegas from Chip Beck, who made 13 birdies in the third round at Sunrise Golf Club. ...

  6. 59's on the PGA TOUR

    In the history of the PGA Tour only Al Gieberger, Chip Beck, David Duval, Paul Goydos and Stuart Appleby have carded a 59 on their scorecards. .SUBSCRIBE to ...

  7. 59 Watch: Rounds of 59 or better in professional golf

    There is just one 59 in LPGA Tour history, and that belongs to Annika Sorenstam. The only major tour without a single sub-60 round is the Legends Tour, formerly known as the European Seniors Tour.

  8. 59 (and lower) club: Players who broke 60 in pro golf

    Adam Hadwin, 2017. Adam Hadwin fired a 13-under 59 at the 2017 CareerBuilder Challenge, becoming the eighth player in PGA Tour history to shoot 59. His round came during Round 3 at La Quinta Country Club, one of three courses being played for the tournament. Annika Sorenstam poses with a golf ball marked "59" on March 16, 2001 at the Moon ...

  9. 59's on the PGA TOUR

    In the history of the PGA Tour only Al Gieberger, Chip Beck, David Duval, Paul Goydos, Stuart Appleby and Jim Furyk have carded a 59. .SUBSCRIBE to PGA TOUR ...

  10. Remembering David Duval's famous 59 at The American Express

    Adam Hadwin chipped in with a hybrid to shoot 59 in 2017 at The American Express and Justin Thomas chipped in for eagle on the first hole of his 59 at Waialae. ... David Duval's official scorecard ...

  11. Players Who Have Broken 60 On The PGA And DP World Tours: Golf's Most

    Scheffler's 59 is the most recent sub-60 round on the PGA Tour. The American broke 60 in round two of The Northern Trust in 2020 during the FedEx Cup Playoffs. The PGA Tour rookie made six birdies on each nine for a 12-under-par total at TPC Boston to become the second player to break 60 in the FedExCup Playoffs after Jim Furyk at the 2013 BMW ...

  12. What's the greatest single round in PGA Tour history?

    Shooting a 59 at Oakmont, for instance, would be more impressive than doing it at Old White TPC, which is now the first PGA Tour course to have witnessed two 59s after Stuart Appleby did it there ...

  13. Lowest rounds of golf

    This article lists the lowest recorded rounds in golf.In professional competition, a round of 59 or less is regarded as a significant achievement. In men's major championships the lowest rounds are 62 by Branden Grace at the 2017 Open Championship, by Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele at the 2023 U.S. Open, and by Xander Schauffele and Shane Lowry at the 2024 PGA Championship.

  14. Bryson DeChambeau narrowly misses historic 59 at BMW Championship

    Bryson DeChambeau missed a birdie from 6 feet, 3 inches on the 18th hole that would have made him the 12th player to break 60 and given him the 13th sub-60 round in PGA TOUR history. After tapping ...

  15. David Duval reflects on his 59: 'The easiest round of golf I ever

    Al Geiberger was the first to score 59 in 1977 and Chip Beck followed in 1991. Since Duval, there have been nine other rounds on tour under 60—Jim Furyk shot a 58 and a 59 and seven other ...

  16. Scottie Scheffler posts a historic 59 at Northern Trust

    Add another 59 to the PGA Tour record books. Scottie Scheffler logged the iconic number at TPC Boston on Friday in the second round of the Northern Trust. There was almost a second 59 a few hours later, but Dustin Johnson came up short. More on that in a bit. Scheffler's round of 12-under 59 came after an opening 1-under 70.

  17. David Duval returns to competitive golf as a rookie on PGA Tour Champions

    While Duval accomplished far more in his career than the 59, including a British Open title, 13 PGA Tour wins and surpassing Tiger Woods to become the No. 1-ranked player in the game in 1999, the ...

  18. Kevin Sutherland shoots 1st 59 on Champions Tour at Dick's ...

    The 59 gave Sutherland a one-shot lead over Steve Lowerygoing into the final round. He was at 14-under 130. Sutherland, playing in only his third Champions Tour event since turning 50 in June ...

  19. Arpichaya Yubol Out in Front After a 61 at the ShopRite LPGA Classic

    After the turn, Yubol made four birdies between Nos. 3-7, hitting double digits under par on No. 7 and seeking the Tour's second-ever 59 and first since Annika Sorenstam (2001) with two holes to ...

  20. Catlin records first 59 on Tour

    #Golf #AsianTourFor more great content subscribe to Asian Tour: https://bit.ly/2kSFQfUCheck out our Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/asiantourgolfLearn...

  21. Record-breaking Oli Fisher shoots the first 59 on the European Tour

    Oli Fisher has the European Tour's first 59. There have been nine players who have shot sub-60 rounds on the PGA Tour but never before had the feat been achieved on this side of the Atlantic. Until now. Fisher's 12-under-par total (10 birdies and an eagle) during the second round of the Portugal Masters has forever put his name into the ...

  22. Robert MacIntyre wins first PGA Tour event with father as caddie

    I'm a grasscutter not a caddie," 59-year-old MacIntyre, wiping away tears, added to CBS Sports. ... In a video call with his mother shared by the PGA Tour on X, formerly known as Twitter, ...

  23. Katt Williams to perform in Indianapolis at Gainbridge ...

    Williams will perform at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Friday, April 18, as part of the "Heaven on Earth Tour," which promises brand-new material. Presale tickets will be available on Wednesday ...

  24. Kevin Sutherland shoots 1st 59 on Champions Tour

    The 59 gave Sutherland a one-shot lead over Steve Lowery going into the final round. He was at 14-under 130. Sutherland, playing in only his third Champions Tour event since turning 50 in June, recalls asking some of the players at the start of the week if anyone had ever shot 59 on the senior circuit and was surprised it had not been done.

  25. Clint Black: 35th Anniversary Of Killin' Time Tour at Columbia County

    Latest Setlist Clint Black on April 28, 2024. Killin' Time 35th Anniversary Tour 2024. Empire Polo Club, Indio, California

  26. Mac Meissner shoots 59 on Korn Ferry Tour

    Mac Meissner shot a 12-under-par 59 in the second round of the Korn Ferry Tour's LECOM Suncoast Classic at Florida's Lakewood National Golf Club on Friday. After signing for a 71 in the ...

  27. Alan Jackson expands Last Call: One More for the Road tour with ...

    Feb. 15, 2025 - Fort Worth, TX - Dickies Arena. March 7, 2025 - Orlando, FL - Kia Center. April 26, 2025 - Tampa, FL - Amalie Arena. May 17, 2025 - Milwaukee, WI - Fiserv Forum. This ...

  28. Odie Leigh: Carrier Pigeon Tour

    Odie Leigh: Carrier Pigeon Tour More Info. Thu • Oct 03 • 8:00 PM High Noon Saloon, Madison, WI. Important Event Info: Doors at 7:00 pm CASHLESS VENUE - The High Noon Saloon services all credit and... more. Important Event Info: Doors at 7:00 pm CASHLESS VENUE - The High Noon Saloon services all credit and debit payments only. No cash accepted.

  29. Leslie Odom, Jr.

    Hamlet Society presale 10 a.m. Tuesday, June 4 Elsinore email presale 10 a.m. Thursday, June 6 Leslie Odom, Jr. is a multifaceted Tony and Grammy Award-winning, three-time Emmy and two-time Academy Award-nominated vocalist, songwriter, actor, and New York Times bestselling author. With a career that spans all performance genres, Odom has received recognition for his excellence and achievements ...

  30. Djokovic on Nadal: 'I've experienced his evolution'

    Djokovic leads Nadal 30-29 in their Lexus ATP Head2Head series, with their past two meetings coming at Roland Garros in 2022 and 2021. The 98-time tour-level titlist recalled some of their most epic encounters at the French major, where in 2013 the pair played a memorable four-hour, 37-minute semi-final that Nadal won deep in a fifth set.