Get ready for a truly golden jubilee to mark 50 years of the Players Championship
There is a marvel to the PGA Tour that explains the passion with which we are invested.
As a sport with great vision, it is one that creates excitement, which was proven on January 30, with the announcement of a billion-dollar partnership with the Strategic Sports Group.
But so, too, is it a sport that is proud to look back and smile at its rich history and toast all the efforts that have gotten it this far. The greatest example being its annual Players Championship.
Simply put, the Players has been affixed the moniker “flagship event” for years, but to students of the professional game and aficionados of golf history, it is more. Much more.
When the game’s elite players gather at the Stadium course at TPC Sawgrass from March 14-17 in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, for the 50th anniversary of the Players Championship, there will be reasons aplenty to celebrate. Not only for the awe of a $US25 million purse, or the strength of a field that will include a huge majority of the top 100 players in the world, or the rousing cheers of tens of thousands of fans. No, the celebration will also extend to memories that have built this championship into the sporting spectacle it is.
Harken back, for instance, to the debut of the Players at Atlanta Country Club in 1974. Could there have been any better way to introduce what you wanted to be a marquee event than to have Jack Nicklaus triumph? Oh, and to win it again in ’76 and ’78, as Nicklaus did, then to be followed in succession by Lanny Wadkins, Lee Trevino and Raymond Floyd?
A proverbial march of Hall of Famers, those names. But such a trend has continued throughout a 50-year history that has done what the best tournaments do: produce stalwart and legendary names, players who need no introduction.
To wit, when it comes to recent history, there is this with the Players – six of the past 10 winners have at one time or another been world No.1 and one could make a case for Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas and Scottie Scheffler – three of the past four winners – someday earning a World Golf Hall of Fame status.
Marvellous bookends, Nicklaus and Scheffler, winners of the first and most recent Players, respectively.
Nicklaus shot 272 in 1974, Scheffler was 271 a year ago, which indicates how the more things change, the more they stay the same. Except the course because whereas Nicklaus 50 years ago triumphed at Atlanta Country Club, Scheffler won at what arguably ranks among golf’s most hallowed cathedrals.
The Stadium course at TPC Sawgrass in 1982 became the fifth venue to host the Players and there’s two generations of golf fans who would tell you that there are two courses they know intimately, thanks to televised golf – Augusta National and TPC Sawgrass.
What a beginning TPC Sawgrass had for itself. Considered a diabolical and penal challenge by famed architect Pete Dye, the course with the iconic island-green, par-3 17th is such a daunting challenge that the 1982 winner, Jerry Pate, became obsessed with it.
“I wasn’t playing against Bruce [Lietzke] and Brad [Bryant]. I kept telling my caddie, ‘We gotta beat Pete [Dye],’” Pate recalled a few years ago. “We gotta beat the course, not the scoreboard.”
Closing with a 67 for eight-under 280, Pate added a phenomenal win to a résumé that already included a US Open triumph and was promptly to celebrate in a fitting style. He pushed Dye and then-PGA Tour commissioner Deane Beman into a big pond that protects the left side of the 18th hole.
Fifty years later, TPC Sawgrass is as good as it gets – and if you need to tick all the boxes, sharpen your pencil: unforgettable hole? The island-green 17th where Pate in 1982 played the hole in 2-2-2. Famous rollcall of winners beyond Nicklaus? Wadkins, Floyd, Spieth, Thomas, Scheffler, Tiger Woods, Fred Couples, Davis Love, Hal Sutton, David Duval, K.J. Choi, Jason Day and Adam Scott all have their names on the walls at TPC Sawgrass.
Consider that a sweep of what you have always been told you must have to be a championship course of historic lengths – history and an unforgettable list of winners – are in TPC Sawgrass’ corner.
From the very beginning, the island-green 17th stole the headlines. But it was written at the debut of TPC Sawgrass in 1982 and is still true today, that “the 17th is only one jewel in the course Pete Dye designed for the Tournament Players Association”, according to Shav Glick of the Los Angeles Times.
What Dye produced was a golf course with a multitude of spectator amphitheatres, which is why the years have treated this championship kindly. Spectators can rattle off the memories at the short, par-4 fourth; the corkscrew on the par-5 ninth; the demanding par-4 14th; and possibly championship golf’s most famous finishing stretch – the risk/reward, par-5 16th; the iconic 17th; and the par-4 18th, with what might be the toughest driving hole in golf.
“We feel confident that in the Tournament Players Club we have the future of golf today,” Beman said in 1982. More than 40 years later, those words still ring true.
But while TPC Sawgrass and its series of waste bunkers and low-hanging tree branches that ask you to shape your shots is prominent in the greatness of the Players Championship, what remains the most significant ingredient is the field. Year after year, the Players brings you the class of professional golf, from the brightest young stars to the most savvy of polished veterans. Year after year, the Players has represented the best in professional golf, a championship without a weakness.
“It is special to be able to win a championship like this,” Woods said in 2001 when he was riding a wave of success like the game had never seen. All the heralded titles had fallen his way but this triumph at TPC Sawgrass was counted as special as any of them for a sound reason.
“An extremely demanding golf course with probably the best field in all of golf.”
It’s a recipe that has stood the test of time and only gets better.
Photos by: PGA Tour and Getty Images