[PHOTOS: Robert Beck]
Payne Stewart’s win at Pinehurst No.2 is widely considered one of the greatest US Opens in history – and for good reason. Among other things, there was the thrilling final-day battle against some of the game’s best players, the Phil Mickelson baby pager subplot, and, of course, that walk-off (par) putt that made Stewart the only player to finish the week in red numbers. Pinehurst played extra-tough that week.
We’ve documented all of those things over the years, including a fantastic oral history of that memorable day from the June 2005 issue of Golf Digest. And one thing mentioned in there that sometimes gets lost when discussing Stewart’s win – and his remarkable putting that day – was that he received a last-minute tip from his wife. Here’s a passage from Peter McCleery’s piece:
Ultimately the Open came down to the final pairing of Stewart and Mickelson, with a Monday playoff looming after Stewart found the rough and a bad lie with his tee shot on the 72nd hole. Acting on a Saturday-night putting tip from his wife, Tracey (“Keep your head still”), Stewart had already made putts of 25 feet for par at the 16th hole and four feet for birdie – and the lead – at the 17th.
Keep your head still. That’s about as simple as it gets, but sometimes that’s all you need. And Stewart needed only 24 putts that day on Pinehurst’s treacherous greens.
Right after Stewart’s famous embrace with runner-up Mickelson in which he grabbed his face and reminded the golfer he was about to be a father, Payne embraced Tracey with a different message.
“I did it, love,” he said. “I held my head still all day.”

Shortly after, Stewart also made sure to give Tracey – whose brother is Australian touring pro Mike Ferguson – credit in his winner’s press conference.
“I’ve got to thank my wife for the putting tip that she gave me, which was to keep my head still,” Stewart said. “She watched me yesterday and she said you’re moving your head. So I worked on it a little bit last night and I kept my head still on that putt. And when I looked up, it was about two feet from the hole and it was breaking right in the centre and I couldn’t believe it. I couldn’t believe that I’d accomplished another dream of mine.”
While credit certainly goes to Tracey for noticing her husband’s head moving on the greens – and for saying something about it to the 54-hole leader – the tip actually came from Stewart’s late father, who sent a letter to Tracey before he died in 1985 of things to watch for in his son’s golf game. It’s a note that Tracey has said she framed and would refer to in helping her husband throughout his career in which he would win 11 PGA Tour titles and three majors.
Sadly, that career was cut short by Stewart’s tragic death in a plane crash just a few months after sinking that winning putt against Mickelson. But golf fans will always have Payne – and Tracey – to thank for that amazing moment at Pinehurst.


