An emotional moment relived by Crenshaw
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Richard Dunn
Ben Crenshaw, a noted golf history, is part of one of the game’s most
historic moments.
Golf fans will never forget Crenshaw falling to his knees and
breaking down in tears after winning the 1995 Masters Tournament, not
because he’d won, but because of the spiritual honor it provided on
the heels of the death earlier that week of his lifelong instructor,
Harvey Penick.
“I knew I got a lot of help from somewhere else that week. I think
the Lord was going to honor [Penick] through me that week,” Crenshaw,
a two-time Masters winner, said Tuesday morning during the Toshiba
Senior Classic Community Breakfast at the Newport Marriott, where he
was the keynote speaker.
Crenshaw grew up in Austin, Texas, and learned golf at The Country
Club of Austin under Penick, whom Crenshaw said “never gave you a
false sense of hope. He always left you with a kernel of something
positive. He was one of the kindest human beings who walked the earth
... if there was ever a time to do something for somebody, it was
then [at the ’95 Masters]. I couldn’t believe it happened then. He’ll
give me a smile for the rest of my life.”
Tom Kite, who grew up in Austin playing golf with Crenshaw and
also learning the game from Penick, called to tell his former
University of Texas teammate the bad news about Penick. They flew
back to Austin for Penick’s funeral on Wednesday and served as
pallbearers, then flew back in time to tee off for the first round of
the ’95 Masters.
“There were two very lost souls going to Augusta,” Crenshaw said.
“We couldn’t believe it was happening that week. We couldn’t believe
it would happen on Masters week.”
Crenshaw’s caddie since 1976, Carl Jackson, provided a couple of
quick tips to get his boss back on track with his swing. “The shots
were really coming off the clubs,” Crenshaw said. “I was hoping it
would carry over [into the first round] and it did. It was a
beautiful round in the first round.”
What was it that Jackson said to Crenshaw? “Get the ball back in
your stance and make a little tighter shoulder turn.”
Making only five bogeys the whole week, Crenshaw closed with a 68
to hold off Davis Love III by one stroke for his second Masters
championship.
Early in his speech, Crenshaw spoke about the game he loves and
how golf “bridges generation gaps.” Its great tradition can “boast of
having been around for 500 years,” he said.
Crenshaw, who has teed it up with President George W. Bush and his
father, former President George H. Bush, said he’s “having a
difficult time these days” on the golf course and that he’s “very
frustrated,” because taking three or four years off in the late 1990s
and early 2000s certainly did not help his golf game.
“Some of these fellows [on the Champions Tour] play so well and
have kept up their game so well,” said Crenshaw, who is currently
82nd on the money list after four events. “You need 100% devotion.
Some have all of their children out of school and they’re married and
their wives travel with them. They play well and they’re sharp and
competitive. I haven’t gotten to that point. It’s different for me. I
feel like I’m in a state where I have one good hole and then three
bad holes. I’m working on it.”
After collapsing on the 18th green at Augusta National in ‘95,
Crenshaw struggled on the PGA Tour the next six years, playing a
limited schedule while helping to raise his three daughters --
Katherine, 15, Claire, 10, and Anna, 5 -- with his wife, Julie.
Crenshaw’s Masters win in 1984 was also emotional, coming on the
heels of a decision to separate from his first wife and get a
divorce. “I don’t know if that cleared my thinking,” he once said. “I
did feel a certain freedom and an ability to concentrate at that
time. In retrospect, it did have a way of getting everything back to
the golf course.”
Once accused for being too nice of a guy by Lee Trevino, Crenshaw
(a.k.a. Gentle Ben) made his Champions Tour debut in 2002, following
an illustrious career on the PGA Tour with 19 titles, including his
two Masters wins.
Crenshaw was also the captain of the 1999 U.S. Ryder Cup team,
which had the greatest comeback in event history at The Country Club
near Boston.
Crenshaw fought winning battles against Graves disease in the
mid-1980s, wrote a highly successful book called “A Feel for the
Game,” which reached No. 25 on the New York Times best-seller list in
2001, and has been appointed to the President’s Commission On White
House Fellowships by President George W. Bush.
A member of four Ryder Cup teams as a player, Crenshaw lives in
Austin and owns a second home in Dana Point, allowing him to play
Newport Beach Country Club somewhat regularly.
“It’s funny, as a golfer, at least in my case, you start out on
the tour and you’re totally one-dimensional,” Crenshaw said during
last year’s Toshiba Senior Classic. “You just start tournament golf
and you go as far and hard as you can to try to make adjustments and
experiment with things. There are trials and tribulations, there are
lost tournaments and occasional wins ... then between the age of 42
and 50, you just start wondering what you’re going to do with the
rest of your life.”
The recipient of the Payne Stewart Award in 2001 and winner of the
William Richardson Award from the Golf Writers Association in 1989,
Crenshaw defeated Orville Moody to win his first start as a PGA Tour
member at the 1973 San Antonio-Texas Open. He won the 1971 and 1973
NCAA Championship and shared the title in 1972 with Texas teammate
Kite.
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