"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"

online golf column
by
Chris Dortch

August 11, 2010

Even as the 2010 PGA Championship is being played this week at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin, preparation for next year’s PGA is ongoing in Atlanta.

Championshp director Ryan Cannon is an old hand at preparation. Fresh out of East Tennessee State in 2000, he went to work for the PGA of America and was dispatched to Michigan and Oakland Hills, which was about to play host to the 2004 Ryder Cup and the 2008 PGA. Cannon literally immersed himself in the community as he did his job.

“I spent seven years up there,” he said. “I got my MBA from Michigan State, met my wife and had my first child up there. I’ll always have a strong affinity for Michigan. It played such a huge part in my life.”

In 2008, Cannon and his new family pulled up stakes for Atlanta, where he’s been busy helping plan the 93rd PGA Championship at Atlanta Athletic Club. And after that, he’ll be on the move again. Moving every few years isn’t easy, but Cannon loves his job for the opportunity it presents to be around the game he says, “has been a part of my family forever.”

After a brief detour to Whistling Straits this week, Cannon will return to Atlanta and continue on one of his top priorities—the recruitment of volunteers. The tournament needs more than 3,500 to operate and has enlisted more than 2,000 to date.

“Our volunteer recruitment is open to anyone who’s interested,” Cannon said. “The golf communities in Georgia, Tennessee and Alabama are so strong, and we’ve wanted to make people aware that they can get involved in a major championship as a volunteer.

“There’s something about being in the mix at a big sporting event; you have to be there to experience it.”

Volunteer forms are available on PGA2011.com.

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Tickets are available for the 2011 PGA and prices range from a $25 practice round ticket to $850 for a President’s Club pass.

The PGA of America offers an unbelievable deal for juniors 17 and under. Any adult who buys a ticket can bring up to four juniors with him for free.

“It’s a huge opportunity,” Cannon said. “We started doing it in 2008 and have seen participation grow exponentially every year. The PGA of America is a non-profit organization started in 1916, and even back then, one of its primary objectives was to grow participation in the game of golf.

“If you have a youngster who has any interest in golf, this is a tremendous opportunity for them to see a major championship.”

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The Atlanta Athletic Club has a rich history of playing host to major championships:

• 1976 U.S. Open, Atlanta Athletic Club: Coming into the final hole, 22-year-old Jerry Pate led John Mahaffey, Al Geiberger and Tom Weiskopf by a shot. The 18th at AAC required an approach that had to carry a lake that fronted the green. Playing from the rough, Pate knocked a 5-iron to within two feet and made the birdie for the win.

After that great things were expected from Pate, who won the 1974 U.S. Amateur, finished as low amateur in the 1975 U.S. Open and then won the 1976 Open. But shoulder injuries derailed him. He never won another major but finished second in the 1978 PGA and the 1979 Open.

• 1981 PGA Championship, Atlanta Athletic Club. Vietnam veteran and self-taught former driving range employee Larry Nelson shot rounds of 70-66-66-71-273 to finish at 7-under par for the championship, four strokes ahead of Fuzzy Zoeller and five ahead of Dan Pohl.

The victory was the first of three major championships for Nelson, who didn’t play golf until he was 21. Using Ben Hogan’s classic instruction book, The Five Fundamentals of Golf to guide him, Nelson taught himself to play. He broke 100 the first time he played, and within nine months he broke 70.

Nelson went on to win the 1983 U.S. Open at Oakmont, shooting 65-67 over the final 36 holes to do it, and then won the 1987 PGA Championship in a playoff with Lanny Wadkins.

• 2001 PGA Championship, Atlanta Athletic Club. This was back in the day when Phil Mickelson was still seeking his first major championship, but he was denied by David Toms.

Toms made the risky decision to lay up on the 490-yard 18th, and he had to make a 12-foot par putt to beat Mickelson by a stroke.

"I hated to do it," Toms said of laying up at the 18th. "The crowd was over there oohing and ahhing and moaning like, 'You wimp.’ I just had to put it out of my mind and hit two good shots and make a good putt. And I did that."

Mickelson, who closed with a 68, had posted a 266, the lowest score in major championship history, until Toms made his clutch putt to finish at 265.

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