Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Jim King, PGA TOUR and PGA TOUR Champions player dies at age 86

Jim King, PGA TOUR and PGA TOUR Champions player dies at age 86

Jim King, a PGA TOUR and PGA TOUR Champions player, died of causes incident to COVID-19 on August 10 in Jupiter, Florida. King was 86. King, born September 7, 1937 in Chicago, attended college at Western Illinois, where he played both golf and was a linebacker on the football team. After finishing third at the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Golf Championship, he qualified for the 1957 NCAA Championship. Two years later, he was the IAAC medalist. On the football field, the 1959 Leathernecks, under the direction of future NFL head coach Lou Saban, went undefeated (9-0), outscoring their opponents 303-104. Other future NFL head coaches on the coaching staff were Red Miller and Joe Collier. For his collegiate athletic success, WIU inducted King into its Hall of Fame in 1987. While football was not in King’s future after graduation, golf was. After turning pro, he made periodic PGA TOUR starts, playing in 27 tournaments between 1960 and 1963. He made his TOUR debut at the 1960 Yorba Linda Open in California, tying for 60th. His best finish that season was a tie for 43rd in late-November, at the Mobile Sertoma Open in Alabama. King joined the U.S. Army at the conclusion of the 1963 season, and he served in the military for three years, as a paratrooper. He returned to the TOUR for one tournament in 1967—the Western Open—followed by his most prolific year of play in 1968, when he played in 13 tournaments, making a career-high 10 cuts. That season, King enjoyed his first top-10 when he tied for eighth at the Magnolia Classic played opposite the Masters tournament in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. He had two additional top-10s, both coming in 1972—a tie for sixth at the Shreveport Classic and a tie for 10th at the Buick Open. King would play off and on for the next 15 years while serving as a PGA professional at various Florida golf courses. His final made cut came at the 1983 PGA Championship at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. He finished 87th. King also courted controversy during his career, the PGA TOUR suspending him from the USI Classic in Sutton, Massachusetts. During the second round at Pleasant Valley Country Club, King allegedly grabbed rules official Pete Sesso by the throat after Sesso had warned King of slow play and began timing him. Tournament Director Jack Tuthill, a PGA TOUR employee, disqualified King after the incident that took place near the 16th green, and Tuthill suspended King from playing “until further notice.” King didn’t play in four tournaments following the USI Classic and returned to action in late-September, at the B.C. Open, where he tied for 35th. When King wasn’t playing in PGA TOUR tournaments, he was active in state opens and competing on the TOUR’s satellite Tour. King was a two-time winner of the Florida Open, in 1971 when he was the head pro at President Country Club in Boynton Beach, and again in 1976 after he had accepted the teaching-professional position at Pompano Beach’s Palm-Aire Country Club. King turned 50 in 1984 and played 12 PGA TOUR Champions tournaments in 1984 and 1985. His first event was the 1984 Digital Middlesex Classic that resulted in a tie for 13th at Nashawtuc Country Club in Massachusetts. He added a tie for 14th at the Suntree Classic and a tie-for-13th finish at the Senior PGA Championship. He joined PGA TOUR Champions full time in 1986, posting one of two third-place finishes he would enjoy on the senior circuit. King shared third place with Charles Owens at PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach, Florida, earning $15,250. He would earn his largest paycheck a year later when he finished solo third at the Greater Grand Rapids Open in Michigan, an effort worth $17,800. King finished 22nd on the money list that year, his best performance. He ended his career with 130 total appearances, his final tournament the 2001 U.S. Senior Open. King is survived by his daughter, Maria Ribeiro (Artur) and two grandchildren. Funeral services will be August 22 at the Aycock-Riverside Funeral Home in Jupiter.

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Spieth, Koepka lead the way early at The OpenSpieth, Koepka lead the way early at The Open

SOUTHPORT, England — Two great bunker shots by Jordan Spieth and Brooks Koepka — one for par, one for eagle — led to a 5-under 65 for each of them in the opening round of The Open. Koepka, with no competition and very little golf since winning the U.S. Open last month, was in a pot bunker short of the green on the par-5 17th when he blasted out and watched it roll into the cup for an eagle that allowed him to share the lead with Spieth among the early starters Thursday at Royal Birkdale. Spieth had a bogey-free round, and it required great bunker shots even by his standards to keep it that way. His shot out of the rough barely rolled into a pot bunker to the right of the 16th green, leaving the ball on a slight slope near the back edge. “This is dangerous,” he said to his caddie. He aimed to the right of the hole to avoid it going off the green on the other side and into another bunker, and it came off perfectly about 10 feet away. “That was awesome,” were his next words to his caddie. He made the par putt — Spieth made a lot of putts on Thursday — picked up a two-putt birdie on the 17th and narrowly missed a 7-foot birdie putt on the last. It was Spieth’s best start in a major since he opened with a 66 at the Masters a year ago. “I couldn’t have done much better today,” he said. Royal Birkdale was much more kind than it was nine years ago in raging wind and rain. The 146th Open began in cool temperatures, a light rain and a strong wind. Mark O’Meara, a winner at Royal Birkdale in 1998 who is playing in his last British Open, hit the opening tee shot. And then he hit another one. O’Meara’s first shot was lost in the gorse, he made a quadruple-bogey 8 and was on his way to an 81. But it wasn’t long before the wind off the Irish Sea pushed along the rain clouds and led to sunshine in the afternoon. The wind remained strong. The scores were largely good. Koepka and Spieth led the way, with Ian Poulter, Justin Thomas and Richard Bland in at 67. It was a businesslike day in more ways than one for Thomas, who wore a tie loosely draped around his neck and a cardigan sweater. He wasn’t all about making a fashion statement. Thomas, who shot a 63 in the third round of the U.S. Open, made eagle on the 17th hole to hang around the early leaders. Hideki Matsuyama was among those at 68. Koepka didn’t seem to miss a beat from his four-shot victory at Erin Hills, even if he barely touched a club. He stuck to a planned trip to Las Vegas after winning his first major, and he spent two weeks out West. When he finally got back to Florida, he played golf only one time, with manager Blake Smith at Hambric Sports, and lost to him (though he gave him 13 shots). Koepka considers himself the consummate gamer, though. He was itching to get back to competition, and after arriving last weekend at Royal Birkdale to learn the course, he proved to be a quick study. “It feels back in the routine now,” Koepka said. Whether he and Spieth had the lead depended on the late starts, particularly Matt Kuchar, who made the turn at 5-under 29. Kuchar was the U.S. Amateur champion when he played Royal Birkdale in 1998, still not even sure he was going to turn pro. Now he’s on the short list of best players to have never won a major. And the way the majors have gone the last few years, maybe this is his time. Koepka was the seventh straight first-time winner of a major.

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