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Greeted by golf’s finest gentleman

On so many fronts it was an overdue celebration when 1,300 people jammed into a Dallas banquet hall on April 23, 1968, to pay tribute to Byron Nelson. After all, Lord Byron had pretty much retired 22 years earlier – as an in-his-prime 34-year-old, by the way. Oh, he played the occasional tournament here and there, just 50 of them from 1947-66, but on that night in 1968 when they feted him, it had been 17 years since Nelson had recorded the last of his 52 PGA TOUR wins. Yet the banquet hall was overflowing with Hollywood names (Bob Hope) to TV sports personalities (Chris Schenkel) to the best players in the game (Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Billy Casper, Sam Snead, Ken Venturi). What brought them there wasn’t his .229 winning percentage between 1935-46 (51 wins in 223 starts), nor the 11 straight victories during his 18-win record-setting season in 1945. Instead, admirers came to pay tribute to the first golfer to have a PGA TOUR tournament named after him. THE IMPACT OF BYRON NELSON During what would’ve been AT&T Byron Nelson week, PGATOUR.COM is celebrating the tournament’s legendary namesake and his impact on golf with a series of stories. • His impact on my life and career, by Tom Watson • His impact on the modern golf swing Stories to come include his charitable impact in conjunction with the Salesmanship Club; and his impact on the PGA TOUR’s record book. The 1968 Byron Nelson Golf Classic at Preston Trail Golf Club was worthy of a celebration, or so organizers felt, and apparently every name of note in the game agreed, because they were all there. The most impressive guest being 55-year-old Ben Hogan, who may not have shared the warmest relationship with his colleague from the Glen Garden CC caddie barn in Fort Worth, but he surely occupied a seat that afforded him the most unique view of Nelson’s life. “Byron isn’t the richest man in the world,� Hogan told that sell-out crowd. “But I think his life has been fulfilled and that’s the reason he’s so humbled by this turnout tonight.� Hogan’s words resonated profoundly. But more than that, they seemed to set a tone that would echo for decades thereafter, because winner after winner after winner of the tournament named for Byron Nelson embraced his opportunity to share the stage with one of the game’s greatest legends. All of them shared a common denominator – they were blown away by the humility, grace, and faith that defined the Lord Byron. “He sat there on the deck (of the clubhouse) near the scoring area every round of every year,� said 2007 winner Scott Verplank. “But the thing was, Byron didn’t sit there because he wanted to be seen, he sat there because he wanted to see you.� In the mid-1980s, a talented golfer out of Zimbabwe, Nick Price, had established himself as a world-class pro with an uncanny ball-striking touch that matched his impeccable demeanor, but he was one in search of that ability to finish things off. Only one PGA TOUR win was on Price’s resume and everyone knew the talent was there for far more. “One year (at the Nelson) in the third round I drove it great, hit it beautifully, but I was in the third-to-last group and I just couldn’t buy a putt,� said Price. “I went right to the putting green after my round and around this time Byron (who was announcing for ABC) came down from the tower and came right over to see me. “He asked if he could talk to me and I had huge respect for him as a gentleman, so we went downstairs to the locker room where they had an indoor pool, a nice quiet place, and we just talked for about 75 minutes. “It wasn’t him telling me what to do, it was just him explaining the game, making you feel so at ease. This meant the absolute world to me, that he was putting his feelings out there.� In 1991, Price won the Nelson, his second PGA TOUR triumph. It had been 179 starts since his breakthrough win at the World Series of Golf in 1983, and he was consumed by joy. Price was also touched by the gentle smile offered by Lord Byron, who leaned into him at the trophy celebration and in his iconic soft voice said: “Now, you’ve figured it out.� Let the record show that Nelson was right – Price would win 13 times in his next 76 PGA TOUR starts, including three major championships during a stretch when he was the No. 1 player in the world. “Absolutely no doubt that he helped me,� said Price. “He was amazing. All these years later, thinking of him brings a tear to my eye.� Price is not alone. For while in our world we spend countless hours debating who is better than whom and whose resume is the best, there is one discussion that has already been decided: Byron Nelson is the finest gentleman the game of golf has ever known. The voices of those who feel blessed to have won Nelson’s tournament echo that sentiment. Ben Crenshaw (1983) “He lived a great life.� You felt blessed to have one tie-in to Nelson, but Crenshaw had two. Like Byron, he was a Texan and he was also connected to famed golf instructor Harvey Penick. “That’s how I met Byron, when I was 17, through Harvey. From there on, whenever I met Byron, he would always say, ‘Please tell Harvey I said hello.’ � Well established in his career by 1983, Crenshaw had played nicely at the Nelson – a second, two fifths, a T-12 – but never a win. But in his 10th try, Crenshaw prevailed, his final-round 66 allowing him to overcome a three-stroke deficit and leapfrog Lanny Wadkins, Hal Sutton and Tom Purtzer. The audience with the tournament host was the highlight. “Byron wasn’t shy, but he was so giving of himself, so dedicated to his wife and his faith,� Crenshaw said. “But he never thrust it at you, he quietly offered it, in a graceful manner.� Nick Price (1991) “I don’t think they came any better than him.� Seven-and-a-half years removed from his only PGA TOUR win, Price finally brought his ball-striking genius to the finish line – and against a stellar lineup, too. His closing 66 was one better than Craig Stadler and other marquee names followed closely – Raymond Floyd, Corey Pavin, Hal Sutton, Scott Simpson, Lanny Wadkins, and Tom Kite. But nearly 30 years later, what touches Price are memories of Nelson’s ability to see a bigger picture than the insular world in which most golfers operated. Anyone who knew the difference between a bogey and a birdie understood Price could ball-strike it like few others, but Nelson had different parameters. “I was proud that Byron respected how I conducted myself on the golf course,� Price said. “That was important to him. He told you that being a golfer wasn’t just hitting the ball and putting down a score. It was the way you treated people, the empathy you had for people, it was all-encompassing.� Billy Ray Brown (1992) “He was about family and faith and that always influenced me.� So many layers of flavor from this win leave a sweet taste in Brown’s mouth. The fact that he’s a proud native of Texas, which arguably has produced the grandest list of golf champions. The fact that it came during what was his most successful PGA TOUR season. The fact that he prevailed in a one-hole playoff against a heralded trio – Ben Crenshaw, Raymond Floyd and Bruce Lietzke – and was so warmly embraced by them. “I was very good friends with Raymond,� Brown said. “And Ben and Bruce (native Texans) told me how special this win was going to be.� Euphoric, all of that, but very tiring, too, given that rain had shortened the tournament to 54 holes and the four players had to sit around for four hours late Sunday to conduct the playoff. (Brown made birdie at the par-3 17th.) The winner simply didn’t think it could get any better, until it came for the trophy presentation and Mr. Nelson eased into the picture. Brown felt the man’s presence, but what made an impact on him was Charles Brown’s reaction: “My father was in awe. When he first saw Mr. Nelson (at the tournament) he said, ‘That’s the man right there.’ � A prized possession of Brown’s is a picture he has of himself; his father, Charles; and Nelson. Billy Ray Brown quickly came to appreciate the Nelson legacy that his father was so enamored with. “To have my name on his trophy, it’s front and center in my house,� said Brown. “In my opinion, knowing the single-mindedness that young golfers have, I look at Byron and know that his priorities were in line and that golf was down the list a little.� John Cook (1998) “He recognized that you weren’t a golf professional, you were a professional golfer.� When you’re mentored by a former U.S. Open champion, as Cook was by Ken Venturi, you’re blessed. But when your mentor’s mentor is Byron Nelson, “well, that took it to a whole new level,� said Cook, who won 11 times on the PGA TOUR and was a mainstay at Nelson’s tournament. On those times when Cook sat and talked with Nelson, he was thrilled to hear validation for all that Venturi had instructed. “From the time I was 14, I soaked in everything Mr. Venuri told me,� Cook said. “To have Mr. Nelson tell me things that he had told Venturi years earlier was such a gift.� But Nelson did more than offer feedback on the golf swing; he showed how a life of dignity and faith should be lived. “You always got nice notes from him and you saw in him how much character he had and how to treat people with respect,� said Cook. Trailing Fred Couples by four entering Sunday’s final round, Cook posted a sterling 65 and in his 14th trip to the Nelson, the walk up those clubhouse steps to sign his card and shake the host’s hands was finally a victorious one. “When Mr. Nelson got up to greet me, I got all choked up,� said Cook. “It was really special.� Loren Roberts (1999) “After that win, Byron would send me notes just to say, ‘nice playing,’ or something like that. I keep them in my desk at home. Those things are always going to matter to me.� Roberts trailed Tiger Woods by four through 36 holes, but shot 62-68 on the weekend, then beat Steve Pate in a playoff. At 43, it was the sixth of his eight career wins, but most memorable was a scene that played out at the trophy presentation. “My father (Hugh, who was 83) came to some of my other tournaments, but this was the only time he saw me win,� said Roberts. “He was a postman in Memphis, a very reserved man, but what I always think about is how nervous he was around Mr. Nelson. He just couldn’t get couldn’t a word out.� The picture of Roberts, his father and Nelson is a special memento. But Roberts’ prized possession is something given to players who attended services for Nelson when he died in September 2006. “It was a cross he had carved out of a deer’s antler,� said Roberts. “I was just so impressed. It’s my most special keepsake.� Ted Purdy (2005) “There was an amazing aura to him. He was obviously very strong in his faith and it was like God poured through him when you talked to him. With this unique time on earth, we need him more than ever.� At a time in his career when Purdy was playing nicely, the inability to close the door haunted him. For that reason, few observers gave him serious thought when he started the fourth round two shots off the lead and in the third-to-last group. “But it was amazing; I played flawless golf that day,� said Purdy, who hit all 18 greens, shot 5-under 65, and was offered the chance to sit with Nelson while he waited to see if anyone in the final two groups could pull even or surpass his 15-under 265 total. (They did not, and Purdy recorded his only PGA TOUR win.) “It was one of the highlights to my life, to sit there and talk with Mr. Nelson and his wife, Peggy. At one point, I’ll never forget him saying, ‘Ted, you didn’t have a bogey today.’ I thanked him for noting that, then he said, ‘I don’t think I ever played a round without making at least one bogey.’ “I smiled and remember thinking that I’m pretty sure Byron Nelson played quite a few rounds without making a bogey, but that was his humility, he was trying to make you feel good.� Nelson succeeded, because Purdy confirms he never felt better about his golf and never as proud as he did while sitting next to Nelson. Scott Verplank (2007) “Just the finest gentleman I ever met. How blessed was I that he befriended me?� Perhaps no one can speak to the essence of Nelson’s humility and love of the PGA TOUR more than Scott Verplank. His story would be considered a fantasy-writer’s product, only it’s true. Upon hearing that this young man from W.T. White High School in Dallas was playing impressive golf, Nelson extended an invitation to come hit balls at Preston Trail. A few swings into the session, Verplank was asked to stop by the head professional, who explained to Nelson that the club’s age limit had been violated. Imagine, reprimanding Byron Nelson. Not too many years later, Verplank was back on the range in front of Nelson, this time as a competitor in the man’s tournament. A dream come true, for this tournament years earlier had ignited Verplank’s passion in the game. RELATED: Talk of the TOUR Golf Podcast: Scott Verplank “I worked the tournament (as a standard-bearer), carrying a sign for Bobby Clampett and Jodie Mudd when I was 12 or 13,� said Verplank. “My mother (Betty) was a scorer.� In future years, Verplank would attend the tournament and walk all 18 holes watching Tom Watson, knowing Watson was mentored by Nelson. Saturday of the Nelson was a happening. “The Salesmanship Club always pushed the envelope and did a great job. Crowds were enormous. It was Phoenix before Phoenix,� said Verplank. For 20 years, Verplank was a staple at his hometown tournament. He had struggled early on, but eventually got comfortable at the TPC Four Seasons Resort – a playoff loss in 2001 and a trio of top-six finishes. Then in 2007, eight months after Lord Byron’s death, Verplank won the Nelson in his 21st try. “Fitting, I guess, in a way, that I would win that year,� said Verplank, who embraced Nelson’s wife, Peggy, in an emotional scene. “It was meant to be,� Verplank told her and Peggy Nelson agreed. “Byron,� she told him, “wanted you to win.� In that case, Nelson got what he wanted. But only after he had given everything he had to give.

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A friendship ‘bigger than a video game’A friendship ‘bigger than a video game’

Not quite a year after a chance encounter on “Call of Duty,� Harold Varner III finally met gamer pal Arturo at the Mayakoba Golf Classic on Tuesday. Carlos Ortiz, one of seven players representing Mexico here, and Preston Lyon, Varner’s childhood friend and agent – both of whom also know Arturo through the game – were also on site. They’ve spent hundreds, maybe thousands of hours together, but this was the first time they had met in person. “I can’t believe this is happening,� said Arturo, a 22-year-old college student from Mexico, smiling through his braces. He wore jeans and a red Tommy Hilfiger sweater and admitted to being too nervous to have slept much the night before. Varner, 29, giggled like a kid at Christmas. Ortiz, a married father of two whose gaming has taken a back seat to family time, grinned and shook his head at the improbability of it all. The PGA TOUR is full of golfers lending a hand, oftentimes prioritizing the human connection above even wins and losses. As Varner put it at the BMW Championship last summer, “What’s going to matter is how we affected the people in our community and who we reached out to.� He and Arturo hugged on the practice green at El Camaleon Golf Club on Tuesday. Then came Mexico’s Ortiz. They played the video game that afternoon, and Arturo caddied for Varner in the rain-delayed pro-am Wednesday. Oh, and he’s also staying with Varner all week. All parties remain amazed at how this developed. At the start of this year, Varner and Lyon, new to “Call of Duty,� in which gamers play on squads of four, joined Jake Buchanan, a professional baseball player and another friend from their hometown of Gastonia, North Carolina.   “We needed a fourth,� Lyon said, “and ended up with Arturo.� Buchanan got ejected due to a network error, and Lyon and Varner decided to leave the game but changed their minds when they realized the kid they’d been grouped with was very, very good. “I’ve played since 2012,� Arturo said with a shrug. “I was 14 or 15.� Arturo was intrigued by his new friends, even if they weren’t as good, and mentioned them to a bilingual gamer friend named Jorge Chávez, a 31-year-old loan processor in Phoenix, Arizona. “I got home, and they’d just signed off,� Chávez said in a phone interview. “Arturo said, ‘Hey, man, I just played with a group of guys.’ He thought they were baseball players.� Soon, they formed a new four-man team: Varner, Lyon, Chávez (who translated) and Arturo. “It evolved,� Lyon said. “Arturo kind of warmed up, he started trying to speak English, which – he speaks perfect English. I think he and Harold have a lot of similarities in the way they grew up. Both come from good parents, and maybe didn’t have as much but kept a positive mindset. Arturo is in school to be an engineer; he’s got goals just like Harold had goals.� Ortiz soon began to join in, and Arturo learned that he was playing with golfers, not baseball players. He asked if Ortiz and Varner were rich. Could they, for example, order anything they wanted at restaurants? They said they could … and then contemplated the nature of the question. Sensing Arturo’s tenuous financial situation, they bought Arturo new gaming equipment and sent it to him, which was far more of a logistical challenge than a financial one. The relationship deepened in April, when on Arturo’s 22nd birthday his father had a heart attack. The youngest of four, Arturo went to the hospital to be with his dad, and temporarily withdrew from the game. For a few days, his gaming friends didn’t know where he’d gone. And then they did. “On the second day in the hospital, Harold instant-messaged me,� Arturo said. “‘Hey, bro, you good?’ I said, ‘No, I’m good.’ Because I thought I was. I never thought  …� His father spent five days in intensive care before dying at 59. “It was heartbreaking,� Lyon said. “It was tough to see it all go down.� Then, a further complication: Due to a mistake on the death certificate, his father being listed as single, Arturo’s mother couldn’t be transferred vital pension money. He asked Lyon for permission to sell the new gaming equipment to pay for funeral expenses. Lyon said not to do that and sent $800, enough to for Arturo’s family to get by while the paperwork was sorted out. “It became the thing to do right now; who cares if we’ve never seen him?� Lyon said. “That’s the way Harold is; it’s easy to do things like this and impact people. That’s how we grew up. It became a little bit bigger than ourselves; bigger than a video game. It circled back to humanity.� They made plans to meet at Mayakoba, where Arturo, who is beyond grateful, gave the golfers a gift of foods and other items from his hometown. They also gave each other the needle, like they do when they’re wearing headsets and playing the game. Arturo razzed Ortiz for never being able to play now that he has two kids; Varner jokingly complained that school is taking too much of Arturo’s time; Arturo playfully noted Varner’s physique (stout) and hairline (receding). “It’s hard to believe this,� Arturo said. “Because from one match playing with Harold, I am here. I’m a guy who was playing ‘Call of Duty.’ Now I’m here. I love Harold.� He pronounces it “Gerald,� and sometimes searches for the right words in English, but he’s made big strides at learning the language. He’s in his second year of college and aims to go to work for his family just as soon as he completes his architectural engineering degree. Ortiz’s father, who has a construction business, has said he’ll help him get a job right now. “Everyone is like, ‘If you come from here, you have this much percentage chance of making it,’� Varner said. “I don’t care what your percentage is; I just want to give you a chance.�     He, Lyon and Ortiz continue to help Arturo any way they can, even funding his nominal gaming dues (as low as $35 to re-up), which would not be quite so nominal for him. “I think we’ve learned more about life from him,� Ortiz said, “than he has from us. We want to help him. We want to see him grow.� Added Varner, “What’s cool is whenever he makes it, he’s gonna help someone else.� More than striving for trophies, that’s just the Varner way. You might even say it’s his call of duty.

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Reed following Masters game plan to a teeReed following Masters game plan to a tee

AUGUSTA, Ga. – They say the key to Augusta National is to get at the par-5s. Patrick Reed listened. The American is 8 under on the four par-5s through two rounds, making birdies on them all in each of the opening rounds. “You’re not going to shoot a low score if you don’t,â€� he said post-round. It has helped him to a 69-66 start and a two-shot lead over Marc Leishman. He’s four clear of Henrik Stenson in third. The next-best player on the par-5s is Jordan Spieth at 6 under – he’s 4 under for the tournament. “To be able to go out and capitalize on those par-5s and to make a lot of birdies there, it kind of allows you to be really aggressive when you feel like you’re really comfortable with a shot,â€� Reed added. “Or at the same time, even though you might have a short iron, because of what you’re doing on the par-5s, you might play a little bit on the cautious side.â€� Prior to this year, Reed had never shot a round in the 60s at Augusta National through 12 tries. He has opened 69-66 this year. But no player has ever carded four rounds in the 60s at the Masters. “My game plan has gotten me to this point, and I have 36 more holes to stick to my game plan,â€� he deadpanned. “I believe that if I play the golf that I know how to play, that I can win majors. I have to not get ahead of myself and go into tomorrow and just take it shot-by-shot, hole‑by‑hole, like I’ve been doing. “There’s a lot of holes left, and I just need to go out and play some solid golf and just go out and continue shooting in the 60s and see if it gets the job done.â€� NO LAY UP IN LEISHMAN Australian Marc Leishman came to the par-5 15th hole on Thursday in the lead and promptly double bogeyed the hole. When he returned Friday with another hot round going, he faced a predicament having been blocked out from the left pin by the trees. He could lay up and face a difficult wedge shot – or he could sling hook a 5-iron from 223 yards and go for glory. Glory it was. The three-time PGA TOUR winner produced a stunning shot that carved around, found the putting surface, and rolled out to 6 feet. He then buried the eagle putt and finished the round alone in second place. “With the way I hooded the club over to hook it that much, it turned it into like a 3‑ or 4‑iron,â€� he explained. “I hooded the club a lot and just swung into‑out, and the ball comes out like that. I don’t really think about it too much. I just see a shot and swing.â€� What makes his gung-ho attitude even more impressive is it was on the 15th hole where he lost his chance at a Green Jacket five years ago. Playing with eventual champion Adam Scott, his approach found a watery grave and sent him towards a T4 finish instead. But the silver lining for Leishman was seeing firsthand what it took to win – and guts was part of it. “You have to grab the bull by the horns … it’s not going to come to you,â€� he said of winning the tournament. “You have to go out and win it. That’s how I’ve always played. I try and win tournaments. “Like that shot on 15 today, I’m not one to lay up if there’s a chance I can get there. I saw it firsthand, know what it takes. I feel like I learned a lot that day and hopefully it will put me in good stead for this week and can be sitting here Sunday night.â€� QUOTABLES “Even though I’m a lot behind, if I play a special weekend, shoot two rounds in the mid 60s, you never know.â€� – Tiger Woods will start 13 shots back Saturday. “I’ve always felt comfortable being up around the lead. It’s a place that I’m thankfully quite familiar with and know how to deal with.â€� – Rory McIlroy “The greens are very tough. They’re a fine line. Not very often do you get a gimme after having anything outside of 20 feet.â€� – Rickie Fowler “This experience is invaluable. Just can’t wait to get back every year after this.â€� India’s Shubhankar Sharma who missed the cut in his first Masters “I think it’s going to be pretty bunched up over the weekend and it should be very entertaining.â€� Louis Oosthuizen sits seven back and T8. NOTABLES Tiger Woods: A scratchy 75 leaves Woods at 4 over and in need of a miracle weekend starting 14 back. Jordan Spieth: The overnight leader dropped to T4 with a scratchy 74 but he’s still within reach of a second Green Jacket. Read about his travails here. Rory McIlroy: 69-71 for McIlroy has the career Grand Slam well and truly within reach. He starts Saturday T4, five shots back. Read about the big names lurking here. Dustin Johnson: The World No. 1 is T6, just six back. Justin Thomas: The FedExCup leader is also T6, just six shots back. Rickie Fowler: 70-72 for Fowler and a T8 slot means the major drought could yet be broken. Phil Mickelson: A dismal 79 on Friday, equaling his worst at Augusta, dropped Phil out of the race at 5 over. Sergio Garcia: Became just the 10th player in Masters history to miss the cut in their title defense, shooting 81-78 to be 15 over. See other notables to miss the weekend here. SUPERLATIVES Driving distance: Dustin Johnson 323.4 yards Fairways hit: Webb Simpson 13/14 Greens in regulation: Bubba Watson 15/18 Proximity to the hole: Chez Reavie 30 feet, 2 inches Scrambling: Louis Oosthuizen 6/6 Strokes Gained: Putting: Patrick Reed 3.569 Strokes Gained: Tee to Green: Marc Leishman 5.380

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