Lets watch another amazing piece of history. Thanks USGA
@TheSports50 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this. Curtis Strange winning the US Open back to back wow
@billgreen4003 Жыл бұрын
Cool You all can freely make copies of all my videos I upload to KZbin videos search engine even VBS skits church activities and magic TV shows and Rubik's cube puzzles and magic TV specials
@anthonyosman1998 Жыл бұрын
Great episode, off to Malaga in the morning ❤✈⛳ 5 day trip 3 courses la cala, setanta & marbella .. up the soft lemons
@ja-ks8dh Жыл бұрын
It was nice to watch a little bit of golf amongst the adverts
@devingibson44636 ай бұрын
If Tom Kite hadn't won in '92 how crushing would this have been to him?
@johnhenryclark9112 ай бұрын
@ 50:02 Trouble 😵💫 Starts For The Leader , Tom Kite!🪁⛳🏌🏻♂️ The TV 📺 Announcers , Were All But Giving Tom Kite 🪁⛳🏌🏻♂️ The Victory! 📺🪁⛳🏌🏻♂️🏆 Despite The Fact That Tom Kite Still Had 14 Golf Holes To Go.⛳🏌🏻♂️ Thankfully Tom Kite 🪁⛳🏌🏻♂️🏆 Would Get His U. S. Open Golf Championship ⛳🏌🏻♂️ 🏆 3 Years Later , At Pebble Beach! ⛱️🏖️⛳🏌🏻♂️🏆 I Am Posting ✉️📨📫 This 👇🏻 At 1:28 p.m. , Saturday Afternoon 🌁🛤️🛣️🏙️ , August 17 , 2024 .
@danraine Жыл бұрын
Amazing performance Paul!!!!🎉
@cjs83172 Жыл бұрын
The aftermath of this U.S. Open is a case of "who would have ever known". That's because, while Curtis Strange's win was his first since winning the 1988 TOUR Championship (then known as the Nabisco Championship) at Pebble Beach (and only his second since the 1988 U.S. Open), Strange was undoubtedly at the height of his career with a second consecutive U.S. Open win, yet incredibly, he was never to win again on the PGA Tour, and would only win once more overseas (at Greg Norman's event in Australia in 1993). And he was only 34 at the time of his successful U.S. Open title defense.
@frankcarbo6622 Жыл бұрын
Thank you USGA - Ah, the leaders tie off with Persimmon (ah, that sound) and forged irons are in the bag. When the technology and ball suited the vintage courses pretty well... Gone are those days...
@edchapman58017 ай бұрын
Did they ever explain why Kite got a free drop on #1 from the rough to the fairway - how could there be casual water in that much heavy rough.
@Oldguitar57 Жыл бұрын
CS hit the ball a lot better in 89 than 88, at least in the final round
@ryanprobert5635 Жыл бұрын
Let er buck, man. Just play your game. Send it.
@MarcusGardner-zg7nd Жыл бұрын
I believe, based on the course map, this mr Japan hit a shot backwards when he had to go around the bush
@starflake47Ай бұрын
Looks like Carl Sagan in the gallery at 54:48.
@trulymeparker Жыл бұрын
Check out that awesome visor at 5:07
@Alex-tk2ru Жыл бұрын
lolol
@StFidjnr Жыл бұрын
Curtis strange said after winning the 1989 U.S. open "Move over Ben"
@MarcusGardner-zg7nd Жыл бұрын
An hr and forty smooth as margarine then yall go a found yes found a way smh
@dougbreeze9393 Жыл бұрын
Tom really disappointed his dad on Father's Day. He was always a disappointment to him unfortunately.
@dorothygale11046 ай бұрын
If not winning the US Open is a disappointment to one’s father, then every player in the US Open every year is a disappointment, except the winner, who is the only player who wouldn’t be a disapponntmrnt to their father based upon your logic. BTW - Kite did win the 1992 US Open at Pebble Beach, which concluded on Father’s Day as usual. So, he wasn’t “always” a disappointment.
@nicholasschroeder36784 ай бұрын
That's about the nastiest and most unnecessary comment I've ever read on any golf thread anywhere. And Kite, by all accounts I've ever read or heard, was one of the most decent guys to have ever played the tour. And never mind that he did win a US Open, plus 18 other tournaments, and placed in the top ten in 27 majors; basically, one of the best 50 players to have ever played, and according to Johnny Miller the single best wedge player to have ever played. What on earth motivated that comment? Did he steal your ice cream cone at a tournament or something?