Ben Hogan

Ben Hogan
Hogan in New York City in 1953
Personal information
Full nameWilliam Ben Hogan
NicknameThe Hawk, Bantam Ben, The Wee Iceman
Born(1912-08-13)August 13, 1912
Stephenville, Texas, U.S.
DiedJuly 25, 1997(1997-07-25) (aged 84)
Fort Worth, Texas, U.S.
Height5 ft 8+12 in (1.74 m)
Weight145 lb (66 kg; 10.4 st)
Sporting nationality United States
SpouseValerie Fox (1911–1999)
(m. 1935)
Career
Turned professional1930
Former tour(s)PGA Tour
Professional wins69
Number of wins by tour
PGA Tour64 (4th all-time)
Other5
Best results in major championships
(wins: 9)
Masters TournamentWon: 1951, 1953
PGA ChampionshipWon: 1946, 1948
U.S. OpenWon: 1948, 1950, 1951, 1953
The Open ChampionshipWon: 1953
Achievements and awards
World Golf Hall of Fame1974 (member page)
PGA Tour
leading money winner
1940, 1941, 1942, 1946, 1948
PGA Player of the Year1948, 1950, 1951, 1953
Vardon Trophy1940, 1941, 1948
Associated Press
Male Athlete of the Year
1953
(For a full list of awards, see here)
Ben Hogan
Allegiance United States
Branch U.S. Army Air Forces
Years of service1943–1945
Rank  Captain
UnitFort Worth Army Air Field

William Ben Hogan (August 13, 1912 – July 25, 1997) was an American professional golfer who is considered to be one of the greatest players in the history of the game.[1] He is notable for his profound influence on golf swing theory, his assiduous practice,[2] and his ball-striking skill.[3][4][5] Hogan won nine major championships, and is one of six men to complete the career grand slam.

Hogan was introduced to golf through caddying at age 11 and turned professional when he was 17. He struggled at the start of his career and did not win a professional tournament until he was 26. After serving in the U.S. Army Air Forces from 1943 to 1945, Hogan claimed his first major championship at the 1946 PGA Championship, which was one of his 13 tournament victories that year. He won the 1948 U.S. Open with a record score of 8-under 276.

In 1949, Hogan was struck in a head-on collision with a bus while driving home from a tournament. He sustained serious injuries, but recovered and returned to professional golf, winning the 1950 U.S. Open in what became known as the "miracle at Merion". Hogan achieved the Triple Crown in 1953, with victories at the Masters Tournament, the U.S. Open and The Open Championship. In total, he won 64 professional tournaments recognized as PGA Tour events.

Outside of playing golf, Hogan started his own equipment company and authored Ben Hogan's Five Lessons, which became one of the most influential and best-selling golf books.[6] He was an inaugural inductee to the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1974. Johnny Miller proclaimed in a 2013 Golf.com interview: "Ben is more respected for the quality of his shots than any golfer ever in history and that includes Woods or Nicklaus—nobody has been copied more than Ben Hogan and his book has been copied more than any book ever."[7]

Early life

William Ben Hogan was born in Stephenville, Texas, on August 13, 1912. He was the third and youngest child of Clara (née Williams) and Chester Hogan. The family lived in nearby Dublin, Texas, where Chester worked as a blacksmith.[8] Hogan's grandfather and namesake William Hogan was a blacksmith for the 1st Mississippi Cavalry Regiment in the American Civil War.[9][10] The Hogans were of Irish descent.[10] After the war, William worked as a tenant farmer then moved from Mississippi to Dublin, Texas, where Hogan's father Chester was born in 1885.[8] William opened a blacksmith shop in Dublin. Chester worked as a bottler at Dublin Dr Pepper, before inheriting William's blacksmith shop. As a child, Hogan (who went by the name Ben)[11] spent much of his time around the shop, where he was regarded as a shy but polite boy who calmed horses which were in line to be shoed.[8]

As the blacksmith trade began to decline due to automobiles replacing horses, Chester's business suffered and he spiraled into debt; Hogan biographer James Dodson stated Chester "became so despondent that he could barely lift a hammer".[8] In 1921, the family, led by Clara, sold the Hogan house in Dublin and moved into a small rented house in downtown Fort Worth, where she worked as a seamstress to support the family and arranged for Chester to be treated by a doctor for his "black moods". On February 13, 1922, Chester shot himself with a .38 revolver in the family home in Fort Worth. By some accounts, Hogan was in the same room as his father when he committed suicide, although Dodson noted this was uncertain as the Hogan family afterwards refused to discuss the incident and contemporary newspapers gave conflicting reports whether Hogan witnessed his father's suicide or not. He had regarded his father as his hero and he could not bear to see him in a casket during the funeral.[8] The suicide troubled Hogan for the remainder of his life.[12]

The family incurred financial difficulties after Chester's suicide, and the children took jobs to help their mother make ends meet. Hogan's brother Royal quit school aged 14 and delivered office supplies, sold copies of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram on street corners. pumped gasoline at a service station, and later took night classes to study accounting. Clara described Royal as her "rock of Gibraltar" and said he was crucial to sustaining the family. Nine-year-old Hogan also sold newspaper copies at a nearby train station, and his sister Princess helped by babysitting local children.[8] In a 1983 interview with Ken Venturi, Hogan said he was grateful for his difficult childhood: "Because I know tough things, and I had a tough day all my life, and I can handle tough things. ... And every day that I progressed was a joy for me, and I recognized that. I don't think I could have done what I've done if hadn't had the tough days to begin with."[13][14]

Introduction to golf

A tip from a friend led Hogan to caddying at age 11 at Glen Garden Country Club in Fort Worth. He walked seven miles each way to the club.[15] Hogan was enticed by hearing caddies could make $0.65 (equivalent to $12 in 2024) per round. Glen Garden had a driving range and the members rarely used it, which meant caddies were free to hit balls while waiting for a bag to carry. Hogan hit more balls than any other caddie. Initially left-handed, he started swinging right-handed on the advice of the club professional Ted Longworth, who also gave him pointers on basic concepts such as gripping the club. Outside of this, Hogan was self-taught through watching the swings of the players he caddied for and through trial and error.[16]

Hogan did not show natural ability at golf, but had an intense work ethic and improved rapidly. Caddies at Glen Garden had a game where the shortest hitter would have to retrieve all the balls from the range, which motivated Hogan to become a long hitter despite his slight stature.[16] In his attempt to gain distance, he began hooking the ball, a tendency which plagued him for years afterwards.[17] Hogan's mother Clara initially discouraged him from golf as she did not see a future in it. She unfavorably compared him to his older brother and said Hogan's golf was "nothing", adding that "nothing divided by nothing is nothing", a phrase which Hogan later used throughout his life. He persisted with golf despite the criticism.[18] Hogan also attempted to play American football but he proved too small, and baseball did not pique his interest. He later said: "Why golf did I do not know, but I just loved it." After seeing Walter Hagen arrive in an extravagant car and clothing for the 1927 PGA Championship in Dallas, Hogan decided that "if golf could make it possible for a fellow to live like that, then I would have a fling at it myself."[18]

One of Hogan's fellow caddies at Glen Garden was future major champion Byron Nelson, who was six months older than Hogan. The two became friends, but never close friends.[18] At the annual Christmas caddie tournament in 1927, when both were 15, Nelson sank a 30-foot (9.1 m) putt on the final hole to tie the match and force a playoff. Hogan had a putt to win the match on the first extra hole, but he then was informed the format had changed from sudden death to a nine-hole playoff. He ultimately lost the playoff on the final green, after Nelson holed another long putt.[17] Hogan later said that he felt Nelson had routinely received preferential treatment at Glen Garden.[11] When Nelson was chosen to receive junior membership at Glen Garden instead of him the following year, Hogan became determined to surpass Nelson.[18]

Once he turned 16 and reached the age-limit for caddying, Hogan began working in Glen Garden's golf shop, where he repaired and polished clubs. On weekends, he would work until 3 a.m. in the shop. He recalled of this time: "Boy, I'd look at those clubs and they were the most beautiful things, Nichols and Stewarts, all made in Scotland. I got my own set of mongrel clubs out of a dime store barrel for a dollar a piece."[18] As he was no longer a caddie and had not received membership, Hogan was not allowed to practice at Glen Garden. He instead practiced at the nearest public course, Katy Lake.[11] In September 1928, Hogan competed in a match play championship held at River Crest Country Club in Fort Worth. He made eagle on the final hole to force extra holes against defending champion M. L. "Happy" Massingill, but was eliminated on the 19th hole. Hogan also impressed in the tournament's long-drive contest, leading fellow competitor Ed Stewart to say of the 130-pound (59 kg) Hogan: "It's a good thing that kid don't weigh about 170."[17] As a Christmas present in 1928, Clara bought Hogan a set of clubs. She later stated that, upon receiving the clubs, Hogan proclaimed: "Mama, I'm going to be the greatest golfer that ever lived."[8]

In 1929, while still in high school, Hogan won the Cleburne Invitational at Cleburne Country Club, where he defeated 52-year-old John Douglas in the final. This was Hogan's first win in a significant tournament.[17][19] In July of that year, he finished second in the Southwest Amateur in Shreveport, Louisiana, losing in the final to Gus Moreland.[17][20] Hogan then won the Dublin-DeLeon tournament in August. He shot a course-record 68 to advance to the final, where he defeated George Meredith. This was Hogan's last amateur victory before turning professional.[17] By this stage, he was prioritizing golf ahead of his formal education. He decided to drop out of Central High School in Fort Worth and attempt to become a professional golfer.[18] Hogan persuaded his mother that he would make up for his lack of a diploma by doubling his efforts to read newspapers and books.[8]

Turns professional

1930–1936: Early struggles

As a 17-year-old, Hogan was hired as an assistant at Oakhurst Country Club, a nine-hole course in downtown Fort Worth.[16] The job paid less than $30 (equivalent to $549 in 2024) per week, but it permitted him the opportunity to practice whenever customers were not around.[8] Hogan decided to make his professional tournament debut in late January 1930 at the Texas Open, a PGA Tour event held at Brackenridge Park Golf Course in San Antonio. He hitched a ride from Fort Worth and paid $5 (equivalent to $94 in 2024) as a registration fee.[8][21] Amidst the Great Depression, Hogan felt that he could not afford to spend time playing amateur tournaments,[8] remarking: "You can't eat trophies."[22] He shot rounds of 78-75 and withdrew.[23] He stated afterwards: "I found out the first day that I shouldn't even be there."[24] A week later, Hogan competed in the Houston Open, where he shot 77-76 and was 14 strokes off the lead. He again decided to withdraw, later recalling that he believed he "had no right to be out there at all" if he could not play to a higher standard.[18]

Hogan returned to Fort Worth and took on various jobs, such as mopping floors in a restaurant and bellhopping at the Blackstone Hotel. He also worked as a croupier at night at the hotel, a job which he became ashamed of and was reluctant to mention afterwards.[25] Hogan continued his diligent practice to prepare for another attempt on tour. He would practice to the point that his hands bled, and once the skin blistered and cracked open he soaked his hands in pickle brine to toughen them. He made his second attempt to play in late 1931, having received $75 (equivalent to $620 in 2024): 25 from his brother, and 50 from department store owner Marvin Leonard, whom Hogan had met while caddying at Glen Garden. He joined fellow Texan Ralph Guldahl and headed west.[8]

At the Pasadena Open In December 1931, Hogan failed to finish inside the money as he struggled with a smother hook. Sponsors of the tournament gave competitors a bag of oranges, which he lived off for a week.[26] He earned his first check as a professional in January 1932 at the Los Angeles Open, shooting 71-72-79-69 to receive $50.[23] He cashed another check at the Agua Caliente Open, shooting 295 over four rounds to earn $200.[27] He also placed in the money at the Phoenix Open, which Guldahl won. Hogan then followed the tour east, but had little success. Paying for his own food, transportation and accommodation while on the road, he soon whittled away his earnings and returned to Texas broke. Hogan then secured a position as club professional at Nolan River Country Club, a small club in Cleburne, Texas.[17] He received $35 (equivalent to $807 in 2024) per week, and was allowed to rent a room in the back of the club at a nominal price. At Nolan River, Hogan spent a significant amount of his time in the golf shop reshafting clubs from hickory to steel, which gave him a deeper understanding of club construction and mechanics. The club had few members and he rarely was requested to give formal lessons, leaving him ample time to practice and attempt to fix his tendency towards snap hooks.[8][28]

Hogan made two more brief attempts to play on tour in 1933 and 1934; he went broke each time and returned home. In the latter attempt, he made his first appearance in a major championship, at the 1934 U.S. Open held at Merion Golf Club, where he shot 79-79 to miss the cut.[16] Hogan married Valerie Fox in 1935, and considered quitting the sport as he felt that he was failing to provide for his wife by unsuccessfully pursuing a career as a touring professional. She refused to let him quit and functioned as a form of sports psychologist.[29] He recalled: "She kept saying, 'You can't give up now. You’re so close. I just know it'."[18] Hogan's mother later stated that "Valerie is the only one who can honestly say, 'I told you so.' The rest of us hoped Ben would make it, but Valerie was always sure he would."[30] Hogan qualified for the 1936 U.S. Open at Baltusrol Golf Club,[31] where he again missed the cut, shooting 75-79.[32]

1937–1941: Breakthrough on tour

After amassing $1,400 (equivalent to $30,622 in 2024) in savings, Hogan made another attempt to play on tour beginning in 1937. He brought Valerie along with him, as his "secretary, treasurer, and wardrobe mistress".[16] By the time he entered the Oakland Open at Sequoyah Country Club in late January 1938, they were down to $86.[33] They stayed at the Leamington Hotel in Oakland, and Hogan parked his car across the street to avoid paying the hotel's parking fee. When he exited the hotel on the morning of the first round, he discovered that thieves had stolen the wheels from his car.[34][35] Fellow competitor and childhood friend Byron Nelson gave him a ride to the course. Hogan ultimately finished the tournament in sixth-place, shooting a final-round 67 to earn $285.[36] This enabled him to continue playing on tour. He finished third the following week at the Sacramento Open and received $350. Hogan subsequently received an offer to become assistant professional at Century Country Club in Purchase, New York, a wealthy club which offered him a comfortable salary. Two months later, Hogan made his debut at the 1938 Masters Tournament, where he finished tied-25th. In September of that year, he partnered with Vic Ghezzi to win the Hershey Four-Ball. The pair opened with a best-ball 61, and Hogan made 31 birdies in the 126-hole tournament, six more than anyone else in the field.[8] Despite holding a large lead, he remained determined and emotionless on the final holes. Ghezzi remarked that: "If we had lost, I am quite certain that [Hogan] would have jumped out of a window." This was Hogan's first professional victory, and they earned $1,100.[37] Hogan ended the year at 13th in the PGA Tour's money list, and he later stated this was the turning point of his career.[8]

Hogan had been invited to the Hershey Four-Ball thanks to Henry Picard, who convinced the organizers at Hershey Country Club that the as-yet-winless Hogan was a talented player. Picard also helped Hogan by offering him advice on his technique; he advised Hogan that weakening his grip might alleviate the tendency to hook the ball. Hogan had received a similar tip to cure the hook in 1937 from Harry Cooper, who noticed that Hogan was letting go of the club slightly at the top of his backswing then regripping it stronger during the downswing than he had done at address.[38] Hogan continued to have success on tour in 1939. He finished runner-up at the Phoenix Open in February, albeit 12 shots behind the winner Nelson, and ninth at the 1939 Masters Tournament in April. Hogan made the cut for the first time at the 1939 U.S. Open, held at Philadelphia Country Club in June. He ultimately finished in 62nd place, 24 strokes behind the champion Nelson. Although he did not win during the year, Hogan recorded 16 top-10 finishes and placed seventh on the money list.[39]

Hogan's significant breakthrough came in 1940. After runner-up finishes at both the Phoenix Open and Texas Open in February, Hogan recorded his first individual win in a professional tournament at the North and South Open in March. Held at Pinehurst No. 2 in North Carolina, the North and South Open was considered among the most prestigious tournaments on tour. He shot a record 11-under 277 to finish three shots ahead of runner-up Sam Snead.[40] Hogan followed this with a nine-stroke win at the Greater Greensboro Open the next week. He added his third straight win at the Asheville Land of the Sky Open at the end of March, shooting 67-68-69-69 to win by three strokes. Although he had previously struggled on the greens, Hogan displayed top-class putting during this winning streak.[41] During the trophy presentation at Pinehurst, Hogan said: "They've kidded me about practicing so much. I'd go out there before a round and practice, and when I was through I'd practice some more. Well, they can kid me all they want because it finally paid off."[42][43] Hogan added his fourth win of the year at the Goodall Palm Beach Round Robin in May, and ended 1940 as the PGA Tour's money list leader, with over $10,000 (equivalent to $224,442 in 2024) in earnings. He also received the Vardon Trophy for lowest scoring average.[11]

In 1941, Hogan was hired as head professional at Hershey Country Club in Hershey, Pennsylvania. He filled the vacancy left by Henry Picard, who recommended that Hogan receive the job. He did not give lessons, and his role was largely ceremonial in that he would represent Hershey while playing tournaments and visit the club to give the members a close-up look at an elite golfer's swing. He received annual payment in the region of $4,000 (equivalent to $85,511 in 2024).[44] Members at Hershey Country Club recalled that Hogan had a meticulous attitude towards practice, focusing on each shot on the range as he would during a tournament.[45] During the year, Hogan had eleven runner-up finishes and won five times, including at the Hershey Open. He again topped the tour's money list, with over $18,000 (equivalent to $384,801 in 2024), and won the Vardon Trophy for a second time. Despite this, he stated that he was not yet satisfied with his play.[16]

1942–1945: Hale America Open victory and military service

Hogan started 1942 by winning the Los Angeles Open and the San Francisco Open in January. At the Texas Open in February, he finished runner-up for the third consecutive year. Hogan won his second North and South Open in March, and his third consecutive Asheville Land of the Sky Open at the start of April.[46] The following week, at the 1942 Masters Tournament, Hogan shot 67 on Saturday, the lowest round of the day by four strokes, to move into contention.[47] He shot 2-under 70 in the final round to finish in a tie for first alongside Byron Nelson. In the ensuing 18-hole playoff, Hogan shot 70 but was defeated by one stroke. This extended Hogan's drought in the majors.[48]

Due to World War II, the U.S. Open was cancelled in 1942. In its place, the USGA and the PGA of America organized the Hale America Open in June. Subject to the same open qualifying system as the U.S. Open, it drew over 1,000 attempted qualifiers and the field included many of the top players on tour, such as Byron Nelson, defending U.S. Open champion Craig Wood, and seven-time major champion Gene Sarazen (a notable absence was Sam Snead). It was held at Chicago's Ridgemoor Country Club, which was not a U.S. Open venue.[49] Hogan opened with a 72, then followed with a 10-under 62 to take the lead. He shot 69-68 on the weekend to total 17-under and win by three strokes ahead of Jimmy Demaret and Mike Turnesa. Hogan was presented with the gold medal as traditionally given to a U.S. Open champion by USGA director Joseph Dey. Due to these factors, Hogan's supporters and some golf historians considered this to be a major championship victory for Hogan. Officially, the tournament is not recognized as a major championship.[50][51][52] However, the event was recognized as a PGA Tour victory, and helped Hogan end the year as the tour's money list leader for the third consecutive year.[8]

Hogan did not play a tournament in 1943. He received his draft notice on March 1, and was inducted into the United States Army Air Forces on March 25. Hogan served in non-combat roles during the war. He was admitted to Officer Candidate School in Miami; he passed and was promoted to second lieutenant later that year. He then returned to Fort Worth and joined the Civilian Pilot Training Program unit, where he received $225 (equivalent to $4,089 in 2024) per month.[53] When aviators returning from overseas arrived in Fort Worth, they were deemed more qualified flight instructors, so Hogan's responsibilities decreased.[54][55] He was afforded time to continue practicing golf and was permitted to play a handful of events when the tour resumed in 1944, including the Chicago Victory Open in June, where he lost in a playoff to Jug McSpaden. He also offered golf instruction to returning pilots who had been wounded in action. Shortly before being honorably discharged on August 5, 1945, Hogan was promoted to the rank of captain.[55] He received a personal letter of gratitude from President Harry S. Truman.[8]

While Hogan was enlisted, Byron Nelson, who was exempt from military service, established himself as the leading player on tour. Nelson won eight tournaments in 1944, and eighteen in 1945, including an unprecedented eleven-straight victories.[56] At the Nashville Invitational in September 1945, Hogan won his first tournament since being drafted, shooting 19-under to win by four ahead of Nelson and Johnny Bulla. Later that month, at the Portland Open Invitational, he won again, finishing 14 strokes clear of runner-up Nelson. Hogan's score of 27-under 261 broke the PGA Tour scoring record in relation to par; this record stood for 53 years, until John Huston shot 28-under at the Hawaiian Open in 1998.[57] Hogan ultimately won five tournaments in his return to the tour in 1945, the last being the Orlando Open in December.[58]

1946–1948: Establishing dominance, first major titles

Hogan won four tournaments in the first three months of 1946, including the Texas Open, his first victory at that event after four runner-up finishes. He entered the 1946 Masters Tournament among the favorites to win, and two of Augusta National's members had bet $50,000 (equivalent to $806,229 in 2024) on Hogan at 4/1 odds. Outsider Herman Keiser led wire-to-wire to claim victory, one stroke ahead of Hogan.[59] The following month, Hogan won the inaugural Colonial National Invitation, held at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth. This was the first of his five wins at the tournament, and Colonial Country Club later was nicknamed "Hogan's Alley" due to his repeated success at the course. At the 1946 U.S. Open in June, Hogan had a short-range putt on the final green to enter a playoff, but missed it and finished in tied-fourth. He rebounded with a win at the Inverness Invitational Four-Ball the next week.[60]

Ahead of the 1946 PGA Championship in August, defending champion Byron Nelson announced that he planned to retire from full-time professional golf. The championship was held at Portland Golf Club, where Hogan had shot a record 27-under the prior year when the course hosted the Portland Open.[61] Hogan and Nelson were seeded on opposite sides of the draw, so a showdown in the final between the two was possible, but Nelson was eliminated by Porky Oliver.[62] Hogan dispatched Jimmy Demaret, 10 and 9, to reach the final, where he then defeated Oliver, 6 and 4, to win his first major championship. Aged 34, the victory came 17 years after Hogan had turned professional. In total, Hogan played 32 tournaments in 1946. He made the cut in all 32 events and recorded 27 top-10 finishes, including 13 wins. He claimed the title as money list leader for the fourth time in his career, with over $42,000 (equivalent to $677,232 in 2024) in earnings.[60] As Nelson had retired and Sam Snead won only once between December 1946 and March 1949, Hogan established himself as the dominant player on tour.[63]

Partially influenced by Nelson's early retirement, Hogan reduced his tournament schedule in 1947 to avoid potential burnout.[64] He continued his form from 1946 and won four tournaments at the start of the year. Regarding his success, he proclaimed to a sportswriter: "I've found the secret."[65] He did not initially reveal the secret, and it became the subject of much speculation. He added three more tournament victories in 1947 after announcing this epiphany.[64] Hogan was chosen as a playing-captain at the 1947 Ryder Cup in November, the first edition of the contest since 1937. It was bankrolled by Portland businessman Robert A. Hudson and was held at Portland Golf Club.[66] The United States trounced Great Britain 11-1; Herman Keiser's loss to Sam King in the Sunday singles prevented a clean sweep for the Americans.[67] Hogan ended 1947 third in the money list, behind Bobby Locke and leader Jimmy Demaret.[68][69]

Hogan opened 1948 with a win at the Los Angeles Open held at Riviera Country Club. He led wire-to-wire, shooting a record 9-under 275 to win by four strokes ahead of Lloyd Mangrum.[70] Hogan added his second major title at the 1948 PGA Championship, held at Norwood Hills Country Club in May. He defeated Mike Turnesa, 7 and 6, in the final. In this era, the PGA Championship was a grueling 216-hole, seven-day format. After his win, Hogan was exhausted and stated he might not play the PGA Championship again.[70] In June, Hogan competed in the 1948 U.S. Open, which was also held at Riviera Country Club. He opened with a 4-under 67 to take the lead, but was overtaken by Sam Snead in the second round. Hogan rallied with 68-69 on the 36-hole final day to win his first U.S. Open and third major championship title. His total of 276 shattered the U.S. Open scoring record previously held by Ralph Guldahl's 281 in 1937.[71] Hogan's aggregate score of 8-under also set a new U.S. Open record, which stood until Tiger Woods shot 12-under in 2000.[72] Demaret, who finished runner-up at the 1948 U.S. Open, said Hogan seemed unbeatable at Riviera and described it as "Hogan's Alley".[71] Hogan also became the first man to win the PGA Championship and U.S. Open in the same year since Gene Sarazen in 1922.[73]

Following his victory at the U.S. Open, Hogan won five more consecutive tournaments. He was sponsored by equipment company MacGregor Golf at the time, and MacGregor awarded him matching prize money for each of his victories, which averaged $2,090 (equivalent to $27,352 in 2024) during this streak.[71] After the final victory of the streak, at the Denver Open Invitational in August, Hogan signed his scorecard and walked off the course before the trophy presentation. He also refused numerous media requests during this time and the Associated Press issued a report on the incident, which led to negative coverage of Hogan. Biographer Curt Sampson remarked that "Hogan was extraordinarily driven and had no particular interest in savoring a win in public or in public relations. He was a shy man trying to hide while everyone watched, a sad impossibility."[74] Hogan added two more wins before the end of the year. In total, he played 25 events in 1948, finishing in the top-three in 17 of them, including 10 wins. He won the inaugural PGA Player of the Year award, and topped the tour's money list for the fifth and final time of his career, with over $30,000 (equivalent to $392,618 in 2024).[74]

Life-threatening accident

In January 1949, Hogan won the Bing Crosby Pro-Am held at Pebble Beach Golf Links. He won again the following week at the Long Beach Open, and finished runner-up at the Phoenix Open at the end of the month. As the tour headed for the Texas Open in San Antonio, Hogan decided to take a detour and drive home to Fort Worth in his newly-purchased Cadillac Sedan.[75]

On February 1, Hogan and his wife Valerie stayed overnight at the El Capitan hotel in Van Horn, Texas. They left the following morning around 8 a.m. for Fort Worth. At 8:30, Hogan slowed down to under 30 miles per hour (48 km/h) while driving on a narrow, two-lane bridge due to fog limiting visibility. At the same time, a Greyhound 548 Bus, whose driver was running late, attempted to overtake a truck by entering the oncoming lane and collided head-on with Hogan's car. The bus weighed approximately 20,000 pounds (9,100 kg) and was traveling at around 50 miles per hour (80 km/h). Moments before the collision, Hogan saw the approaching headlights and let go of the steering wheel to dive in front of Valerie, in an attempt to shield her from the impact. Hogan would likely have been killed if he had not done so, as the steering column shot through the car upon collision. The edge of the steering wheel nevertheless fractured Hogan's left collarbone, and it was followed by the Cadillac's engine, which snapped Hogan's left ankle and crushed his left leg.[76] He also suffered a fractured pelvis, a fractured rib, damage to his left eye, and injuries to his internal organs due to the force of the impact. Valerie, who had suffered less severe injuries, managed to exit the car and then remove Hogan from the mangled front seat with the help of two people who had stopped to investigate the scene.[77] The bus had continued onwards until plowing into an embankment several hundred feet past the crash site. None of the passengers in the bus or any other vehicles on the road suffered serious injuries.[8]

After being removed from the car, Hogan said that he felt his left leg was going cold and numb. A nurse who happened to be on scene recognized that Hogan was descending into circulatory shock. He lost and regained consciousness several times before an ambulance arrived around 90 minutes later from El Paso. He was transported to Hôtel-Dieu Hospital in El Paso, where he underwent X-rays before being placed in plaster casts. Valerie was interviewed by reporters who gathered outside the hospital and the detail that Hogan had dove across his wife in an attempt to save her dominated newspapers, with headlines such as "Hogan's Greatest Win - Saving His Gal Val". While in hospital, Hogan received thousands of get-well-soon messages from strangers. Hogan's niece Jackie later recalled that: "Ben really was genuinely startled to discover what he meant to millions of people he'd never met. He simply had no idea how and why they cared about him."[8] Hogan had previously been regarded as aloof and cold, and the incident caused a sea change in his public image.[78]

Hogan's condition quickly improved from "critical" to "fair" to "good", and he was informed that he would soon be able to leave the hospital. However, on February 18, Hogan reported a sharp pain in his chest and it was determined that blood clots were traveling from his damaged left leg towards his lungs, creating the threat of a pulmonary embolism.[79] Greenfield filters did not exist at this time and attempts to thin Hogan's blood proved ineffective, so the decision was made to have an emergency operation. Alton Ochsner, regarded as the top vascular surgeon in the country, accepted the request to perform the surgery, but was unable to fly from New Orleans to El Paso due to a rainstorm. U.S. Air Force brigadier general David William Hutchison agreed to a plea from Hogan's family to send a B-29 to transport Ochsner.[80] The surgery lasted around two hours and Ochsner successfully ligated Hogan's inferior vena cava, thus preventing a pulmonary embolism.[81] Hogan was cleared to leave the hospital at the start of April, and returned home by train to Fort Worth.[82] During his hospital stay, Hogan was asked by journalist Charles Bartlett if he would return to golf: "I'm going to try. ... You work for perfection all your life, and then something like this happens. My nervous system has been all shot by this, and I don't see how I can readjust it to competitive golf. But you can bet I'll be back there swinging."[83]

As a result of the broken collarbone he suffered, Hogan experienced regular pain in his left shoulder for the remainder of his life. Blood flow to his legs was also permanently restricted, which caused constant discomfort and pain. Hogan's doctors were initially skeptical that he would ever walk independently again, let alone play golf. They advised that it would take around five months before the swelling in his legs subsided and informed him that his muscles had atrophied. By April 17, Hogan managed to walk a half-block around Westover Hills with the aid of a cane and assistance from a nurse. After a promising evaluation from Ochsner on April 30 in New Orleans, Hogan doubled his recovery efforts, which consisted of chin-ups, rubber-ball squeezing and a weightlifting regimen. He mailed an entry form to the USGA for the 1949 U.S. Open in June, but ultimately was unable to attempt to defend his title. While the U.S. Open was ongoing, the driver of the Greyhound bus which collided with Hogan was on trial for aggravated assault and failure to yield the right-of-way. He was found responsible but received the minimum penalty: a fine and legal costs which totaled only $127 (equivalent to $1,678 in 2024). Separately, Hogan reached a financial settlement with Greyhound. Although the terms were undisclosed, it was reported that Hogan received $25,000 (equivalent to $330,385 in 2024) a year for life in compensation.[8][16] Later in 1949, the driver of the Greyhound bus was involved in another crash, which resulted in two deaths and 34 injuries.[83]

By September 1949, Hogan had recovered enough to travel aboard the RMS Queen Elizabeth to England, where he was selected as non-playing captain for the United States at the 1949 Ryder Cup held at Ganton Golf Club. More than a ceremonial captain, Hogan demanded his players to wake earlier than usual and practice before and after each match. The American team rallied on the final day to win by a score of 7-5.[84] Upon his return to Fort Worth, Hogan began hitting full shots on the practice range. He experienced significant pain when shifting weight during the swing, but this lessened over time. He played eighteen holes for the first time since the crash on December 10, at Colonial Country Club with the aid of a scooter, which he reluctantly rode on in between shots. Two weeks later, he registered to make his return to the tour and play the Los Angeles Open.[85]

Return to golf

1950: Miracle at Merion

Hogan played in his first tournament since the car crash in January 1950, at the Los Angeles Open held at Riviera Country Club, the site of his 1948 U.S. Open victory.[86] He opened with a 73, then followed with three consecutive rounds of 69 to post 4-under 280. Sam Snead was the only player left on the course who could match Hogan's score, and required two birdies in the final three holes. Snead birdied the 17th and 18th to force a playoff, which was delayed for a week due to weather and scheduling issues. A member of Riviera recalled that, during the fourth round, Hogan "was telling me his arms felt like wet noodles and he was in some kind of pain on every step."[87] In the playoff, Hogan shot a five-over 76 and was defeated by Snead, who shot 72.[86] Sportswriter Grantland Rice wrote: "[Hogan's] legs simply were not strong enough to carry his heart any longer."[88] Two weeks later, he played in the Phoenix Open, which was ceremonially named the "Ben Hogan Open". He shot 65 in the first round, but faltered with three over-par rounds and finished tied-20th.[89] Hogan did not play again until the 1950 Masters Tournament in April, where he finished in a tie for fourth.[83] He recorded his first victory of the season at the Greenbrier Pro-Am in May, shooting 64-64-65-66 to total 21-under 259 and win by 10 strokes ahead of Snead.[90]

Despite his successful return to tournament play, Hogan struggled with near-blindness in his left eye which had been damaged in the crash, a condition which he refused to mention to the press. He also used heavy dosages of aspirin to tolerate the constant pain he experienced while on the course.[91] As a result, Hogan dramatically reduced his tournament schedule. Previously he had averaged around 30 tournaments per year, but now he could only play five or so. To compensate for the lack of tournament play, Hogan underwent pre-round preparations that lasted four hours. In the mornings, he soaked in hot water and Epsom salt. He followed this by consuming large amounts of aspirin, wrapped his legs in bandages to prevent swelling, had breakfast, then started his lengthy practice routine.[92]

At the 1950 U.S. Open held at Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, Hogan opened with a 2-over 72 on Thursday. He had a solid start to the second round on Friday, until his legs began to cramp on the back nine. He managed to play through severe pain and carded a 69 to trail the lead by two shots heading into the 36-hole final day. As he had a 9:30 tee time the following morning, Hogan had to wake at 5 a.m. to undergo his pre-round preparations.[93] In the morning round, Hogan shot a 72 and remained only two strokes off the lead, which was now held by the 1946 U.S. Open champion Lloyd Mangrum. In the afternoon round, Hogan's 37 on the front nine was enough claim the lead, as his competitors all struggled. With nine holes remaining, most of the 13,000 spectators on the course were following Hogan.[94] After climbing the hill to the 12th tee and hitting his drive, Hogan visibly staggered and almost fell. He ultimately made bogey on the hole, and later recalled: "My legs had turned to stone."[16] Hogan retained a two-shot lead on the 15th hole, where he hit his approach to around 25 feet (7.6 m), but three-putted for bogey. He dropped another shot on the 230-yard (210 m) par-3 17th after finding the greenside bunker, meaning he required a par on the uphill, 458-yard (419 m) par-4 18th hole to force a playoff.[95] After finding the fairway, Hogan still had 213 yards (195 m) remaining for his approach. He hit a 17-degree, 1-iron to 40 feet (12 m) and two-putted for par to join the playoff alongside Mangrum and George Fazio.[96][97] Hy Peskin of Sports Illustrated photographed Hogan playing his 1-iron approach to the green at the 72nd hole. It subsequently became one of the most famed images in golf history.[98][99]

The 18-hole playoff was set for the following day. Hogan returned to the Barclay Hotel in Philadelphia and was rejuvenated by a good night's sleep.[100] He did not have the 1-iron used on the 72nd hole in his bag for the playoff, as it had been stolen from his locker overnight.[95] Hogan fell behind early in the playoff after Mangrum birdied the 2nd hole, but thereafter never trailed. On the 16th hole, Hogan was at even par, Mangrum at one-over, and Fazio at three-over. While on the green, Mangrum noticed an insect on his ball and picked it up to remove the insect, then placed it back down and holed his par putt. An official afterwards informed Mangrum that he was not allowed to pick the ball up and that he had incurred a two-stroke penalty.[100] Hogan holed a 50-foot (15 m) putt for birdie on the 17th hole to establish a four-shot lead headed to the 18th hole, where he hit a 5-iron into the green and made par to win his second U.S. Open title.[95][101] Just 16 months after his near-fatal car crash, Hogan had won what was generally considered the most important tournament in the golfing calendar at that time. It was immediately credited as one of the most impressive comeback achievements in sports history.[102] Hogan's victory at the 1950 U.S. Open subsequently became known as the "miracle at Merion".[103][104]

1951–1952: Continued success, first Masters title

Hogan made his first start of 1951 at the Phoenix Open in January. He shot an opening round of 6-under 65 to take the lead, but was forced to withdraw due to intestinal influenza.[105][106] Hogan did not return until April, at the 1951 Masters Tournament. After rounds of 70-72-70, Hogan was positioned in third place, one shot off the lead shared by Skee Riegel and Sam Snead.[107] Hogan went out in 33, and built a two-shot lead after making birdie on the par-5 13th hole. He maintained this advantage headed to the 18th hole, where he holed a 4-foot (1.2 m) putt for par to shoot a bogey-free 68 and win his first Masters title. He was presented with the green jacket by Bobby Jones. When a reporter asked him which tournament he would like to win next, Hogan said: "If I never win another one, I'll be satisfied."[108]

In his title defense at the 1951 U.S. Open held at Oakland Hills Country Club, Hogan started with a 6-over 76. Oakland Hills' South Course was a Donald Ross design but had been renovated by Robert Trent Jones prior to the U.S. Open to tighten the fairways and add more fairway bunkers; the course was subsequently dubbed "the Monster" by the media.[109] Hogan said after his 76 that it was "the most stupid round of golf I ever played." He followed with a 73 and stood five strokes behind the lead. A third-round 71 on Saturday morning left Hogan in fifth-place at 10-over-par.[110] In the final round on Saturday afternoon, Hogan decided to attack the course and almost holed multiple approach shots. He finished with a 15-foot (4.6 m) putt for birdie on the 459-yard (420 m) par-4 18th to shoot 67, the lowest round of the week, and retain his U.S. Open title.[111] Afterwards, Hogan described it as "the finest round of golf I have ever played" and said "I'm glad I brought this course, this monster, to its knees."[112]

Hogan played in only three tournaments in 1952.[113] As the defending champion at the 1952 Masters Tournament in April, he was tied for the lead after 54 holes alongside Snead, but shot a 7-over 79 and finished in tied-7th. As part of the 79, he three-putted on five occasions.[114] During that year, Hogan started the tradition of the Masters champions' dinner, after suggesting the idea to Bobby Jones and Clifford Roberts. He recalled: "They thought it would be a great idea, especially since I was the defending champion and would pick up the check."[114] He won the Colonial National Invitation in May,[113] and held the 36-hole lead at the 1952 U.S. Open in June, but shot 74-74 over the final two rounds to finish in third place.[115]

1953: Winning the Triple Crown

On the eve of the 1953 Masters Tournament in April, 40-year-old Hogan stated to a reporter: "I'm in grand shape. I practiced every day of the winter."[116] He opened with a 2-under 70 in the first round, and followed with a 69 to take a one-shot lead at 5-under.[117] Hogan extended his lead to four strokes thanks to a third-round 66, which also set the 54-hole scoring record at the tournament at 11-under 205. He closed out the tournament with a 69 on Sunday to claim the second Masters title of his career. His total of 14-under 274 broke the previous tournament record by five strokes. Hogan said afterwards: "That's as good as I can play." Regarding his limited tournament schedule, he added: "Practice means as much as playing itself. A tournament is an anticlimax to preparation, the way I see it."[118] President Dwight D. Eisenhower flew to Augusta and two days later played the course together with Hogan, Byron Nelson, and Clifford Roberts. Eisenhower joked that: "Ben Hogan made fun of your course, didn't he, Cliff?"[119]

In May, Hogan competed in the Pan American Open, for which he received a $5,000 (equivalent to $58,762 in 2024) appearance fee. He won the tournament ahead of Dave Douglas and received another $2,900 (equivalent to $34,082 in 2024) in prize money.[120] Later that month, Hogan won the Colonial National Invitation for the fourth time in his career. He shot a final-round 67 to win by five strokes ahead of Doug Ford and Cary Middlecoff. Sportswriters quipped that the tournament should be renamed the "Colonial National Second Place Invitation" due to the difficulty other players had in defeating Hogan at the event.[121]

Although he had won three of the previous five U.S. Opens, Hogan had to participate in 36-hole qualifying for the 1953 U.S. Open in June due to the USGA's rules at the time. Biographer Curt Sampson stated that making Hogan play a qualifier for the U.S. Open was "like running a credit check on John D. Rockefeller, an insult and a waste of time."[122] The 1953 U.S. Open was held at Oakmont Country Club, which was regarded as one of the toughest courses in the world. Hogan shot a bogey-free, five-under 67 to take the first-round lead.[123] He retained his lead following rounds of 72-73, but his long-time rival Sam Snead had closed within one stroke.[124] In the final round, Hogan brought a one-shot lead to the 15th hole, but found a bunker off the tee and made bogey. He responded by parring the 234-yard (214 m) par-3 16th, driving the green on the 292-yard (267 m) par-4 17th to set up a birdie, then hit a 5-iron approach close to the pin on the 462-yard (422 m) par-4 18th. Snead meanwhile had imploded and ended with a 76 to finish runner-up for the fourth time at the U.S. Open. Hogan's birdie putt on the last hole gave him a 71 to total 5-under 283. He was the only player to finish under par for the week and won by six strokes.[125] With the victory, Hogan joined Willie Anderson and Bobby Jones as the only men to have won four U.S. Opens. Jack Nicklaus equalled this mark in 1980.[126]

Towards the end of June, Hogan traveled across the Atlantic to compete in the 1953 Open Championship, held at Carnoustie Golf Links in Scotland.[127] He arrived two weeks early in Scotland to practice on links courses and familiarize himself with the British-sized golf ball, which had a 1.62 in (41 mm) diameter compared to the American 1.68 in (43 mm) ball.[128] He practiced at Panmure Golf Club, which afforded him more privacy than Carnoustie.[129] In this era, the Open offered a prize pool that was a fraction of the American major championships. When asked why he chose to compete in the Open, Hogan stated: "Because so many people want me to; it's being held in July, when it might be warm ... the Royal and Ancient rules now permit me to use my center-shafted putter, after having banned it for some time; and for the challenge." By "people", he referred to fellow major champions such as Tommy Armour and Walter Hagen, who had urged him to play the Open. He was also encouraged to try competing in the Open by Claude Harmon, who stated it would be "for the good of the game."[128] The 1953 PGA Championship was scheduled in the same week as the 1953 Open Championship, meaning it was impossible to compete in both.[126]

Hogan initially was not fond of Carnoustie. He stated: "These greens are awful. It's like putting on glue. I've got a lawnmower back in Texas. I'll send it over to you." The Open Championship rules at the time also meant that Hogan had to participate in qualifying on July 6–7 despite his status as the reigning Masters and U.S. Open champion.[129] He stated afterwards: "I kept asking myself, 'What am I doing over here?' You know, a great many people built up in their minds a mythical Hogan who could win whenever he wanted to win. Well, life does not work that way." He felt pressure to perform and believed if he did not win, "people over there would have thought, 'Well, American players aren't so good as they're supposed to be, especially under British conditions'."[130] Hogan made it through qualifying and shot a 1-over 73 in the first round. He struggled on the greens on the opening day and the struggles continued in the second round, but he managed to shoot 71 thanks to quality ballstriking and moved within two strokes of the lead.[131] Hogan developed a flu prior to the 36-hole final day; he had a temperature of 103 °F (39 °C), but received a shot of penicillin and continued to play. He shot 70 in the third round to tie for the lead alongside Roberto De Vicenzo.[132]

In the final round at Carnoustie, Hogan chipped in from 40 feet (12 m) for birdie on the 5th hole, then made another birdie at the 567-yard (518 m), par-5 6th hole.[133] During the tournament, Hogan played the 6th hole aggressively. With a split fairway, most of the field chose to lay up off the tee short of the bunkers on the right half, which was safer. Hogan noticed he could reach the green in two if he aimed down the left, which brought out of bounds into play. He successfully targeted the left side of the fairway and the hole later became known as "Hogan's Alley".[132] Hogan was notified he had a two-stroke lead while on the 15th hole, and after hitting his approach on the 235-yard (215 m), par-3 16th hole to 12 feet (3.7 m), he told reporter John Derr: "This tournament's over. You can go in now and set up for the broadcast."[133] Hogan finished with a birdie on the 18th hole to shoot a course-record 68 and claim the Claret Jug, totaling 6-under 282 to win by four strokes over Antonio Cerdá, Dai Rees, Frank Stranahan, and Peter Thomson.[134] This made him the second golfer after Gene Sarazen to complete the modern career grand slam, and the first to win the Triple Crown. As well as the "Triple Crown", the press dubbed it the "Hogan Slam" and compared it to Bobby Jones's 1930 season.[126][135] For this win, Hogan received £500 (equivalent to $17,634 in 2023).[136]

When asked afterwards if he would return to the Open Championship, Hogan said: "I don't know when I'll be back. But I'll try to make it next year." He ultimately never played again in the Open, and the win at Carnoustie was his ninth and final major championship.[137] Hogan returned to America on July 21, aboard the SS United States.[134] When he arrived in New York City, he received a ticker-tape parade down Broadway. He stated: "Only in America could such a thing as this happen to a little guy like me. Ever since I can remember, new things and better things have been happening to me. I owe it all to the people who have been pulling for me—and to the good Lord."[138][139] Hogan was the first golfer to have been honored in this way since Bobby Jones in 1930.[135] For his achievements, Hogan was named the 1953 AP Athlete of the Year and was awarded the Hickok Belt as the top professional athlete in the United States.[140]

1954–1971: Later years

As the defending champion at the 1954 Masters Tournament, Hogan held a three-stroke lead after 54 holes, but shot a 75 in the final round to fall into a tie for the lead with Sam Snead. In the ensuing 18-hole playoff, Hogan lost with a score of 71 to Snead's 70. This was one of Hogan's many close calls in major championships in his later years. He missed multiple short putts in the final round of the 1955 Masters Tournament, where he again finished runner-up, this time to Cary Middlecoff. With his persistent struggles on the green, he found it difficult to contend over the course over four rounds at Augusta National for the rest of his career.[141] In preparation for the 1957 Masters Tournament, Hogan trialed a 10-finger, baseball grip while putting. Although his putting improved with this grip, he was too embarrassed to use it in front of the crowds at Augusta National and switched back to his conventional, reverse-overlap grip which he had used throughout his career. He subsequently missed the cut at the Masters for the first time in his career.[142] This ended his streak of 14 consecutive top-10 finishes at Augusta National.[143]

Despite his putting struggles, Hogan continued to contend at U.S. Open.[141] At the 1955 U.S. Open, Hogan had the outright lead through three rounds. After two putting for par on the final hole to post 287, he was congratulated by Gene Sarazen, who was commentating the event for NBC-TV.[144] NBC then finished its one-hour coverage of the tournament by declaring Hogan the champion. Meanwhile, Jack Fleck was still on the course, and birdied his final hole to match Hogan's score of 287 and force a playoff.[145] In the playoff, Hogan was fatigued and trailed by one headed to the 18th hole. He hooked his drive left and took multiple strokes to remove the ball from deep rough, which resulted in a double-bogey. Fleck made par to win with 69 to Hogan's 72. Hogan announced afterwards: "I'm through with competitive golf. From now on, I'm a weekend golfer."[146] He contended again at the 1956 U.S. Open. He missed a putt on the 71st hole from approximately 3 feet (0.91 m) and ultimately finished one stroke behind the winning mark of 282.[147] Hogan competed in the 1956 Canada Cup the following week, where he partnered with Snead to represent the United States. The Americans won by 14 strokes over the South African team of Bobby Locke and Gary Player. Hogan also led the individual leaderboard with a score of 7-under 277, five strokes better than anyone else in the field.[148]

Hogan won the final professional tournament of his career at the Colonial National Invitation in May 1959. After missing a 3-foot (0.91 m) putt to win in regulation, he entered an 18-hole playoff with Fred Hawkins. Regarding the miss, he said: "I was completely confident I could sink that putt. I guess I didn't hit enough club." In windy conditions, Hogan shot 1-under 69 in the playoff to best Hawkins' 73 and claim the fifth victory of his career at Colonial. He stated afterwards: "It's been quite a dry spell. I've had five years of poor putting."[17] The following month, Hogan was in solo-second place after three rounds at the 1959 U.S. Open but shot a 76 to finish five strokes behind the winner Billy Casper.[149]

After three rounds at the 1960 Masters Tournament, Hogan was one stroke behind the lead held by Arnold Palmer, but carded a final-round 76 to slide down to tied-6th place, seven behind Palmer. Two months later, Hogan was in contention at the 1960 U.S. Open. After opening with a 4-over 75, Hogan rebounded with a 67, which his playing partner Dow Finsterwald described as "one of the greatest rounds of golf I ever saw." Paired with 20-year-old Jack Nicklaus in the third round, Hogan shot a 69, as did Nicklaus.[150] In the final round, Hogan had hit every fairway and every green through fifteen holes and was tied for the lead. After a par at the 16th, Hogan laid up on the par-5 17th and had around 50 yards (46 m) for his approach.[151] He went directly at the pin for his third shot, but hit it too short and his ball found the stream guarding the green. Hogan was able to play his fourth shot onto the green, but missed the putt and dropped out of the lead.[152] In an attempt to reclaim the lost stroke, Hogan hit an aggressive drive on the long, par-4 18th hole, but hooked it into the water and finished with a triple-bogey 7.[153] With his bogey, triple-bogey finish, Hogan fell into a tie for ninth, four strokes behind the champion Palmer.[154] In 1983, Hogan commented on his approach to the 17th green: "I find myself waking up at night thinking of that shot. Right today. How many years ago has that been? That was 23 years ago and there isn't a month that goes by that that doesn't cut my guts out."[155]

At the 1967 Masters Tournament, 54-year-old Hogan opened with 74-73 to make the cut but was seven strokes adrift of the lead. On Saturday, he shot the low round of the tournament with a 6-under 66, including a 30 on the back nine, to move within two of the lead.[156] He faltered with a final-round 77 and finished tied-10th. He limped badly during the tournament, and it proved to be Hogan's final appearance at the Masters, although he did not announce it beforehand.[157] Hogan detested being seen as a ceremonial golfer and after 1967 did not attend the Masters champions' dinner.[158]

In 1971, Hogan entered the Houston Champions International held at Champions Golf Club. He played at the request of his friends Jack Burke Jr. and Jimmy Demaret, who had founded the Champions Golf Club. In the opening round, Hogan hit his approach into a creek left of the green on the par-3 4th hole. When he went down to retrieve the ball, he injured his knee which had been damaged in the 1949 car crash. He continued to play through the pain until the 12th hole, at which point he returned to the clubhouse and withdrew from the event. Aged 58, this was Hogan's last professional tournament.[159]

Personal life and death

Hogan met his wife Valerie Fox in Sunday school in Fort Worth when they were both aged around 12.[160] They married on April 14, 1935, with a handful of friends and family in attendance at the home of Valerie's parents. The wedding was officiated by Albert Venting, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Cleburne.[161] The couple never had children.[162][163] Hogan regularly attended services by Reverend Granville Walker at University Christian Church in Fort Worth. He also attended services at the Catholic church where his niece and her husband were parishioners.[8]

Throughout his career, Hogan was considered introverted and shy by the media and his competitors.[11][164] Sam Snead stated: "About all Ben ever said on a golf course was 'good luck' on the tee and 'you're away'."[165] Hogan was compared to Greta Garbo due to his shunning of publicity, and sometimes called the "Garbo of golf".[166] In his private life, Hogan was known to be more open and affectionate. He played practical jokes on his friends and used an alterego, "Henny Bogan".[8] He also mentored younger golfers who had asked him for help, such as Gardner Dickinson and John Schlee.[167]

Hogan began smoking cigarettes when he was around 12, and continued the habit into his 80s. He averaged around two packs per day.[11] Hogan appeared in an advertisement for Chesterfield in 1953.[168] After surgery for a ruptured appendix in 1987 led to him developing pneumonia, Hogan's doctors strongly advised him to stop smoking, but he continued to do so.[169]

In 1995, Hogan had surgery due to colon cancer. He also suffered from blindness and Alzheimer's disease in his final years.[170][171] Hogan died at age 84 on July 25, 1997, at his home in Fort Worth.[3][4][5] His wife Valerie died two years later on June 30, 1999;[172] they were interred at Greenwood Memorial Park in Fort Worth.

Technique and playing style

Practice

Hogan was known to practice more than any of his contemporary golfers and is said to have "invented practice". On this matter, Hogan said, "You hear stories about me beating my brains out practicing, but... I was enjoying myself. I couldn't wait to get up in the morning, so I could hit balls. When I'm hitting the ball where I want, hard and crisply, it's a joy that very few people experience."[173] He was also one of the first players to match particular clubs to yardages, or reference points around the course such as bunkers or trees, to improve his distance control.

Hogan thought that an individual's golf swing was "in the dirt" and that mastering it required practice and repetition. As a young golfer, Hogan was badly afflicted by hooking the golf ball. Although slight of build at 5 ft 8.5 in (1.74 m) and 145 pounds (66 kg)[174] – attributes that earned him the nickname "Bantam Ben", which he thoroughly disliked – he was long off the tee early in his career. Like many professional golfers of his day, he competed in long-drive contests as well as matchplay and strokeplay events.

Course management

Hogan stressed the importance of course management. After winning the 1953 Masters, he said: "You can hit your shots great and still shoot 80 every day because of poor management. The shots are 30 percent of the game. Judgment is 70 percent."[175]

Shot shape

English golfer John Jacobs stated that Hogan used a "strong" grip, with hands more the right of the club grip, in his early career, despite often practicing with a "weak" grip, with the back of the left wrist facing the target, and that this limited his success and consistency. Jacobs said Hogan developed and used the "strong" grip as a boy to be able to hit the ball as far as bigger, stronger contemporaries, and speculated the strong grip resulted in Hogan hitting the odd disastrous snap hook.[176]

Hogan's late swing produced the famed "Hogan Fade" ball flight, lower than usual for a great player and from left to right. This ball flight was the result of his using a "draw" type swing in conjunction with a "weak" grip, a combination that all but negated the chance of hitting a hook.

Hogan played and practiced golf with only bare hands, i.e., without gloves. Moe Norman did the same, playing and practicing without gloves. The two were arguably the greatest ball strikers golf has ever known; even Tiger Woods quoted them as the only players ever to have "owned their swings", in that they had total control of it and, as a result, the ball's flight.[177]

Ballstriking

Hogan is widely acknowledged to have been one of the finest ball strikers that ever played the game. In May 1967, the editor of Cary Middlecoff's 1974 book The Golf Swing watched every shot that 54-year-old Hogan hit in the Colonial National Invitational in Fort Worth, Texas. "Hogan shot 281 for a third-place tie with George Archer. Of the 281 shots, 141 were taken in reaching the greens. Of the 141, 139 were rated from well-executed to superbly executed. The remaining two were a drive that missed the fairway by some 5 yards and a 5-iron to a par-3 hole that missed the green by about the same distance. It was difficult, if not impossible to conceive of anybody hitting the ball better over a four-day span."[178]

Hogan's ball striking has also been described as being of near miraculous caliber by other observers such as Jack Nicklaus, who only saw him play some years after his prime. Nicklaus once responded to the question, "Is Tiger Woods the best ball striker you have ever seen?" with, "No, no - Ben Hogan, easily".[179]

Further testimony to Hogan's (and Moe Norman's) status among top golfers is provided by Tiger Woods, who said that he wished to "own his (golf) swing" in the same way as Moe Norman and Hogan had.[177] Woods claimed that this pair were the only players ever to have "owned their swings", in that they had total control of it and, as a result, of the ball's flight.[177]

By most accounts, Ben Hogan was the best golfer of his era and still stands as one of the greatest of all time. "The Hawk" possessed fierce determination and an iron will, which combined with his unquestionable golf skills, formed an aura that could intimidate opponents into competitive submission. In Scotland, Hogan was known as "The Wee Ice Man", or, in some versions, "Wee Ice Mon," a moniker earned during his famous British Open victory at Carnoustie in 1953.[180] It is a reference to his steely and seemingly nerveless demeanor, itself a product of a golf swing he had built that was designed to perform better the more pressure he put it under. Hogan rarely spoke during competition, and mostly kept to himself. Hogan was also highly respected by fellow competitors for his superb course management skills. During his peak years, he rarely if ever attempted a shot in competition which he had not thoroughly honed in practice.

Putting

Although his ball striking was perhaps the greatest ever, Hogan's putting skills are thought to have been below average, though he was capable of putting very well. Solid and sometimes spectacular in his early and peak years, Hogan by his later years deteriorated to the point of being an often poor putter by professional standards, particularly on slow greens. The majority of his putting problems developed after his 1949 car accident, which nearly blinded his left eye and impaired his depth perception. Toward the end of his career, he often stood over the ball inordinately long before drawing his putter back.

While he suffered from the "yips" in his later years,[181] Hogan was known as an effective putter from mid to short range on quick, U.S. Open style surfaces at times during his career.

Hand dominance

Many believe that although he played right-handed as an adult, Hogan was actually left-handed.[182] In his book Five Lessons, in the chapter entitled "The Grip", Hogan said "I was born left-handed -- that was the normal way for me to do things. I was switched over to doing things right-handed when I was a boy but I started golf as a left-hander because the first club I ever came into possession of, an old five-iron, was a left-handed stick." This belief also seemed to be corroborated by Hogan himself in his earlier book Power Golf. However, some mystery still remains about this since Hogan in subsequent interviews said that the belief of his being left-handed was actually a myth (noted in what was probably his last video interview and in his 1987 Golf Magazine interview).

In these interviews, Hogan said that he was indeed a right-handed player who early on practiced/played with a left-hand club that had been given to him because it was all that he had and that it was this issue that brought about the myth that he was left-handed. This may be the reason that his early play with right-handed equipment found him using a cross-handed grip (right hand at the end of the club, left hand below it). In "The Search for the Perfect Golf Swing", researchers Cochran and Stobbs held the opinion that a left-handed person playing right-handed would be prone to hook the ball.

"Five Lessons" and golf instruction

In 1954, Hogan accepted an offer of $10,000 (equivalent to $117,088 in 2024) from Life magazine to reveal the "secret" to his swing which he stated he had discovered in 1946.[183] The story, tilted "Ben Hogan Finally Reveals the Mysterious Maneuver That Made Him a Champion", was issued on August 8, 1955. In it, he said the secret had three components: weakening his grip (in other words, moving it to his left), opening the clubface on the backswing, and cupping the left wrist. This method was designed to prevent him from hooking the ball, which made the "secret" ineffectual for most recreational golfers who generally struggled with slices rather than hooks. Hogan's fellow professionals believed he had not revealed much to Life and retained the real secret for himself.[184]

As debate about the secret continued, Sports Illustrated published drawings about the subject, which it had taken from Hogan's piece in Life without his permission. After Hogan threatened to sue, Life and Sports Illustrated founder Henry Luce offered him an additional $20,000 (equivalent to $234,758 in 2024) to write a full-length instructional book, which Hogan accepted. Sports Illustrated writer Herbert Warren Wind and medical illustrator Anthony Ravielli were chosen as co-author and illustrator of the book, entitled Five Lessons: The Modern Fundamentals of Golf.[185] It was originially serialized in Sports Illustrated and was printed in book form in 1957. It quickly became the best-selling golf intructional in history.[186]

Hogan believed that a solid, repeatable golf swing involved only a few essential elements, which, when performed correctly and in sequence, were the essence of the swing. His book Five Lessons: The Modern Fundamentals of Golf (written with Herbert Warren Wind) is perhaps the most widely read golf tutorial ever written, although Harvey Penick's Little Red Book would also have a claim to that title, and the principles therein are often parroted by modern "swing gurus". In the Five Lessons, Hogan breaks down the swing into four parts: The Fundamentals, The Grip, Stance and Posture, and The Swing.

"The Fundamentals"

Hogan explains that the average golfer underestimates himself. He believes that beginners place too much emphasis on the long game. If you have a correct, powerful and repeating swing, then you can shoot in the 70s. "The average golfer is entirely capable of building a repeating swing and breaking 80."[187] Through years of trial and error, Ben has developed techniques that have proved themselves under various types of pressure.

"The Grip"

Hogan says, "Good golf begins with a good grip."[187] Without a good grip, one cannot play to his or her potential. The grip is important because it is the only direct physical contact you have with the ball via your golf club. A bad grip can cause dipping of the hands at the top of the swing and a decrease in club head speed. This can cause a loss of power and accuracy. The following describes the perfect golf grip in the eyes of Mr. Hogan:

"With the back of your left hand facing the target, place the club in the left hand so that, 1) The shaft is pressed up under the muscular pad at the inside heel of the palm, and 2) The shaft also lies directly across the top joint of the forefinger".[187]

"Crook the forefinger around the shaft and you will discover that you can lift the club and maintain a fairly firm grip on it by supporting it just with the muscles of that finger and the muscles of the pad of the palm."[187]

"Now just close the left hand-close the fingers before you close the thumb-and the club will be just where it should be."[187]

"To gain a real acquaintance with this preparatory guide to correct gripping, I would suggest practicing it five or 10 minutes a day for a week until it begins to become second nature."[187]

"To obtain the proper grip with the right hand, hold it somewhat extended, with the palm facing your target. Now-your left hand is already correctly affixed-place the club in your right hand so that the shaft lies across the top joint of the four fingers and definitely below the palm."[187]

"The right hand is a finger grip. The two fingers which should apply most of the pressure are the two middle fingers."[187]

"Now with the club held firmly on the fingers of your right hand, simply fold your right hand over your left thumb."[187]

"Stance and Posture"

The right stance not only allows for proper alignment, but also a balanced swing, prepared usage of the proper muscles, and the maximum strength and control over your swing. We align our body to the target only after we have aligned the club head to the target.

A proper stance starts with your feet being aligned at the target, followed by your knees, hips and shoulders. Your feet should be shoulder-width apart, your front foot should be slightly opened towards the target and your back foot should be perpendicular to the target. As you increase in club, your stance should widen for further stability. Your shoulders will be naturally open to the target line because your arms are not at equal length while holding the club. Make sure to close your shoulders slightly to stay aligned with the target line. The proper stance affects how controlled the backswing is, governs the amount of hip turn in the backswing, and allows for the hips to clear through the downswing. Your front arm should be extended at all times to allow the club to travel in its maximum arc.

"The elbows should be tucked in, not stuck out from the body. At address, the left elbow should point directly at the left hipbone and the right elbow should point directly at the right hipbone. Furthermore, there should be a sense of fixed jointness between the two forearms and the wrists, and it should be maintained throughout the swing."[187]

"You should bend your knees from the thighs down. As your knees bend, the upper part of the trunk remains normally erect, just as it does when you sit down in a chair. In golf, the sit-down motion is more like lowering yourself onto a spectator-sports-stick. Think of the seat of the stick as being about two inches or so below your buttocks."[187]

"The Swing"

"The Backswing"

Hogan advocates the use of a waggle not only because it helps you loosen your muscles, but also because it allows for your hands and arms to remember where to go for the first part of your backswing. The angle of the swing should feel like you are swinging under a slanting plane of glass. The "glass" has a hole for your head while it rests on your shoulders and touches the ground on top of your ball. Also, the backswing should be slightly steeper than the downswing. At the top of your backswing, your back should be facing the target.

"On the backswing, the order of movement goes like this: hands, arms, shoulders, hips."[187]

"Actually, the hands start the club head back a split second before the arms start back. And the arms begin their movement a split second before the shoulders begin to turn."[187]

"Just before your hands reach the hip level, the shoulders, as they turn, automatically start pulling the hips around. As the hips begin to turn, they pull the left leg in to the right."[187]

"When you have turned your shoulders all the way, your back should face squarely toward your target."[187]

"When you finish your backswing, your chin should be hitting against the top of your left shoulder."[187]

"As you begin the backswing, you must restrain your hips from moving until the turning of the shoulders starts to pull the hips around…It is this increased tension that unwinds the upper part of the body. It unwinds the shoulder, the arms and the hands in that order, the correct order. It helps the swing so much it makes it almost automatic."[187]

"If he executes his backswing properly, as his arms are approaching hip level, they should be parallel with the plane and they should remain parallel with the plane, just beneath the glass, till they reach the top of the backswing. At the top of his backswing, his left arm should be extended at the exact same angle (to the ball) as the glass."[187]

"The Downswing"

Hogan believes the second part of the swing, the downswing, is initiated by the hips starting to turn. A baseball player throws a ball by transferring his weight and rotates his hips. His shoulders and arm follow. Hogan thinks that the downswing resembles this action. The downswing is at a slightly shallower angle and therefore the arms and hands should come from the inside out on the downswing. The club head reaches its maximum speed, not at impact, but right after, when both arms are fully extended.

"At impact the back of the left hand faces toward your target. The wrist bone is definitely raised. It points to the target and, at the moment the ball is contacted, it is out in front, nearer to the target than any part of the hand."[187]

"At impact the right arm is still bent slightly."[187]

"At that point just beyond impact where both arms are straight and extended the club head reaches its maximum speed."[187]

"The hips lead the shoulders all the way on the downswing."[187]

The Five Lessons was initially released as a five-part series in Sports Illustrated magazine, beginning with the issue of March 11, 1957.[188] It was compiled and printed in book form later that year and is currently in its 64th printing. Even today it continues to maintain a place at or near the top of the Amazon.com golf book sales rankings. The book was co-authored by Herbert Warren Wind, and illustrated by artist Anthony Ravielli.

Distinctions and honors

  • A special room is dedicated to Hogan's career, comeback, and accomplishments at the United States Golf Association Museum and Arnold Palmer Center for Golf History in Far Hills, New Jersey.[189]
  • The Hogan Bridge at Augusta National is one of the most photographed sights during The Masters as it is the footbridge that takes golfers to the green on the famous 12th hole.[190]
  • He was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1974. In 1976, Ben Hogan was voted the Bob Jones Award, the highest honor given by the United States Golf Association in recognition of distinguished sportsmanship in golf.
  • Hogan helped to design the original plans for the Trophy Club Country Club golf course in Trophy Club and 18 of the course's 36 holes are designated as the "Hogan" Course.
  • Hogan played on two U.S. Ryder Cup teams, 1947 and 1951, and captained the team three times, 1947, 1949, and 1967, famously claiming on the last occasion to have brought the "twelve best golfers in the world" to play in the competition. (This line was used by subsequent Ryder Cup captain Raymond Floyd in 1989. In 1989, playing at The Belfry, the two sides halved at 14 points each and Team Europe retained the cup.)
  • Hogan ranked 38th in ESPN's SportsCentury 50 Greatest Athletes of the 20th Century in 1999.
  • Hogan won the Vardon Trophy for lowest scoring average three times: 1940, 1941, and 1948. In 1953, Hogan won the Hickok Belt as the top professional athlete of the year in the United States.
  • In 2000, Hogan was ranked as the second greatest player of all time by Golf Digest magazine. Jack Nicklaus was first, and Sam Snead was third.[191]
  • In 2009, Hogan was ranked as the fourth greatest player of all time by Golf Magazine. Jack Nicklaus was first, Tiger Woods was second, and Bobby Jones was third.[192]
  • The Ben Hogan Award is given annually by the Golf Writers Association of America to a golfer who has stayed active in golf despite a physical handicap or serious illness. The first winner was Babe Zaharias.
  • The Ben Hogan Award is given by Friends of Golf and the Golf Coaches Association of America to the best college golf player since 1990.
  • At the 2024 Masters during the press conference for the honorary starters Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson, and Gary Player, Mr. Player proclaimed: "I never saw a man hit a ball like Ben Hogan. He was the only man I ever met in my life that knew the swing from A to Z … He knew more about the golf swing than anybody."[193]
  • The Ben Hogan Museum, located in Hogan's childhood hometown of Dublin, Texas, pays homage to Hogan—the boy, the businessman, the golfer. It highlights his early experiences and their resulting impact on his private and professional life. As the son of the local blacksmith, Hogan learned from an early age the way metal could be forged to best accomplish specific tasks. He is thought to have used that knowledge to his advantage, later in life, as he went on to design and manufacture golf equipment.[194]

The Ben Hogan Golf Equipment Company

Following his most successful season, Hogan started his golf club company in the fall of 1953 in Fort Worth. Production began in the summer of 1954, with clubs targeted toward "the better player." Always a perfectionist, Hogan is said to have ordered the entire first production run of clubs destroyed because they did not meet his exacting standards.

In 1960, he sold the company to American Machine and Foundry (AMF), but stayed on as chairman of the board for several more years. AMF Ben Hogan golf clubs were sold continuously from 1960 to 1985 when AMF was bought by Minstar who sold The Ben Hogan company in 1988 to Cosmo World, who owned the club manufacturer until 1992, when it was sold to another independent investor, Bill Goodwin.

Goodwin moved the company out of Fort Worth, and a union shop, to Virginia so it would be close to his home of operations for other AMF brands and, incidentally, a non-union shop to return the company to profitability. Goodwin sold to Spalding in 1997, closing the sale in January 1998. Spalding returned manufacturing to Hogan's Fort Worth before eventually including the company's assets in a bankruptcy sale of Spalding's Top-Flite division to Callaway in 2004. After over a half-century and numerous ownership changes, the Ben Hogan line was discontinued by Callaway in 2008. The brand name was sold to Perry Ellis International in 2012.[195] In May 2014, Eidolon Brands approached Perry Ellis International and acquired the rights to use Ben Hogan's name for a line of golf clubs.[196][197]

The Ben Hogan Golf Equipment Company enjoyed its best year in 2021 since pivoting to a direct-to-consumer business model in 2017. In 2021 the company would have achieved (and surpassed) profitability targets if not for supply and financial constraints related to the COVID-19 pandemic. ExWorks Capital, LLC was the majority shareholder and manager of the board for the Ben Hogan Golf Equipment Company since its re-inception in 2017. It also acted as the company’s primary source of funding. ExWorks Capital ceased providing any financial support in late 2020 as its high-risk investment portfolio was negatively impacted by the pandemic. A search for new investors or funding proved unsuccessful and ExWorks Financial filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in March 2022.[198] In 2023, just over a year later, the Ben Hogan Golf Equipment Company was resurrected once again. 'Simon Millington, owner of Las Vegas-based Golf Brands, Inc., struck a licensing deal with Hogan brand owner Perry Ellis to resurrect Hogan. Over the past year, Millington had brought long-gone brands MacGregor, RAM and Zebra back to life.'[199]

Ownership timeline

  • 1953 – company founded
  • 1960 – sold to AMF,[195] Hogan retained as president
  • 1984 – sold to Irwin Jacobs for $15 million
  • 1988 – sold to Cosmo World of Japan for $55 million, initial sponsor of the Ben Hogan Tour from 1990 to 1992
  • 1992 – sold to Bill Goodwin of Richmond, Virginia
  • 1997 – sold to Spalding Top-Flite[200]
  • 2003 – sold to Callaway Golf,[195] Hogan line discontinued in 2008
  • 2012 – brand name sold to Perry Ellis International[195]
  • 2014 – brand name licensed by Eldolon Brands, led by CEO Terry Koehler.[195]
  • 2017 – Ben Hogan Golf Equipment Company re-emerged, funded by ExWorks Capital[201]
  • 2022 – Filed for its third bankruptcy and ceased trading[198]
  • 2023 – Simon Millington, owner of Las Vegas-based Golf Brands, Inc., struck a licensing deal with Hogan brand owner Perry Ellis to resurrect Hogan.[199]

Professional wins (69)

PGA Tour wins (64)

Major championships are shown in bold.

Source: (Barkow 1989, pp. 261–262)

Other wins (5)

this list is probably incomplete

Major championships

Wins (9)

Year Championship 54 holes Winning score Margin Runner(s)-up
1946 PGA Championship n/a 6 & 4 n/a Ed Oliver
1948 PGA Championship (2) n/a 7 & 6 n/a Mike Turnesa
1948 U.S. Open 2 shot lead −8 (67-72-68-69=276) 2 strokes Jimmy Demaret
1950 U.S. Open (2) 2 shot deficit +7 (72-69-72-74=287) Playoff1 George Fazio, Lloyd Mangrum
1951 Masters Tournament 1 shot deficit −8 (70-72-70-68=280) 2 strokes Skee Riegel
1951 U.S. Open (3) 2 shot deficit +7 (76-73-71-67=287) 2 strokes Clayton Heafner
1953 Masters Tournament (2) 4 shot lead −14 (70-69-66-69=274) 5 strokes Ed Oliver
1953 U.S. Open (4) 1 shot lead −5 (67-72-73-71=283) 6 strokes Sam Snead
1953 The Open Championship Tied for lead −6 (73-71-70-68=282) 4 strokes Antonio Cerdá, Dai Rees,
Frank Stranahan, Peter Thomson

Note: The PGA Championship was match play until 1958
1Defeated Mangrum and Fazio in 18-hole playoff; Hogan 69 (−1), Mangrum 73 (+3), Fazio 75 (+5).

Results timeline

Tournament 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
Masters Tournament T25 9
U.S. Open CUT CUT CUT T62
The Open Championship
PGA Championship R16
Tournament 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949
Masters Tournament T10 4 2 NT NT NT 2 T4 T6
U.S. Open T5 T3 NT NT NT NT T4 T6 1
The Open Championship NT NT NT NT NT NT
PGA Championship QF QF QF NT 1 R64 1
Tournament 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
Masters Tournament T4 1 T7 1 2 2 T8 CUT T14 T30
U.S. Open 1 1 3 1 T6 2 T2 T10 T8
The Open Championship 1
PGA Championship
Tournament 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967
Masters Tournament T6 T32 38 T9 T21 T13 T10
U.S. Open T9 T14 12 T34
The Open Championship
PGA Championship CUT T9 T15
  Win
  Top 10
  Did not play

NT = no tournament
WD = Withdrew
CUT = missed the half-way cut (3rd round cut in 1960 PGA Championship)
R64, R32, R16, QF, SF = Round in which player lost in PGA Championship match play
"T" indicates a tie for a place

Summary

Tournament Wins 2nd 3rd Top-5 Top-10 Top-25 Events Cuts made
Masters Tournament 2 4 0 9 17 21 25 24
U.S. Open 4 2 2 10 15 17 22 19
The Open Championship 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1
PGA Championship 2 0 0 5 7 8 10 9
Totals 9 6 2 25 40 47 58 53
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 18 (1948 Masters – 1956 U.S. Open)
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 35 (1939 Masters – 1956 U.S. Open)

U.S. national team appearances

Professional

See also

References

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Further reading

  • "Ben Hogan: "Players Were Afraid"" (1999). In ESPN SportsCentury. Michael MacCambridge, Editor. New York: Hyperion ESPN Books. pp. 142–3.
  • Barkow, Al (1989). The History of the PGA TOUR. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-26145-4.
  • Dodson, James (2004). Ben Hogan: An American Life. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-50312-1.
  • McLean, Jim; McCarthy, Tom (2012). The Complete Hogan. New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-87624-4.
  • Tschetter, Kris (2010). Mr. Hogan the Man I Knew. New York: Gotham. ISBN 978-1-592-40545-9.