Sept. 4, 2023

Lee Trevino - Part 2 (The 1968 U.S. Open at Oak Hill)

Lee Trevino - Part 2 (The 1968 U.S. Open at Oak Hill)

World Golf Hall of Fame member Lee Trevino takes us back to three very important U.S. Opens in his career, the 1966 Open at Olympic Club for which he qualified and won $600 for a 54th place finish, the 1967 event at Baltusrol where a 5th place showing earned him $6,000 and playing privileges for the rest of that season, and the 1968 U.S. Open at Oak Hill where Lee won his first major and becoming the first winner ever to score in the 60's in each of his four rounds. Interspersed throughout are stories that are vintage Trevino including three putter tales and examples of how generous he was in helping his friends" on tour. Lee Trevino continues his incredible life story, "FORE the Good of the Game."

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About

"FORE the Good of the Game” is a golf podcast featuring interviews with World Golf Hall of Fame members, winners of major championships and other people of influence in and around the game of golf. Highlighting the positive aspects of the game, we aim to create and provide an engaging and timeless repository of content that listeners can enjoy now and forever. Co-hosted by PGA Tour star Bruce Devlin, our podcast focuses on telling their life stories, in their voices. Join Bruce and Mike Gonzalez “FORE the Good of the Game.”


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Trevino, LeeProfile Photo

Trevino, Lee

Golf Professional

All golfers are self-made, but the man who made the most out of what he started with has to be Lee Trevino.

Trevino rose from a three-room shack with no plumbing in east Dallas to become arguably the most consistent shotmaker the game has ever seen. Through an agile mind, a tremendous work ethic and a sense of moment that belongs to the natural performer, Trevino carved a way to the top that is unlike any other in golf history.

Starting as a caddy and coming up through the ranks of driving ranges, military golf and hustling, Trevino first burst into big-time professional golf full blown. He was a squat 5’7″, 180-pound ball of fire whose rapid wit made players and galleries laugh, but whose game commanded their respect. In June 1968, the still unknown 28-year-old won the U.S. Open at Oak Hill and became the first golfer to post four rounds in the 60s at the U.S. Open (69-68-69-69, and matched Jack Nicklaus with a record-tying score of 275.

Three years later, Trevino won his second U.S. Open, this time at Merion in a classic 18-hole playoff with Jack Nicklaus. Within 20 days he added the Canadian Open and the Open Championship at Royal Birkdale, completing an unprecedented international sweep. The next year he won the Open Championship again, this time at Muirfield. His final two Major Championships would come in the PGA Championship, first at Tanglewood in 1974, and finally at Shoal Creek in 1984.

“You don’t know what pressure is until you play for five bucks with only two in your pocket.”
Trevino was born on December 1, 1939, in Garlan… Read More