Latest news with #AugustaCountryClub
Yahoo
08-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
PGA legend and HBCU trailblazer, dies at 85
'Big Boy' Never was a nickname more worthy than the one given to PGA legend Jim Dent. He was a large man at 6ft 3in and 224lb, yet he also was one of the longest drivers in the game. Not to mention the weight he carried from a game that tried to keep him from what he loved. Advertisement Before Tiger Woods, there was Jim Dent—a man who didn't just play golf, he powered through it. With drives that could split the sky and a story that cut through America's deepest racial divides, Dent's legacy is not just measured in yardage or wins, but in the doors he opened for Black athletes in a game that long refused them entry. Dent, who passed away at 85 in his hometown of Augusta, Georgia, was one of the few Black golfers on the PGA Tour during a time when golf was still shaking off its segregationist past. Born into poverty in 1939, Dent learned the game as a caddie at the Augusta Country Club and the Augusta Municipal Golf Course—places where he once couldn't play. Despite early losses, he never stopped grinding. 'I got better each year,' he told the USGA. He didn't win on the PGA Tour, but his mark was made on the senior circuit, the PGA Champions Tour, where he won 12 titles between 1989 and 1998 and earned over $9 million. In 1974, he won a PGA driving contest with a jaw-dropping 324-yard shot—outdriving nearly every pro in the sport. Later, Callaway honored him with a signature Big Bertha driver. Senior Tour star Jim Dent shows off the trophy for winning the second annual BellSouth Senior Classic bringing him the biggest check of his 25-year tour golf career with a $165,000 payout.© George Walker IV / The Tennessean via Imagn Content Services, LLC An HBCU product from Paine College, Dent was a football scholarship athlete before switching his focus to golf full-time. He represents a generation of Black athletes who had to fight not just for trophies, but for space to compete. Unlike others who are given their stage, Dent built his. Augusta's renaming of a road leading to 'The Patch' as Jim Dent Way in 2020 symbolized just that. Advertisement Related: NBA legend and HBCU trailblazer dies at 88 For fans of HBCU sports and Black golf history, Dent's life is more than a story—it's a reminder. A reminder that power, dignity, and perseverance still matter. Let's honor that legacy by investing in Black golf programs and remembering the names that made it possible for today's stars to shine. Related: HBCU school sparks major buzz with bold talent move Related: Shaquille O'Neal turns heads with untold HBCU story


USA Today
12-04-2025
- Entertainment
- USA Today
Saturday is moving day but it was more like quarterback day at Augusta National Golf Club
Saturday is moving day but it was more like quarterback day at Augusta National Golf Club AUGUSTA, Ga. — Moving day? More like quarterback day at Augusta National Golf Club. Josh Allen, Trevor Lawrence, as well as Peyton and Eli Manning were all on hand Saturday at the 89th Masters Tournament. Lawrence, donning an 'ANGC' hat, wore a 'Members Guest' badge, and spent the early afternoon sipping an Azalea on the clubhouse lawn. Josh Allen, after playing Augusta Country Club on Friday, sported a University of Wyoming lid, while the Manning brothers could be found in green coats. Also in attendance Saturday was former NFL star Michael Strahan, Florida governor Ron DeSantis and Bret Baier of Fox News.