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Golf Monthly
Golf Monthly
Sport
Thomas Patrick Clarke

Players Who Have Broken 60 On The PGA And DP World Tours: Golf’s Most Exclusive Club

Montage of golfers who have broken 60 on men's professional tours.

In the sport of golf, 59 is the magic number.

With par usually being between 70-72, a great round on the elite men's professional tours tends to be between 62-64 and anywhere from eight-under-par to ten-under-par.

However, there are times when the world's best can go even lower - into the 50s. It's happened 12 times on the PGA Tour, with 11 scores of 59 and one at 58. On the DP World Tour, there has been one 58.

So who are the sub-60 shooters?

Players to shoot 59 on the PGA/DP World Tours

Al Geiberger, 1977 Memphis Classic

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Geiberger was the inaugural member of the 59 Club, putting his wonder score together during the second round of the 1977 Memphis Classic at Colonial Country Club.

Geiberger, who obviously became known as Mr 59, crammed 11 birdies and an eagle into his 13-under par round, and went on to win the tournament, despite not bettering 70 in his other three rounds.

Chip Beck, 1991 Las Vegas Invitational

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Beck’s 59 came during the third round of the 1991 Las Vegas Invitational at the Sunrise Golf Course. He opened up with a 40-footer for birdie on his first hole – the 10th – and never let up, adding 12 more birdies.

Sunrise was a late replacement for Spanish Trails, and many players felt a 59 might be possible as the course was short, flat, new and never really designed to host a tournament.

Beck didn’t mind either way as the Hilton Corp hotel chain had put up a $500,000 bonus if anyone could shoot 59, with a further half million going to junior golf and PGA Tour charities - phenomenal sums given that the typical winner’s cheque that year was $180,000.

David Duval, 1999 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Double D could play a bit in his heyday, nowhere more so than in his highly impressive 59 during the final round of the 1999 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.

Duval had already compiled 11 birdies heading into the 18th, before memorably hitting it close on the par-5 finale and rolling in the six-footer for eagle.

Most impressive of all is that Duval had birdie or eagle putts on 17 holes and only four of those were outside 10ft. He won the event by one from Steve Pate.

Paul Goydos, 2010 John Deere Classic

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Goydos needed just 22 putts in his opening 59 at the 2010 John Deere Classic, shooting an eight-under par 28 on the back nine to match the lowest nine-hole score in relation to par in PGA Tour history.

Incredibly, he only led by one from Steve Stricker, the only man in PGA Tour history to shoot 60 in the first round and find himself trailing!

Stuart Appleby, 2010 Greenbrier Classic

Stuart Appleby's scorecard for the final round of the 2010 Greenbrier Classic (Image credit: Getty Images)

2010 was a vintage year for 59s with Stuart Appleby holing a curling left-to-right 15-footer to not only join the 59 Club but also claim the Greenbrier Classic in dramatic fashion.

Six-under to the turn, Appleby bagged an eagle on 12 and then a trio of birdies to close out his round and pip Jeff Overton by one.

Jim Furyk, 2013 BMW Championship

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Furyk’s 59 came in the second round of the BMW Championship in 2013. After a solid start playing the back nine first, his round really got a lift when he holed out from 115 yards on 15 with a wedge to be six-under after six.

Remarkably, Furyk bogeyed the 5th on his homeward run, but hit the magic number with a majestic wedge approach to three feet on his final hole before calmly rolling the putt in.

Justin Thomas, 2017 Sony Open in Hawaii

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Thomas made his little piece of history en route to winning the 2017 Sony Open. He put this tournament straight to bed when he shot 59 in the opening round.

He eventually won by seven shots clear of Justin Rose in second place.

Adam Hadwin, 2017 CareerBuilder Challenge

(Image credit: Getty Images)

The Canadian Adam Hadwin took control of the 2017 CareerBuilder Challenge in round 3 when he shot 59 just a week after Justin Thomas had his low round in Hawaii.

Unfortunately for Hadwin he shot 11 strokes worse in the final round to score a 70 – this meant he lost out on the title by a single shot to eventual winner Hudson Swafford.

Brandt Snedeker, 2018 Wyndham Championship

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Brandt had his 59 in the opening round of the Wyndham Championship - but he did not have the tournament all his own way, having to shoot a 65 in the final round to hold off a charging Webb Simpson.

Oliver Fisher, 2018 Portugal Masters

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Finally Oliver Fisher became the first person to break 60 on the European Tour in 2018 when in round 2 of the 2018 Portugal Masters he had 10 birdies and an eagle to shoot 59.

This performance in round two likely had an effect on him as he shot 69 and 70 over the weekend to finish in a tie for seventh.

Kevin Chappell, 2019 A Military Tribute To The Greenbrier

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Golf is a strange sport, and this can be summed up with Kevin Chappell's performance at the 2019 A Military Tribute To The Greenbrier - he shot an opening round of 71, followed that up with a flawless 59, which included a stretch of nine consecutive birdies.

The American then failed to break 70 over the weekend to finish tied 47th.

Scottie Scheffler, 2020 The Northern Trust

(Image credit: Getty Images)

The American broke 60 in round two of The Northern Trust in 2020 during the FedEx Cup Playoffs. The then PGA Tour rookie made six birdies on each nine for a 12-under-par total at TPC Boston to become the second player to break 60 in the FedExCup Playoffs after Jim Furyk at the 2013 BMW Championship.

He ended the week T4th, a total of 13 strokes behind Dustin Johnson who had a 60 in the second round himself.

Cameron Young, 2024 Travelers Championship

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Finding two eagles and seven birdies at TPC River Highlands, Cameron Young became just the 13th player in PGA Tour history to shoot 59, with his 28 on the front nine being followed by a four-under 31 on the back nine.

Rather amusingly, despite firing a 59 in Connecticut, the 11-under-par round is technically not the course record as, famously back in 2016, Furyk carded a 12-under 58. However, the score vaulted Young up the leaderboard at the PGA Tour's final Signature Event.

The 58 Club

Jim Furyk, 2016 Travelers Championship

(Image credit: Getty Images)

There of course has been one performance that tops the 59s - in the final round of the 2016 Travelers Championship Furyk started 16 shots behind leader Daniel Berger – having just made the cut on the number on the Friday and had a two-over-par 73 on the Saturday.

An Eagle and 10 birdies later he shot an incredible 58 and  managed to finish 5th and just three shots back from eventual winner Russel Knox. Furyk parred 5 of the final 6 holes... so it could have been lower!

Other 58s: Two other players of shot rounds of 58 in a men's professional golf tournament Ryo Ishikawa on the Japan Golf Tour in 2010 and Stephen Jager on the Web.com Tour in 2016. 

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