On Sept. 11, 2001, The Times-Dispatch newsroom produced the paper s first Extra edition since the end of World War II. Then word came that a classmate was among the slain.
Curtis Strange first began working as a golf analyst more than 25 years ago. His return to Oak Hill as part of the ESPN broadcast team for the PGA Championship
Curtis Strange first began working as a golf analyst more than 25 years ago. His return to Oak Hill as part of the ESPN broadcast team for the PGA Championship will mark the first time commentating at a course where he won a major championship. That was only interesting until the two-time U.S. Open champion […]
Curtis Strange has mixed memories of Oak Hill. He returns to the course outside Rochester, New York, next week for the PGA Championship as part of ESPN's broadcast team. Oak Hill is where Strange in 1989 became the first player since Ben Hogan to win back-to-back in the U.S. Open. It's also where Strange bogeyed his last three holes to lose a pivotal Ryder Cup match in 1995 that kept the Americans from winning. Strange hasn't been back to Oak Hill since that Ryder Cup. He says golf produces memories good and bad. But the Ryder Cup doesn't overshadow his U.S. Open win.