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Bob Rosburg and Jimmy Wright battled down to the wire for the second annual PGA Club Professional Championship at The Roadrunner Resort in 1969 Scottsdale, Ariz. Nursing a one-stroke lead and standing in the 18th fairway, Rosburg watched as Wright faced a 30-inch par putt. Just as Wright was about to strike the ball, a woman spectator sneezed. Wright flinched, and his ball rolled weakly off the left side of the cup. He ended with a bogey. Rosburg, who won the PGA Championship in 1968, followed by approaching safely to the side of the green, chipped on and two-putted for a one-stroke victory. Rosburg didn’t return to Tour golf until 1975, when he became an on-course reporter for ABC Sports. Wright, who later became a head professional in Osprey, Fla., continued impressive play. In 1970, he became the last PGA Professional to compete in all four major championships in the same calendar year.
| Average of courses | Rounds of 70 & under | Round leader | Bob Rosburg | |
| Rd. 1 | 74.1 | 30 | 66 - Jimmy Wright | 71 - T30th |
| Rd. 2 | 74.0 | 29 | 133 - Jimmy Wright | 137 - (66) 2nd |
| Rd. 3 | 72.3 | 27 | 203 - Jimmy Wright, Bob Roseburg |
203 - (66) T1st |
| Rd. 4 | 74.6 | 7 | 275 - Bob Roseburg | 275 - (72) 1st |
| Totals | 73.89 | 93 |
The PGA Club Professional Championship was born in 1968, and contested at The Century and Roadrunner Country Clubs in Scottsdale, Ariz. The showcase event for PGA Professionals debuted with a talented field containing such notables as former Tour professionals Tommy Bolt, Bob Rosburg and Mike Souchak. But, it was a 28-year-old assistant professional from the Mountain Ridge Country Club in West Caldwell, N.J., Howell Fraser,w ho earned the right to hoist the Walter Hagen Cup. Fraser finished with a final- round,picked up a first-place check of $8,000 and credited his experienced caddie, Ralph, for inspiring him to a strong performance. Fraser met Ralph in the parking lot before the Championship. A veteran Tour caddie, Ralph needed a job and Fraser quickly agreed. Fraser ’s 14-under-par 272 defeated Rosburg and Chuck Malchaski by four strokes. "I wish I had been able to use Ralph again in later years," Fraser said. "I never learned his last name."
| Average of courses | Rounds of 70 & under | Round leader | Howell Fraser | |
| Rd. 1 | 74.2 | 33 | 66 - Chuck Malchaski, Don Bies | 72 - T50th |
| Rd. 2 | 74.4 | 31 | 134 - Chuck Malchaski | 138 - (66) T3rd |
| Rd. 3 | 72.6 | 21 | 203 - Howell Fraser | 203 - (65) 1st |
| Rd. 4 | 72.8 | 22 | 272 - Howell Fraser | 272 - (69) 1st |
| Totals | 73.73 | 107 |