NEWS

Bruce Smith sinks albatross to rescue round at Senior PGA Professional Championship

By Bob Denney
Published on
Bruce Smith sinks albatross to rescue round at Senior PGA Professional Championship

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – PGA Professional Bruce Smith of Frisco, Texas, is a rare golfer who finds as much joy in a well-placed kick in tae kwon do as he does in a timely shot on a golf course.

Playing the demanding Geronimo Course at Desert Mountain on Thursday in the 29th Senior PGA Professional Championship, Smith stunned himself by “bagging” a rare bird. The PGA Director of Instruction at Black Belt Golf Academy hit a 240-yard 3-hybrid into the cup on the 545-yard, par-5 14th hole for his first career “albatross” or the U.S. golfer-preferred double eagle.

The shot enabled Smith to recover from a front-nine 40 that included a quadruple bogey and bogey. He added a birdie at No. 15 to finish at even-par 72.

MORE: First round scores from Senior PPC | Photos from Desert Mountain | Full schedule

“I hit a big drive, and stood on a hybrid that went into the hills on the left. We never saw it,” said Smith. “I was looking around for the ball and I was ready to go back and hit another one when one of my partners looked in the hole and there it was.”

Smith owns a fourth degree black belt in tae kwon do.

“I could have shot 90 after that and it wouldn’t have mattered,” said Smith. “It was a little bit of Jekyll and Hyde out there. There was a lot of ping pong going on out there. I’ve had 15 holes-in-one in my life, but never a double eagle. It’s now off my bucket list.”

The Senior PGA Professional Championship is presented by Mercedes-Benz, and is supported by GolfAdvisor.com and John Deere.