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Member of PGA Hall of Fame, 28 Tour Tiltles. PGA Champion 1934 and 1935. Senior PGA Champion 1961 and 1962. Member of Two Ryder Cup Teams. Member of World Golf Teachers Hall of Fame. |
Paul Runyun
Golf
Hot Springs
Born:
July 12, 1908, in Hot Springs, Arkansas
Died:
March 17, 2002
Nickname:
"Little Poison," both for his small size, and for the fact that while his drives
where short, his short game was deadly.
Hall of Fame
• Member, World Golf Teachers Hall of Fame
• Member, Arkansas Hall of Fame
• Recipient, Harvey Penick Lifetime Teaching Award
• PGA Tour money leader, 1934
• 2-time member, U.S. Ryder Cup team
• Recipient, PGA of America Distinguished Service Award
Paul Runyan is a member both of the World Golf Hall of Fame and the World Golf Teachers Hall of Fame. Today, he is perhaps best remembered as a short-game guru, having authored a classic instructional book. He continued teaching, giving up to 20 lessons a week, into his 90s.
As a player, Runyan was small (only 5-foot-7) and a short hitter, but he made up for a lack of power with one of golf's greatest short games.
Runyan was a caddie and then an apprentice at a golf course in his hometown before turning pro at age 17. He served as an assistant pro to Craig Wood at Forest Hills Golf Course in White Plains, N.Y., in 1921. Thirteen years later, Runyan defeated Wood in a playoff to win the first of his two PGA Championships.
Of Runyan's 29 career PGA Tour wins, 16 of them came in 1933 and 1934. His 9 wins in 1933 make him one of only 7 golfers to win 9 or more times in one year on the PGA Tour. But Runyan was competitive for many years, winning the PGA again in 1938 and leading the U.S. Open after three rounds as late as 1951.
In the finals of his 1938 PGA, Runyan defeated Sam Snead 8 and 7, the most lopsided title match of the era when the PGA was contested at match play.
Runyan's teaching prowess led many top pros to him over his 75 years of teaching, including Gene Littler, Phil Rodgers, Frank Beard, Jim Ferree and Mickey Wright. Golf Magazine wrote: "... since the late 1930s, he has probably been the most influential short game instructor. Untold thousands have been taught his methods for putting and chipping."