AKRON, Ohio – For many players in next week’s PGA Championship Bellerive Country Club will be a mystery.
The last time the St. Louis layout hosted a PGA Tour event was in 2008 when it was the site of the BMW Championship, and prior to that the 1992 PGA Championship was the last time the course was the site of a significant professional event.
But for Tiger Woods, who didn’t play either the ’08 BMW or ’92 PGA, his last memories of Bellerive are impossible to forget. At the 2001 WGC-American Express Championship Woods was playing a practice round at Bellerive with Mike Weir when the world changed.
“I was playing a practice round and the first plane hit, and then we got pulled off the golf course,” said Woods of the 9/11 attacks. “By the time we got in, unfortunately, we had the chance to see the second plane hit.”
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The American Express Championship was cancelled because of the attacks and since the airports were still closed Woods and the other players in the ’01 field had to improvise.
“I drove home on [Sept.] 13. Obviously, everything was grounded in the States. I took the courtesy car and basically drove, I think, 17 hours home,” Woods said. “I had a lot of reflecting to do during that time.”
In fact, during that 17-hour trek back to Florida, Woods came to a profound decision.
“That’s one of the reasons why I changed my foundation from a golf-based foundation to an educational-based foundation, because of what happened with the towers,” he said.
Source: Internet