Shooting 59, winning Wyndham Championship 'was really special' for Snedeker family
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GREENSBORO, NC - AUGUST 19: Brandt Snedeker poses with his children Austin and Lily with the trophy after winning the Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club on August 19, 2018 in Greensboro, North Carolina. (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)
Brandt Snedeker breaks down his 59 at Wyndham Championship
Mandy Snedeker had just dropped her two children, Lily and Austin, off at school near their home in Nashville.
Her husband, Brandt, was in Greensboro, North Carolina, playing in the Wyndham Championship. He was in one of the morning’s featured groups, paired with Billy Horschel and Hideki Matsuyama, so she could follow the PGA TOUR Live coverage of his round as she ran errands. It happened to also be the first 59 where every shot was shown.
“And then all of a sudden, I don't know what hole it was, but they started mentioning that there was a chance that he could shoot 59,” Mandy recalls. “I kind of went, errrk, pulled over in a parking lot, and watched the rest of it.”
Mandy sat in that parking lot for a good hour on that Thursday morning a year ago, watching the final four holes or so on her cell phone. So, she saw the 20-footer he made on the Sedgefield’s ninth hole, his last of the day, to become just the ninth player in PGA TOUR history to shoot a 59.
“Oh, my gosh, I screamed and just went crazy,” Mandy says.
And then her telephone started virtually blowing up with text messages. In relatively short order, she had probably 40 or 50; her husband’s phone pinged with roughly double that amount – all meaningful in their own way.
“We have a lot of friends that are in the music industry … and obviously are huge golfers,” Mandy says. “So, they were all texting me. I thought that was cool.
“I don't know if I have anyone that (stood out); it was just so many at one time I couldn't believe it because I wasn't sure if everybody knew. It was a Thursday, Thursday morning. So, I was texting people all morning. Brandt shot 59. Brandt shot 59. It was crazy.”
Of course, her first text was to Brandt. He was whisked away to interviews after he signed his scorecard but called as soon as he could.
“He was so excited,” Mandy recalls. “You know, golf, it's crazy. It's like up and down and he hadn't been playing that great. But out of nowhere he shoots 59. So, it’s just how the sport rolls.”
Then came the hard part. At least for Brandt. Take that four-stroke lead he had accrued with the 59, play three more rounds and try to win a golf tournament.
“Fifty‑nine was such a cool moment and such a great place, has such a great place in my memory and the history of the game obviously, but doing it on Thursday when you've got three more days to deal with, A, all the questions, B, all the kind of attention you draw on yourself, and then most importantly, the expectations you have on yourself,” Brandt says.
“You have a … four‑shot lead after the first day, play that kind of round of golf, you can't really think of anything other than messing it up from there, to be honest with you. So, it's hard to kind of deal with that, try to get over it and make sure you get back into what made you successful that first day.”
The internal pressure was one thing. After all, Brandt had already won eight times on the PGA TOUR. But the 2018 Wyndham Championship was the first time his kids, who were 7 and 5 years old at the time, really understood what was going on.
“The second he (shot 59) it was, Dad are you going to win the tournament? Dad are you winning?” Mandy recalls with a smile. “We flew in Saturday; we go upstairs to the player dining. Dad, are you leading still? Dad are you leading? Are you going to win? I was like, oh my goodness. Stop.
“So, we had joked if he can win with that pressure of the kids constantly reminding him, you know, he's got it. He's got it.”
Steve Holmes, who is chairman of Wyndham Hotels & Resorts and Wyndham Destinations, had sent a private jet to Nashville to pick up Mandy and the kids. Wyndham has sponsored Brandt since shortly after he won the 2007 tournament at Sedgefield, which was his first PGA TOUR victory.
Holmes was the one who presented Brandt with the Sam Snead Cup that year.
“It just so happened he was coming up to New York for the first playoff event right afterwards and he offered me a ride up on his plane,” Brandt remembers. “And so, I hop on the plane. We celebrated and talked and just kind of grew from there and Steve's one of the best human beings in the world. Spending that little time with them on a plane, I realized what a quality guy he was and what they stood for.
“Just always have been very fortunate in my career, surround myself with really good people and make sure I have the right partnerships and it all started with him and them because they are a bunch of great people and do stuff the right way.”
So, Brandt wasn’t at all surprised that Holmes flew Mandy and the kids in for what turned out to be another Sunday celebration with Lily and Austin racing onto the 18th green to jump into their dad’s arms.
“They've been dear friends of ours for a long time,” Mandy says. “That's what made it so special, too. It's not just shooting the 59 … it was just like a storybook book setting. I mean, with it being Wyndham and his sponsor and just all the years that we've been with them and stuff.
“So yeah, it was really special.”