Ultimate List: Every Player With A PBA Title

In the history of the pba tour, there have been 365 players who have won at least one title in their career..

Ultimate List: Every Player With A PBA Title

In the history of the PBA Tour, there have been 365 players who have won at least one title in their career. None of them has been as successful as Walter Ray Williams Jr. , however.

Williams sits atop the all-time titles list with 47 career victories, the last of which came on Feb. 14, 2010, at the United States Bowling Congress Masters.

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Left-hander Earl Anthony ranks second on the list with 43 titles. The late legend won his final title on May 12, 1984, also at the USBC Masters.

Norm Duke is the third member of the 40-title club with exactly 40 titles after winning two events in 2019. Duke’s most recent win came at the PBA Jonesboro Open on March 3, 2019.

Pete Weber (37 titles) and Parker Bohn III (35 titles) round out the top five on the list.

Here’s a list of every player who has ever won a PBA Tour title along with the name and date of their most recent victory (as of March 16, 2022):

47 Titles Walter Ray Williams Jr. (USBC Masters - 2/14/10)

43 Titles Earl Anthony (USBC Masters - 5/12/84)

40 Titles Norm Duke (Go Bowling! Jonesboro Open –3/3/19)

37 Titles Pete Weber (Tournament of Champions - 3/31/13)

35 Titles Parker Bohn III (Cheetah Championship - 12/20/15)

34 Titles Mark Roth (IOF Foresters Open - 4/15/95)

30 Titles Dick Weber (King Louie Open - 2/19/77)

29 Titles Mike Aulby (Silicon Valley Open - 1/21/01)

28 Titles Jason Belmonte (Scorpion Championship, 3/15/22)

26 Titles Don Johnson (Midas Open - 2/12/77)

25 Titles Brian Voss (Bayer Don & Paula Carter Mixed Doubles - 2/21/10)

22 Titles Marshall Holman (Ebonite Classic - 10/15/96)

20 Titles Tommy Jones (Hall of Fame Classic - 1/19/20) Amleto Monacelli (DHC Japan Invitational - 1/31/16) Dick Ritger (AMF Magicscore Open - 2/3/79) Wayne Webb (Bud Light Championship - 4/12/97)

19 Titles Chris Barnes (Lubbock Sports Open – 6/10/18)

18 Titles Nelson Burton Jr. (Angle Open - 2/11/84) Dave Davis (Fresno Open - 7/3/78) Billy Hardwick (Monro-Matic Open - 4/10/76) Dave Soutar (Syracuse Open - 11/9/82)

17 Titles Carmen Salvino (Miller High Life Classic - 1/6/79) Sean Rash (Chesapeake Open - 8/22/21)

16 Titles Jason Couch (Mark Roth Plastic Ball Championship - 3/6/11)

15 Titles Steve Cook (Cleveland Open - 3/21/92) EJ Tackett (PBA Doubles - 3/6/22)

14 Titles Mike Durbin (Quaker State Open - 1/26/85) Dave Husted (National/Senior Doubles - 1/15/00) Mika Koivuniemi (Viper Open – 12/21/14) Johnny Petraglia (PBA National Championship - 3/29/80) Jim Stefanich (Denver Open - 1/24/76)

13 Titles Bill Allen (Newark Open - 9/22/1968) Patrick Allen (Dydo Japan Cup - 4/25/09) Del Ballard Jr. (BPAA U.S. Open - 4/10/93) Bill O'Neill (PBA Playoffs - 11/8/20) Randy Pedersen (PBA Pepsi Open - 11/24/02) Wayne Zahn (Showboat Invitational - 1/17/76)

12 Titles Larry Laub (Kessler Open - 10/16/79) Harry Smith (Denver PBA Open - 7/18/65) Danny Wiseman (PBA Exempt Doubles Classic - 2/3/08)

11 Titles Joe Berardi (Budweiser Challenge - 10/28/89) Jim Godman (Quad Cities Open - 8/5/80) John Guenther (Ford Open - 1/3/76) David Ozio (AMF Dick Weber Classic - 11/1/95) Jesper Svensson (Best of the Best Championship - 2/9/22)

1 0 Titles Barry Asher (Tucson HBO Open - 7/20/76) Tom Baker (PBA World Championship - 3/21/04) Bryan Goebel (PBA Medford Open - 1/12/03) Steve Hoskins (Lone Star Open - 11/21/00) Tommy Hudson (Seattle Open - 6/5/82) Doug Kent (Denny's World Championship - 3/25/07) Wes Malott (Roth/Holman Doubles - 3/1/15) Mike McGrath (Winston-Salem Invitational - 12/14/73) George Pappas (Buffalo Open - 8/14/84)

9 Titles Dom Barrett (Tournament of Champions - 2/27/22) Paul Colwell (PBA Doubles Classic - 7/11/76) Dave Ferraro (Great Lakes Classic - 11/2/94) Anthony Simonsen (U.S. Open - 2/6/22)

8 Titles Ryan Ciminelli (PBA Gene Carter's Pro Shop Open - 8/18/19) Gary Dickinson (BPAA U.S. Open - 4/2/83) John Mazza (Ebonite Challenge - 10/29/97) Don McCune (Japan Gold Cup - 9/23/73) Mike Scroggins (Etonic Don Johnson Eliminator - 3/7/10) Guppy Troup (Austin Open - 7/24/85) Kyle Troup (PBA Playoffs - 5/16/21)

7 Titles Dick Allen (Cheetah Championship - 3/19/19) Roy Buckley (Buffalo Open - 7/28/81) Jakob Butturff (Lubbock Sports Shootout - 6/30/19) Don Carter (Rochester PBA Open - 11/4/62) Steve Jaros (PBA Dexter Tournament of Champions - 4/10/05) Steve Martin (Greater Los Angeles Open - 1/12/85) Hugh Miller (Dream Bowl 2002 - 9/2/02) Ernie Schlegel (USBC Masters - 5/4/96) Robert Smith (CLR Windy City Classic - 11/25/07) Bob Strampe (Waukegan Open - 8/18/68) Mark Williams (Merit Mixed Doubles Championship - 12/15/96)

6 Titles Dave D’Entremont (PBA Wichita Open - 10/13/02) Skee Foremsky (Columbia 300 Open - 11/4/74) Don Genalo (Molson Golden Bowling Challenge - 7/30/86) Don Glover (Portland Open - 6/14/70) Billy Golembiewski (Mobile Sertoma PBA Open - 2/6/65) Mike Limongello (12th Annual National Championship - 10/16/71) Andy Marzich - (San Diego PBA Open - 10/4/64) Rhino Page - (U.S. Open - 11/1/17) Ron Palombi Jr. (Bud Light PBA National Championship - 2/27/93) Les Schissler (Portland Open - 6/18/67) Gary Skidmore (Showboat Invitational - 1/25/86) Butch Soper (PBA National Championship, 6/8/96) Jess Stayrook (Kingpin Classic - 6/22/96) Jim St. John (Buckeye Open - 2/18/67) Ricky Ward (PBA Medford Open - 1/13/02) Chris Warren (Florida Open - 2/29/92)

5 Titles Glenn Allison (Oxnard PBA Open - 9/27/64) Mike Berlin (Columbia PBA Doubles Classic - 6/4/78) Roger Bowker (Columbia 300 Open - 2/7/98) George Branham III (Cleveland Open - 10/9/96) Pete Couture (Kessler Open - 6/18/83) Tim Criss (PBA National Championship - 2/27/99) Tom Crites (Kessler Classic - 7/5/89) Mike Fagan (PBA World Championship - 1/11/15) Eric Forkel (Brunswick Long Island Open - 5/1/99) Butch Gearhart (Brut Open - 11/13/73) Bob Handley (Columbia 300 Open - 8/2/90) Michael Haugen Jr. (Delaware Open - 8/21/16) Don Helling (Monroe Max-Air Open - 3/22/75) George Howard (Camden Open - 11/25/67) Earl Johnson (Madison PBA Open - 3/13/65) Marshall Kent (PBA Doubles - 3/6/22) Francois Lavoie (PBA Tournament of Champions - 02/28/21) Bob Learn Jr. (Japan Cup 2001 - 9/9/01) Marc McDowell (Rochester Open - 10/28/92) Tom Milton (Miller Lite Classic - 2/13/88) Osku Palermaa (Bowling World Open - 7/12/15) Kris Prather (PBA World Championship - 3/13/22) Ed Ressler Jr. (Houston Open - 8/4/79) Ryan Shafer (Gene Carter Pro Shop Classic - 8/23/15) Harry Sullins (Tums Classic - 3/26/94) Billy Welu (USBC Masters - 1965) Mike Wolfe (Cheetah Championship - 12/11/16)

4 Titles Mal Acosta (Lite Beer Open - 3/22/86) Mark Baker (PBA Oregon Open - 5/26/90) Bob Benoit (El Paso Open - 7/17/93) Tom Daugherty (Scorpion Championship - 3/17/21) Scott Devers (El Paso Open - 7/21/90) John Gant (Brunswick World TofC - 1/25/97) Brian Himmler (Earl Anthony Medford Classic - 1/8/06) Dennis Horan Jr. (Bayer/Brunswick TPC - 2/27/00) Joe Hutchinson (Showboat-PBA Doubles Classic - 6/27/81) Steve Neff (Houston Open - 7/31/78) Jim Pencak (Showboat Atlantic City Open - 4/14/90) Marty Piraino (Columbia 300 Open - 8/20/73) Gene Rhoda (St. Paul Open - 3/12/66) Ronnie Russell (Fall Classic Team Challenge - 11/1/16) David Traber (Peoria Open - 2/14/98) Art Trask (Fair Lanes Open - 4/16/83) Bill Tucker (Lions Club Open - 9/17/67) Tony Westlake (La Mode Classic - 8/8/91) Ron Williams (Cleveland Open - 2/20/93) Steve Wilson (PBA Flagship Open - 2/24/02)

3 Titles Andrew Anderson (PBA Doubles – 3/14/21) Dave Arnold (PBA Miller High Life Open - 10/9/01) Jack Biondolillo (Tucson PBA Open - 8/18/63) Josh Blanchard (Xtra Frame Reality Check Open - 3/19/17) Ray Bluth (Buckeye Open - 3/15/69) Ed Bourdase (Seattle Open - 6/18/74) Allie Clarke (San Jose Open - 1/6/73) Dale Eagle (Ebonite-Firebolt Open - 6/25/86) Palmer Fallgren (King Louie Open - 3/19/88) Andres Gomez (Xtra Frame Pensacola South Open - 6/21/15) Ted Hannahs (True Value Open - 2/23/85) Tim Harahan (Rochester Open - 9/2/68) Patrick Healey Jr. (PBA Dexter Tournament of Champions - 12/14/03) Tom Hennessey (Canadian PBA Open - 6/2/62) Justin Hromek (Hilton Hotels Classic - 1/21/95) Bobby Jacks (Waukegan Open - 8/21/66) Dennis Jacques (Southern California Open - 7/10/85) Mats Karlsson (Brunswick Memorial World Open - 11/19/88) Thomas Larsen (USBC Masters - 4/4/21) Robert Lawrence (BPAA U.S. Open - 4/11/92) Randy Lightfoot (Denver Open - 8/10/82) Eugene McCune (Xtra Frame Cheetah Open - 1/22/12) Mike Miller (Don Carter PBA Classic - 1/30/99) Louie Moore (Syracuse Open - 11/8/76) Scott Norton (Earl Anthony Players Championship - 3/24/13) Jimmie Pritts Jr. (King Louie Open - 3/14/87) Joe Salvemini (Columbia 300 Open - 7/26/89) Curt Schmidt (Fair Lanes Open - 2/14/76) Teata Semiz (Burger King Open - 4/3/77) Tom Smallwood (PBA World Championship – 2/25/18) Bill Spigner (City of Roses Open - 5/30/81) Jason Sterner (FloBowling PBA Illinois Open - 8/31/19) Matt Surina (Tucson Open - 6/19/81) Charlie Tapp (Toyota Classic - 11/11/89) Pete Tountas (1968 USBC Masters) Tommy Tuttle (Portsmouth Open - 3/22/69) Steve Westberg (Amarillo Open - 7/24/78) Steve Wunderlich (Columbia Senior/Touring Doubles - 8/21/85)

2 Titles Brad Angelo (Viper Championship - 12/23/12) DJ Archer (PBA/PBA50 South Shore Doubles – 8/8/15) Sam Baca (Ebonite Open - 3/4/67) Bill Beach (Don Carter Classic - 1/29/72) Jeff Bellinger (Lite Beer Championship - 4/2/88) Bob Chamberlain (Hammer Open - 7/31/85) Dennis Chapis (Eastern Open - 12/6/65) Bill Coleman (Columbia 300 Open - 9/2/80) Darylee Cox (Portland PBA Open - 9/22/63) Tommy Delutz Jr. (PBA Long Island Open - 11/18/01) Mike DeVaney (Scorpion Championship - 9/6/09) Vern Downing (Alton PBA Open - 7/21/63) Frank Ellenburg (Syracuse Open - 11/10/81) Ralph Engan (Cougar Open - 2/22/69) Mark Fahy (USBC Masters - 5/10/86) Buzz Fazio (New Jersey BPA Cavalcade - 3/14/64) Steve Fehr (Brunswick Memorial World Open - 11/20/82) Sam Flanagan (Fresno Open - 7/7/79) Henry Gonzalez (Southern California Open - 7/14/79) Carsten Hansen (PBA Scorpion Championship - 10/5/20) Bud Horn (Mercury Open - 11/16/70) Jason Hurd (PBA Pepsi Open - 11/28/04) Fred Jaskie (Brunswick Regional Champions Classic - 10/9/79) Steve Jones (Ford Open - 1/15/77) Joe Joseph (PBA Tournament of Champions - 5/20/62) Jack Jurek (Shark Championship - 9/6/09) Gus Lampo (Mercury Cougar Open - 2/5/72) Rick Lawrence (PBA BowlersParadise.com Open - 11/21/04) Fred Lening (Parkersburg PBA Open - 2/12/65) Alvin Lou (Rolaids Open - 2/2/80) Sam Maccarone (Molson Golden Bowling Challenge - 8/10/88) Mike Machuga (Chameleon Championship - 11/16/08) Shawn Maldonado (Lubbock Sports Open - 7/25/21) Pete McCordic (Miller Lite Challenge – 7/6/88) Johnny Meyer (Boston PBA Open - 8/15/65) Rowdy Morrow (Senior/Touring Doubles Championship - 8/23/90) Paul Moser (Syracuse Open - 11/7/77) Warren Nelson (ARC Alameda Open - 1/5/80) Jay Robinson (Great Adventures Open - 1976) Rick Sajek (Miller High Life Open - 3/24/84) Al Savas (Southern California PBA Open - 7/8/62) Kyle Sherman (Cheetah Championship - 3/14/22) J.B. Solomon (New Orleans Coca-Cola PBA Open - 3/16/63) Rick Steelsmith (PBA National Championship - 3/29/97) Bill Straub (Rolaids Open - 2/13/82) Bob Vespi (ABC West Lanes Open - 8/20/92) Kent Wagner (Austin Open - 7/15/87) Lonnie Waliczek (PBA Odor-Eaters Open - 3/2/03) Del Warren (Showboat PBA Doubles Classic - 6/10/87) Stuart Williams (FloBowling Tulsa Open -10/20/18) Billy Young Jr. (Tums Classic - 4/20/91) Les Zikes (Waukegan Open - 8/30/83) Sam Zurich (Buffalo Open - 8/16/83)    

1 Title Rich Abboud (PBA Touring Pro/Senior Doubles - 5/15/93) Eric Adolphson (Seattle Open - 5/30/92) Dick Agee (Las Vegas PBA Open - 4/28/62) Scott Alexander (Chevrolet PBA National Championship - 2/25/95) Bryan Alpert (Kessler Open - 6/22/88) Annop Arramsaranon (Busan Cup – 5/26/18) Cristian Azcona (Xtra Frame Wilmington Open - 5/20/18) Dick Battista (Grand Rapids Open - 8/17/70) Mitch Beasley (Chameleon Championship - 12/1/16) Dave Beckmann (Seattle Open - 7/1/80) Ron Bell (Fair Lanes Open - 4/8/89) Don Bickford (Oak Hills PBA Open - 3/31/62) Alan Bishop (Quaker State Open - 2/1/92) Glenn Blakesley (Akron Coca-Cola PBA Open - 2/17/62) J.B. Blaylock (El Paso Open - 7/19/71) Sal Bongiorno (Portland Open - 6/18/75) Terry Booth (Tucson Open - 7/16/69) Leroy Bornhop (Budweiser Classic - 11/28/87) Bo Bowden (True Value Open - 3/28/81) Darryl Bower (True Value Open - 11/16/85) Bill Bunetta (Fairless Hills PBA Open - 5/19/60) Neil Burton (USBC Masters - 5/25/80) Lou Campi (Empire State PBA Open - 5/24/59) Tony Cariello (Kessler Open - 6/26/85) Jeff Carter (GEICO Plastic Ball Championship - 2/22/09) Jimmy Certain (Columbia PBA Doubles Classic - 6/4/78) Wayne Chester (Salt Lake Open - 7/10/78) Jim Chestney (1969 USBC Masters) Bob Collatos (Las Vegas PBA Open - 10/15/65) Chris Collins (Pepsi Championship - 3/5/06) Fred Conner (Waukegan Open - 8/27/78) Toby Contreras (AC-DELCO Classic - 1/22/83) Sam Cooley (Cheetah Championship - 3/15/21) Bobby Cooper (1970 BPAA All-Star) Brian Davis (Greater Harrisburg Open - 8/19/93) John Denton (Toledo Open - 4/16/77) Joe Dignam (Huntsville Open - 7/27/69) Dick Downey (Labor Day PBA Classic - 9/3/62) Mike Edwards (IOF Foresters Bowling For Miracles Open - 4/16/94) Ray Edwards (El Paso Open - 7/6/91) Graham Fach (Barbasol PBA Players Championship – 2/21/16) Gary Faulkner Jr. (Rolltech PBA World Championship - 12/18/15) Steve Fields (Seattle Open - 6/12/93) Joe Firpo (Showboat PBA Doubles Classic - 6/10/87) Duane Fisher (Budweiser TPC - 12/1/90) John Forst (Columbia Senior/Touring Pro Doubles - 10/20/84) Dave Frame (Buffalo Open - 8/10/76) Jim Frazier (New England Open - 8/17/76) Kevin Gillette (Canadian Open - 8/26/80) Peter Hakim (Long Island Open - 4/12/86) Jerry Hale (Southern California PBA Open - 12/21/64) Bruce Hamilton (True Value Open - 2/15/92) John Handegard (Northwest Classic - 7/11/95) Tom Harnisch (Bertrand PBA Open - 8/29/65) Chris Hayden (PBA VIA Bowling Open - 2/16/03) Roger Helle (Tennesse PBA Open - 3/29/63) Tom Hess (USBC Masters – 2/13/11) Bob Hood (Home Box Office Open - 7/16/74) Dick Hoover (PBA Colt Open - 2/10/62) Mike Jasnau (ARC Alameda Open - 1/2/88) Bill Johnson (All-American PBA Classic - 2/23/63) Jimmy Johnson (Brunswick Memorial World Open - 4/18/90) Jimmy Johnson Jr. (PBA Oregon Open - 2/28/97) Liz Johnson (PBA Chameleon Championship - 12/17/17) John Juni (Tucson Open - 1/7/67) Jimmy Keeth (Tums Classic - 4/18/92) Johnny King (Hialeah PBA Open - 12/23/63) Bobby Knipple (King Louie Open - 2/3/73) Brian Kretzer (GO RVing Match Play Championship - 3/21/10) Kelly Kulick (PBA Tournament of Champions - 1/24/10) Anthony LaCaze (Earl Anthony Memorial Classic - 1/17/10) Charlie Lacy (True Value Open - 11/3/84) Dennis Lane (Portland Open - 6/7/77) Yannaphon Larpapharat (PBA/WBT Thailand - 10/6/17) Mike Lastowski (USBC Masters - 5/14/1983) Larry Lichstein (Ebonite Open - 2/6/71) Bill Lillard (Miller High Life Open - 3/5/66) Jeff Lizzi (Brunswick Memorial World Open - 11/11/92) Chris Loschetter (Lucas Oil Wolf Open - 6/18/13) Roy Lown (National PBA Invitational - 5/13/61) Ed Lubanski (Chicago PBA Open - 8/12/62) Gary Madison (Bellows-Valvair Open - 6/7/71) Gary Mage (Seattle Open - 6/5/72) Gary Martineau (Nashville Kiwanis PBA Open - 9/19/65) Jeff Mattingly (Tucson Open - 7/17/78) Jerry McCoy (Seattle Coca-Cola PBA Open - 6/21/64) Cliff McNealy (Cleveland Open - 2/24/79) Bobby Meadows (Fair Lanes Open - 2/26/72) Norm Meyers (Seattle Coca-Cola PBA Open - 9/29/63) James Miller (Showboat Invitational - 1/16/82) Mike Mineman (Bayer Classic - 2/25/07) Paul Moor (Balmaster Open - 1/11/15) B.J. Moore (PBA Wilmington Open - 8/14/19) C.K. Moore (Columbia 300 Open - 2/2/96) Jeff Morin (Seattle Open - 6/6/81) Mark Mosayebi (AC DELCO Challenge - 10/6/99) Jim Murtishaw (Bowlers Journal Florida Open - 2/21/87) Doug Myers (1979 USBC Masters) Andy Neuer (Bud Light Hall of Fame Championship - 2/19/94) Scott Newell (Ricart Ford Open – 2/19/12) John Nolen (USBC Masters - 2/15/09) Jon O’Drobinak (Quaker State Open - 2/1/86) Matt Ogle (Roth-Holman Doubles Championship - 1/20/19) Matt O'Grady (PBA Tournament of Champions – 2/18/18)) Morrie Oppenheim (Southern California PBA Open - 9/1/60) Ray Orf (All-American Classic - 7/22/62) Anthony Pepe (Cheetah Championship - 12/14/14) Jake Peters (Lucas Oil Badger Open – 6/11/13) Connor Pickford (Roth/Holman Doubles – 1/17/16) Kurt Pilon (PBA Peoria Open - 9/25/01) Lewis Ray (Baltimore PBA Open - 6/8/63) Tony Reyes (Motor City Classic - 11/5/06) Philip Ringener (Bud Light Championship - 4/20/96) Andy Rogoznica (Birmingham PBA Open - 3/10/62) Matthew Russo (Jonesboro Open - 8/8/21) Matt Sanders (Billy Hardwick Memorial Open - 6/25/17) Lou Scalia (1967 USBC Masters) Alex Seymore (STP Classic - 3/2/74) Mike Shady (Earl Anthony PBA Open - 5/23/92) Kyle Shedd (Ford Open - 2/23/80) Emmett Shutes (Showboat Invitational - 1/13/79) Gil Sliker (Showboat PBA Doubles Classic - 7/28/83) Bryon Smith (USBC Masters - 1/19/03) Robert Spaulding (Quaker State 250 - 2/4/95) Darren Tang (PBA Bowlerstore.com Classic - 8/15/21 Richie Teece (PBA Shark Championship - 12/17/17) Jon Van Hees (Scorpion Championship – 1/10/16) Chris Via (U.S. Open - 4/11/21) Skip Vigars (Cleveland Coca-Cola PBA Open - 2/24/62) Tom Warren (Showboat Best-Ball Doubles - 7/25/76) Cameron Weier (Qatar Open – 12/2/15) John Wilcox (Syracuse Open - 11/10/75) Keven Williams (Shark Championship - 3/16/22) Dave Wodka (Greater Detroit Open - 10/27/99) Tom Wright (Buffalo Open - 8/15/77)

  • Professional
  • Walter Ray Williams Jr.

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1995 PBA Tour season

This is a recap of the 1995 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 37th season, and consisted of 30 events.

Tournament schedule

External links.

The "semi-retired" Dave Husted won his 12th title and second BPAA U.S. Open crown in front of the largest crowd to ever witness a PBA event. After the qualifying at Bowl One Lanes in Troy, Michigan , the TV finals moved to Detroit 's Joe Louis Arena , where a paid audience of 7,212 were in attendance. [1] Bowling in his first TV finals, Scott Alexander was the surprise winner at the Chevrolet PBA National Championship .

Mike Aulby captured the Brunswick World Tournament of Champions to complete his quest for the "triple crown" of PBA majors. He joined Billy Hardwick , Johnny Petraglia and Pete Weber as the PBA's only triple crown winners to date. [2] As the Tour's leading money winner for 1995, Aulby was also voted the PBA Player of the Year.

At the Northwest Classic in July, John Handegard became the oldest PBA Tour champion. Handegard was 57 years, 55 days old. Hall of Famer Buzz Fazio was 56 years, 307 days old when he won a standard PBA tour event in December, 1964. [3]

Another record was set late in the year at the AMF Dick Weber Classic, where David Ozio rolled a four-game total of 1,070 pins en route to the title. This broke the 11-year-old record of 1,050 pins set by Nelson Burton, Jr. [4]

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Nelson "Bo" Burton Jr. is a professional ten-pin bowler, PBA Hall of Famer, and former longtime analyst for the Professional Bowlers Tour on ABC Television. He is the son of Nelson Burton, Sr., who himself was a successful bowler in his day, competing with the likes of Glenn Allison and Billy Welu. Bo compiled 18 titles on the PBA Tour, including two major championships, and earned $763,782 (USD).

Marshall Holman is an American sports broadcaster and retired professional ten-pin bowler. He was known for his flamboyant, fiery demeanor and his success on the PBA Tour from the mid-1970s to the end of the 1980s. He is one of only 17 players in history to reach at least 20 career PBA Tour titles. Holman was sponsored by Columbia 300 and Nike.

The U.S. Open is one of the five major tournaments in the Professional Bowlers Association. Despite its status as a PBA Tour major, the tournament is open to qualifying amateurs as well as PBA members. The U.S. Open is considered one of the most difficult tournaments to bowl in today, due to its long format and demanding oil pattern, which differs from most oil patterns the PBA employs.

John Petraglia Sr. is an American professional bowler. He is a member of the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA), where he won 14 PBA Tour titles. He has also won eight PBA Senior Tour titles. He is a member of both the PBA and USBC Halls of Fame.

Mike Aulby is a left-handed bowler and former member of the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA). He is one of only five PBA bowlers to win both a Rookie and Player of the Year award. He is also the first player in history to complete a career "Super Slam", in which a bowler wins all five PBA Tour major tournaments at least once. He has since been joined in this exclusive club by Jason Belmonte. Aulby owns 29 career PBA Tour titles, currently 9th place all-time, with eight major titles among these wins. He is a member of both the PBA and USBC Halls of Fame.

David Ozio of Beaumont, Texas is a retired right-handed ten-pin bowler and member of the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA). He won 11 titles on the PBA Tour, including one major championship, and was the 1991 PBA Player of the Year. He was the 2004 Senior PBA Rookie of the Year, and has won five titles on the Senior and Generations tours. Ozio is a member of both the PBA and USBC Halls of Fame.

This is a recap of the 2010–11 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the Tour's 52nd season and consisted of 12 title events.

This is a recap of the 1979 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 21st season, and consisted of 34 events. Following up on his eight titles a season ago, Mark Roth captured another six titles in the 1979 season, winning his third straight PBA Player of the Year award to match Earl Anthony's record of three POY crowns. Roth also averaged 221.699 during the 1979 season, to date the highest tour average in PBA history.

This is a recap of the 1984 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 26th season, and consisted of 34 events. With Earl Anthony now retired, it was the bowler with the second-highest career wins, Mark Roth, who stepped up to take his fourth PBA Player of the Year honor. Roth won four titles in 1984, upping his career title count to 31, and won his first major title at the BPAA U.S. Open. Roth had previously qualified for the TV finals in ten major championships without winning. Adding to his accolades, Roth also became the PBA's second career millionaire when he took the title at the Greater Detroit Open, and he capped the season by winning the Angle Touring Players Championship.

This is a recap of the 1985 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 27th season, and consisted of 34 events. Mike Aulby had to defeat his brother-in-law, Steve Cook, in the final match to take the title in the Toledo Trust PBA National Championship. This was just one of six titles that Aulby won on the season, earning him 1985 PBA Player of the Year honors. Aulby also became the first PBA Player to ever cash more than $200,000 in season earnings, as he took home $201,200 on the year.

The 56th season of the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour was played in 2015. There were 27 singles title events, three doubles title events, and two team events on the 2015 schedule.

  • ↑ "1995 Tournament of Champions" . PBA.
  • ↑ "1995 Northwest Classic" . PBA.
  • ↑ "1995 AMF Dick Weber Classic" . PBA.
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2024 national tour, 2024 upcoming events, 2024 past events, 2025 schedule, broadcast schedule, 2023 pwba tour statistics.

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Past Seasons

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Rookie David ‘Boog’ Krol of Missouri wins Professional Bowlers Association Playoffs title in Kissimmee

M issourian David “Boog” Krol, a rookie on the Professional Bowlers Association tour, captured the PBA Playoffs championship Sunday at AMF Kissimmee Lanes, holding off fellow two-hander Jesper Swensson in a two-frame roll-off. Krol rolled a pair of strikes in the tiebreaker to capture the title.

It was the first time in seven years that the PBA made its return to Kissimmee.

Krol, who won his first PBA Tour title in March with the championship at the Delaware Classic, defeated Bill O’Neil in the semifinal round 243-202.

Swensson, a lefty from Sweden who bowls out of the Akron (Ohio) Atom Splitters bowling club, made a 53-pin comeback in the semifinals and won the first game of the final round against Krol 220-213.

Neither player was flawless in the final round, with just six strikes apiece in each game. Krol took advantage of three straight Svensson spares in the seventh, eighth and ninth frames of Game 2 to force the roll-off 204-194.

In the tiebreaker, Krol put the pressure on with a first-frame strike, and then Svensson left one pin standing on his first ball. A strike from Krol on this second ball sealed the championship.

Krol had to earn spots into tournaments during the first half of the season through seven-game Pro Tournament Qualifiers until he won the Delaware title to earn an exemption.

Svensson, who was bowling against two-time defending playoffs champion Kyle Troup in the semifinal round, was trailing his best friend by 53 pins when Troup made an unfortunate misstep into the gutter on his follow-through during the sixth frame. Troup, who appeared to slightly injure his ankle on the misstep, struggled after that and Svensson edged out his buddy 224-223.

©2024 Orlando Sentinel. Visit orlandosentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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2024 PGA Championship tee times, pairings: Complete schedule on TV, groups in Round 1 on Thursday at Valhalla

A number of star-studded groups will be featured throughout the first round of the 106th pga championship in louisville.

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The 2024 PGA Championship has arrived, and so have the tee times for the first day of competition at Valhalla Golf Club. With the second major of the season forthcoming, you not only need to know when your favorites will take the course but how to follow them live throughout the first round. CBS Sports has you covered with a full slate of tee times, though the afternoon session was pushed back to minutes each due to weather. Follow PGA Championship live leaderboard coverage all day Thursday for score updates, weather notices, highlights and much more.

The action heats up right off the bat in Louisville as last year's Cinderella story, Michael Block, is featured in the opening group out to the course alongside Luke Donald and Shaun Micheel at 7:15 a.m. ET. From there, the stars begin to trickle onto the golf course with many big names beginning their first rounds on the 10th tee. Louisville native Justin Thomas gets the home crowd rocking early and often alongside Masters runner-up Ludvig Åberg and Xander Schauffele at 7:53 a.m. This trio precedes a group of major champions that includes 15-time major winner Tiger Woods, Adam Scott and Keegan Bradley at 8:04 a.m.

Immediately following Tiger's grouping is Rory McIlroy. The last two winners of the PGA Championship at Valhalla will be separated by only 11 minutes across the first two days as the 2014 champion gets going at 8:15 a.m. next to Dustin Johnson and Justin Rose.

History will be on the line just a couple groups later as five-time major winner and reigning champion Brooks Koepka begins his quest for a fourth Wanamaker Trophy alongside Max Homa and the man who still needs one to complete his grand slam aspirations, Jordan Spieth. They begin their journey Thursday at 8:37 a.m.

The star-studded groups are not exclusive to the morning hours as the last three major champions will be paired together in the afternoon. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler draws reigning U.S. Open champion Wyndham Clark and reigning Open champion Brian Harman at 2:13 p.m. off the first tee.

Other notable afternoon groups include the two right ahead of Scheffler. Collin Morikawa, Phil Mickelson and Matt Fitzpatrick get their championships underway at 1:51 p.m., while Rickie Fowler, Jon Rahm and Cameron Young follow closely behind at 2:02 p.m.

Take a look at the full slate of Round 1 tee times, and check out CBS Sports' detailed PGA Championship TV schedule and coverage guide so you do not miss a second of live action over the next four days. You can also use Kyle Porter's breakdown of the nine golfers most likely to win the Wanamaker Trophy as a refresher of sorts as play kicks into gear Thursday.

All times Eastern

2024 PGA Championship tee times, Thursday pairings

  • 7:15 a.m. — Michael Block, Luke Donald, Shaun Micheel
  • 7:26 a.m. — Jeff Kellen, Alex Smalley, Ben Kohles
  • 7:37 a.m. — Ryan Fox, Josh Speight, Matt Wallace
  • 7:48 a.m. — Zac Oakley, Adam Svensson, Ryo Hisatsune
  • 7:59 a.m. — Adam Hadwin, Martin Kaymer, Taylor Pendrith
  • 8:10 a.m. — Byeong Hun An, Alexander Bjork, Eric Cole
  • 8:21 a.m. — Adam Schenk, Corey Conners, Nick Dunlap
  • 8:32 a.m. — John Daly, Lee Hodges, Robert MacIntyre
  • 8:43 a.m. — Peter Malnati, Kurt Kitayama, Victor Perez
  • 8:54 a.m. — Benn Polland, Zac Blair, Ryan van Valezen
  • 9:05 a.m. — Jeremy Wells, Sami Valimaki, K.H. Lee
  • 9:16 a.m. — Jared Jones, Taylor Moore, Patrick Rodgers
  • 9:27 a.m. — Kyle Mendoza, Andy Ogletree, Erik van Rooyen
  • 12:55 p.m. — David Puig, Thirston Lawrence, Matt Dobyns
  • 1:06 p.m. — Tracy Phillips, Denny McCarthy, Keita Nakajima
  • 1:17 p.m. — Talor Gooch, Cameron Davis, Harris English
  • 1:28 p.m. — Jason Day, Shane Lowry, Nicolai Hojgaard
  • 1:39 p.m. — Min Woo Lee, Chris Kirk, Billy Horschel
  • 1:50 p.m. — Gary Woodland, Tom Kim, Joaquin Niemann
  • 2:01 p.m. — Collin Morikawa, Phil Mickelson, Matthew Fitzpatrick
  • 2:12 p.m. — Rickie Fowler, Jon Rahm, Cameron Young
  • 2:23 p.m. — Wyndham Clark, Brian Harman, Scottie Scheffler
  • 2:34 p.m. — Patrick Cantlay, Camilo Villegas, Will Zalatoris
  • 2:45 p.m. — Patrick Reed, Sam Burns, Padraig Harrington
  • 2:56 p.m. — Brad Marek, Mark Hubbard, Maverick McNealy
  • 3:07 p.m. — Braden Shattuck, S.H. Kim, C.T. Pan
  • 7:20 a.m. — Doug Ghim, Tyler Collet, Adrian Meronk
  • 7:31 a.m. — Larkin Gross, Lucas Herbert, Grayson Murray
  • 7:42 a.m. — Lucas Glover, Stephan Jaeger, Russell Henley
  • 7:53 a.m. — Ludvig Åberg, Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas
  • 8:04 a.m. — Tiger Woods, Adam Scott, Keegan Bradley
  • 8:15 a.m. — Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Justin Rose
  • 8:26 a.m. — Cameron Smith, Hideki Matsuyama, Viktor Hovland
  • 8:37 a.m. — Brooks Koepka, Max Homa, Jordan Spieth
  • 8:48 a.m. — Tony Finau, Tyrrell Hatton, Sahith Theegala
  • 8:59 a.m. — Akshay Bhatia, Tommy Fleetwood, Bryson DeChambeau
  • 9:10 a.m. — Sepp Straka, Takumi Kanaya, Nick Taylor
  • 9:21 a.m. — Andy Svoboda, Ben Griffin, Dean Burmester
  • 9:32 a.m. — Preston Cole, Tim Widing, Adrian Otaegui
  • 12:50 p.m. — Rich Beem, Sebastian Soderberg, Kazuma Kobori
  • 1:01 p.m. — Josh Bevell, Aaron Rai, Jordan Smith
  • 1:12 p.m. — Andrew Putnam, Jesse Mueller, Charley Hoffman
  • 1:23 p.m. — Si Woo Kim, Tom Hoge, Alex Noren
  • 1:34 p.m. — Y.E. Yang, Matthieu Pavon, J.T. Poston
  • 1:45 p.m. — Jake Knapp, Jason Dufner, Francesco Molinari
  • 1:56 p.m. — Thomas Detry, Jimmy Walker, Rasmus Hojgaard
  • 2:07 p.m. — Austin Eckroat, Luke List, Mackenzie Hughes
  • 2:18 p.m. — Sungjae Im, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Beau Hossler
  • 2:29 p.m. — Thorbjorn Olesen, Brendon Todd, Keith Mitchell
  • 2:40 p.m. — John Somers, Brice Garnett, Jesper Svensson
  • 2:51 p.m. — Emiliano Grillo, Evan Bowser, Alejandro Tosti
  • 3:02 p.m. — Vincent Norrman, Wyatt Worthington II, Chris Gotterup

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Home

PBA Playoffs

3438 Stoluckquamish Ln Arlington , WA 98223 United States

View Players

Game by Game Scoring

TIMES LISTED ARE LOCAL (PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)

Thursday, May 2

Pro-Am: 4 p.m.

Pro-Am: 7 p.m.

Friday, May 3

PBA Playoff Practice (non-TV pair): 2:30 p.m.

PBA Playoff Meet & Greet: 6 p.m.

PBA Playoff Practice (TV pair): 7 p.m.

Saturday, May 4

PBA Playoffs 

Play-in Stepladder / (Taped for FS1): 3 p.m.

Sunday, May 5

PBA Playoffs Rd. of 12 / (LIVE FS1): 9 a.m.

PBA Playoffs Quarterfinals / (Taped for FS1): 1:30 p.m.

Tournament Host Center

Angel of the Winds Casino

3438 Stoluckquamish Ln.

Arlington, WA 98223

(360) 474-9740

Eligibility

Top 16 in points from 2024 (thru 2024 PBA Tournament of Champions)

Maximum Field

There are no entry fee required for the PBA Playoffs

PBA Playoffs - Show 1

Play-in stepladder:

Game 1: No. 16 vs. No. 15

Game 2: Winner game 1 vs. No. 14

Game 3: Winner game 2 vs. No. 13

Game 4: Winner game 3 vs. No. 12

PBA Playoffs Rd of 12 - Show 2

12-player bracket begins:

No. 8 vs. No. 9

No. 5 vs. Winner of play in stepladder

No. 7 vs. No. 10

No. 6 vs. No. 11

PBA Playoff Semifinals - Show 3

No. 8/9 winner vs. No. 1

No. 5/stepladder winner vs. No. 4

No. 7/10 winner vs. No. 2

No. 6/11 winner vs. No. 3

PBA Playoffs: TBD

Oil Pattern

Mike Aulby 39

Dick Weber 45

2024 PBA Approved Equipment

The 2024 list of acceptable Urethane and Urethane-Like equipment made at 78.0HD+ is available on the schedule page under “quick links”.    

The Mike Aulby

PBA Playoffs: $300,000

1st - $75,000

2nd - $50,000

3rd - $25,000

4th - $25,000

5th - $15,000

6th - $15,000

7th - $15,000

8th - $15,000

9th - $10,000

10th - $10,000

11th - $10,000

12th - $10,000

13th - $8,000

14th - $7,000

15th - $6,000

16th - $5,000

IMAGES

  1. The San Miguel Beermen won their 1999 PBA Commissioner's Cup champions

    pba tour results 1999

  2. KYLE TROUP WINS 10TH CAREER TITLE AT PBA TOUR FINALS

    pba tour results 1999

  3. PBA Classic Games: 1999 Governors Cup

    pba tour results 1999

  4. 1999 PBA Flagship Open

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  5. 1999 PBA Albuquerque Open

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  6. PBA Tour Finals

    pba tour results 1999

VIDEO

  1. 1997 AMF Japan Cup

  2. PBA Gameshow "Fastbreak" 1999

  3. PBA 3PT Contest 1999

  4. Friday Five

  5. 99 PBA National Match 3 Barnes vs Arnold Part 1

  6. PBA Open Mic

COMMENTS

  1. 1999 PBA Tour season

    This is a recap of the 1999 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 41st season, and consisted of 26 events. Parker Bohn III collected five titles during the season to take PBA Player of the Year honors, ending Walter Ray Williams, Jr.'s streak of three straight POY awards.. Tim Criss secured a major title at the PBA National Championship.

  2. PBA Tour Scoring Records

    PBA TOUR EARNINGS, SEASON $419,700, Walter Ray Williams Jr. (2002-03) ROOKIE EARNINGS, SEASON $84,811, Rhino Page (2008) MOST EARNINGS IN ONE SEASON WITHOUT A TITLE $153,306, Pete McCordic (1987) MOST CASHES, SEASON 34, Tommy Hudson (1977) MOST MAJOR TITLES IN CAREER 13 Jason Belmonte 10 Earl Anthony Pete Weber.

  3. PBA Bowling Tour: 1999 Season

    This is a recap of the 1999 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 41st season, and consisted of 26 events. Parker Bohn III collected five titles during the season to take PBA Player of the Year honors, ending Walter Ray Williams, Jr. 's streak of three straight POY awards.

  4. Ultimate List: Every Player With A PBA Title

    Pete Weber (37 titles) and Parker Bohn III (35 titles) round out the top five on the list. Here's a list of every player who has ever won a PBA Tour title along with the name and date of their most recent victory (as of March 16, 2022): 47 Titles. Walter Ray Williams Jr. (USBC Masters - 2/14/10) 43 Titles. Earl Anthony (USBC Masters - 5/12/84)

  5. 1999 PBA National Bowling Stadium Open Whole Telecast

    The date was June 20th, 1999! The Pro Bowler's Tour contested the championship round of this telecast at the National Bowling Stadium. The four bowlers vyi...

  6. 1999 PBA Indianapolis Open

    1999 PBA Indianapolis OpenIndianapolis, INNovember 10, 19992:59 Mike Edwards vs John Mazza20:40 Winner vs Parker Bohn III39:10 Winner vs Eric Forkel54:28 Win...

  7. 1999 PBA Bay City Classic

    1999 PBA Bay City ClassicBay City, MINovember 3, 19991:22 Amleto Monacelli vs Richard Wolfe20:10 Winner vs Ricky Ward37:39 Winner vs Jason Couch52:34 Winner ...

  8. PBA Tour

    The PBA Tour is the major professional tour for ten-pin bowling, operated by the Professional Bowlers Association. ... In 1999, the award was officially renamed the Chris Schenkel PBA Player of the Year, in honor of the legendary broadcaster who covered bowling on national television for 35 years.

  9. 1979 PBA Tour season

    1979 PBA Tour season. This is a recap of the 1979 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 21st season, and consisted of 34 events. Following up on his eight titles a season ago, Mark Roth captured another six titles in the 1979 season, winning his third straight PBA Player of the Year award to match Earl ...

  10. PBA Tour

    Stay up to date on the PBA Tour schedule and mark your calendars! See Full Schedule. The 2023 Players. The latest strikes, spares and splits of your favorite bowlers. All the stats you need to know right at your fingertips. Meet the pros. Latest News. Stay up-to-date on all the PBA Tour news.

  11. PBA Live Scoring

    PBA National Tour; Read the Latest News; Meet the Pros; Become a Member; PBA League Bowler Certification; PBA Games; Footer. Watch. Fox Sports Television; Event Tickets; BowlTV; YouTube; PBA Tour. PBA National Tour; PBA Tour Bowlers; PBA Regional Tour; PBA50+ PBA Jr. The PBA Elite League; Player Resources. Oil Patterns; Registered Products;

  12. 1995 PBA Tour season

    As the Tour's leading money winner for 1995, Aulby was also voted the PBA Player of the Year. At the Northwest Classic in July, John Handegard became the oldest PBA Tour champion. Handegard was 57 years, 55 days old. Hall of Famer Buzz Fazio was 56 years, 307 days old when he won a standard PBA tour event in December, 1964.

  13. 1996 PBA Tour season

    PBA Bowling Tour: 1996 Season. This is a recap of the 1996 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 38th season, and consisted of 29 events. Dave D'Entremont won his first career major at the Brunswick World Tournament of Champions. [1] Likewise, long-time PBA Tour professional Butch Soper captured his first ...

  14. Professional Women's Bowling Association

    Dede Davidson and Sandra Jo Shiery were inducted into the PWBA Hall of Fame. The 2025 PWBA National Tour schedule is now out. Visit BowlTV from May 28-30 to watch the 2024 PWBA Greater Nashville Classic. Malaysia's Sin Li Jane won her second career PWBA title in Rockford, Illinois. Shannon Pluhowsky won the first event of the 2024 PWBA Tour season.

  15. 1999 PBA Tour Season

    Share your videos with friends, family, and the world

  16. 2024 PBA Playoffs: Schedule, bracket, results, how to watch PBA ...

    How to watch the PBA Playoffs and Finals. The 2024 PBA Finals will air on FOX at 2 p.m. ET. PBA Playoff Prize Money. The total prize fund for the PBA Playoffs is $300,000.

  17. PBA National Tour

    August 19 - 23. A dozen exempt spots for the 2025 PBA Tour are up for grabs as players bowl 48 games across four oil patterns in four different Chicago-area centers. The top 12 finishers will earn priority entry for all 2025 PBA Tour events and become eligible for the PBA Elite League draft. Entry for PBA Tour Trials will be prioritized as ...

  18. Professional Women's Bowling Association

    PBA/PWBA Striking Against Breast Cancer Mixed Doubles: Copperfield Bowl 15615 Glen Chase Dr., Houston, TX, 77095: July 31, 2024 - August 03, 2024 ... PWBA Tour Championship Week: ABC Gates Bowl 645 Spencerport Rd, Gates, NY, 14606: Tickets. Broadcast Schedule. 2023 PWBA Tour Statistics. Past Seasons. Members. 2023 Past National Finals .

  19. Rookie David 'Boog' Krol of Missouri wins Professional Bowlers

    Missourian David "Boog" Krol, a rookie on the Professional Bowlers Association tour, captured the PBA Playoffs championship Sunday at AMF Kissimmee Lanes, holding off fellow two-hander Jesper ...

  20. 2024 PBA Tour season

    The 2024 PBA Tour season, the 65th season of play for the U.S. Professional Bowlers Association's ten-pin bowling tour, began on January 9 with the pre-tournament qualifier (PTQ) of the PBA Players Championship. The season currently includes 16 singles title events, two doubles title events, and a non-title team event. On November 1, 2023, the PBA and Fox announced that the 2024 season will ...

  21. Professional Bowlers Association

    View Results. TV Schedule. PBA Tour finals - Day 1 | Show 1 Live. 06/08 3:00PM EDT. PBA Tour finals - Day 1 | Show 2 Live. 06/08 5:00PM EDT. PBA Tour finals - Day 2 | Show 1 Live. 06/09 2:00PM EDT. See full schedule Tune In on BowlTV. Official Charity of the PBA Tour. Learn More. fieldset. Subscribe To Our Newsletter.

  22. 2024 PGA Championship prize money, purse: Payouts for Xander Schauffele

    2024 PGA Championship prize money, purse . Total purse: $18.5 million. 1st (Winner): $3,300,000 -- Xander Schauffele 2nd: $1,998,000 -- Bryson DeChambeau

  23. Scottie Scheffler arrested in alleged assault on police officer outside

    The world's top-ranked golfer, Scottie Scheffler, was arrested, charged with felony assault and released from jail before shooting a stellar 5-under par at the PGA Championship on Friday in a ...

  24. David "Boog" Krol Wins PBA Playoffs

    Krol defeated Jesper Svensson in a roll-off to win the 2024 PBA Playoffs title at AMF Kissimmee Lanes in Kissimmee, Fla. The win marked the second title of 28-year-old Krol's season and career. Svensson took the first game of the Race-to-Two championship match. Krol then rebounded to win the second game and force a ninth and 10th frame roll-off.

  25. 2024 PGA Championship tee times, pairings: Complete schedule on TV

    The 2024 PGA Championship has arrived, and so have the tee times for the first day of competition at Valhalla Golf Club. With the second major of the season forthcoming, you not only need to know ...

  26. 1992 PBA Tour season

    PBA Bowling Tour: 1992 Season. This is a recap of the 1992 season for the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. It was the tour's 34th season, and consisted of 35 events. The 1992 season featured 12 first-time winners, including a stretch of five straight weeks in January-February where previous non-winners took home all of the titles.

  27. 1998 PBA Tour Season

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  28. PBA Playoffs

    Top 16 in points from 2024 (thru 2024 PBA Tournament of Champions) Maximum Field. 16. Entry Fees . There are no entry fee required for the PBA Playoffs. TV Format. PBA Playoffs - Show 1. Play-in stepladder: Game 1: No. 16 vs. No. 15. Game 2: Winner game 1 vs. No. 14. Game 3: Winner game 2 vs. No. 13. Game 4: Winner game 3 vs. No. 12. PBA ...