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Grand Slam Moments

1996 Tiger Woods Signed Ticket Bell Canadian Open 2nd Official Tournament

Regular price $21,545.15 SGD
Regular price Sale price $21,545.15 SGD
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An early signature of Tiger Woods on a 1996 Bell Canadian Ticket.  This was Tigers' 2nd event after announcing "Hello World" at the GMO Greater Milwaukee Open.  Items from the GMO have broken many collectibles records and it's just a matter of time as other event items are noticed and follow suit.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Open_(golf)

The Canadian Open (FrenchL'Omnium Canadien) is a professional golf tournament in Canada. It is co-organized by Golf Canada (formerly known as the Royal Canadian Golf Association) and the PGA Tour.[2] It was first played 118 years ago in 1904, and has been held annually since then, except for during World War IWorld War II and the COVID-19 pandemic. It is the third oldest continuously running tournament on the tour, after The Open Championship and the U.S. Open. It is the only national championship that is a PGA Tour-managed event.[2]

As a national open, and especially as the most accessible non-U.S. national open for American golfers, the event had a special status in the era before the professional tour system became dominant in golf. In the interwar years, it was sometimes considered the third most prestigious tournament in the sport, after The Open Championship and the U.S. Open. This previous status was noted in the media in 2000, when Tiger Woods became the first man to win The Triple Crown (all three Opens in the same season) in 29 years, since Lee Trevino in 1971. In the decades preceding the tournament's move to an undesirable September date in 1988, the Canadian Open was often unofficially referred to as the fifth major.

In 2000, Tiger Woods dueled with Grant Waite over the final 18 holes, before finally subduing the New Zealander on the 72nd hole with an exceptional shot. Holding a one-shot advantage, Woods found his tee shot in a fairway bunker, and after watching Waite put his second shot 30 feet from the hole, decided to go for the green. Woods hit a 6-iron which carried a lake and settled on the fringe just past the flag, which was 218 yards away, and then chipped to tap-in range for the title-clinching birdie.[19] With the victory, Woods became only the second golfer to capture the U.S. OpenOpen Championship and Canadian Open in the same year, earning him the Triple Crown trophy; he matched Lee Trevino (1971).

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