WORLD GOLF HALL OF FAME Crenshaw, 5 others to be inducted



One of his fellow inductees is his teacher, Harvey Penick.
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP) -- Ben Crenshaw has been linked with trusted teacher Harvey Penick for as long as he has played golf. His induction into the World Golf Hall of Fame will be no different.
Penick first wrapped Crenshaw's hands around a golf club. He died a week before Crenshaw won the 1995 Masters, an emotional victory in which Crenshaw said he felt his teacher's hand on his shoulder, guiding him to the best golf of his life.
They will be together in spirit and name tonight at the World Golf Village, where Crenshaw and Penick are among six inductees to the Hall of Fame.
"It's extremely personal and sentimental to me," Crenshaw said. "We had a great man to learn the game from, a very humble teacher who wanted to help everyone, and it didn't make any difference what kind of player they were."
The other inductees are two-time Masters champion Bernhard Langer, U.S. Open champion Tommy Bolt, British Open and U.S. Open champion Tony Jacklin, and LPGA founder Marlene Hagge.
Crenshaw was voted in on the PGA Tour ballot, while Langer and Jacklin made it on the international ballot. Bolt and Hagge were selected through the Veteran's Category. Penick was chosen through the Lifetime Achievement Category.
The inductions will increase membership in the Hall of Fame to 96.
18 titles
Crenshaw won 18 times on the PGA Tour, including two Masters. He also was captain of the 1999 Ryder Cup team, which staged the greatest comeback in history at Brookline.
The '95 Masters stands out.
Crenshaw, who began working with Penick as a small boy in Austin, Texas, got one final lesson from Penick's hospital room a week before he died.
The teacher asked him to fetch a putter and said, "I want you to take two good practice strokes and then trust yourself and don't let that club get past your hands in the stroke."
Crenshaw took that tip to Augusta National. He had to leave during a practice round to be a pallbearer at Penick's funeral, then returned and went the entire tournament without a three-putt.
The finish was unforgettable. When Crenshaw tapped in his bogey putt for a one-stroke victory, he buckled over as the tears began to flow.
"It was very obvious I had him in the back of my mind all week," Crenshaw said recently. "That I was able to win, on his memory, will give me a smile the rest of my life."
Last to win U.S. Open
Jacklin has much in common with Crenshaw -- two major championships and special memories in the Ryder Cup. Along with his '69 British Open at Royal Lytham & amp; St. Annes, the Englishman is the last European to win the U.S. Open, a wire-to-wire victory at Hazeltine in 1970.
Jacklin was captain when Europe ended years of frustration by winning the 1985 Ryder Cup for the first time in 38 years. He also was captain two years later when Europe won at Muirfield Village, its first victory in the United States.
Bolt earned the nickname "Terrible Tommy" for club-throwing that often overshadowed his shotmaking.
Despite his 1958 U.S. Open victory at Southern Hills and 14 other wins, Bolt has long been the poster boy for bad tempers.
"I threw a couple of clubs," Bolt said. "I'm human, like the other guys, but I always threw them at the most opportune time. I always had a camera on me."
Langer won two Masters, the second after curing a bad case of the putting yips. He went 16 straight seasons on the European tour with at least one victory, and two months ago played on his 10th Ryder Cup team.
Hagge was one of the founders of the LPGA Tour in 1950. She won 26 times, including the LPGA Championship in 1956.