Michael Block, the teaching pro who recently impressed at the PGA Championship, had a mixed performance in the first round of the Charles Schwab Challenge. After starting with three bogeys, he narrowly missed another hole-in-one and later made an extraordinary escape from a bridge to save par. However, the back nine proved challenging, resulting in a score of +11 and last place. Despite the disappointing outcome, Block maintains a positive perspective and appreciates the opportunities he’s had in the sport as an everyman player.
Yahoo Sports: Michael Block hits incredible escape from bridge at Charles Schwab Challenge, but finishes 1st round in last place
By Jack Baer
The Michael Block magic hasn’t completely run out since the end of the PGA Championship, but he didn’t have much on Thursday.
Four days after finishing a T15 performance at Oak Hill — which included a hole-in-one — the 46-year-old teaching pro competed at the Charles Schwab Challenge in Texas on a sponsor exemption. He didn’t post a repeat performance in the first round, though he at least had his moments.
Block started with three straight bogies, then came about a yard from hitting another hole-in-one on the fourth hole at Fort Worth’s Colonial Country Club.
Six holes later, Block was in a tight spot when a 277-yard drive settled on a bridge to the far right of the fairway. Block somehow saved par, starting with an unbelievable escape from the bridge that landed just short of the green.
That was the good.
The bad came on the rest of the back nine, in which Block went bogey, bogey, bogey, par, double bogey, double bogey, par, double bogey to finish the round +11 and in last place by a margin of four strokes. Rory Sabbatini was next to last at +7.
Speaking with reporters after the round, Block had a level-headed outlook:
“It’s one of those days of golf. If you play golf, you know exactly what just happened. So I don’t really need to explain it too much because, if you are a golfer, you’ve had the day I’ve had. You understand the facts of where the lies aren’t good and the trees are in your way every time. Even your good shots are bad, your bad shots are worse, et cetera, et cetera.
“It is what it is. I’m going to live with it. I thought it was going to happen that third or fourth round last week at Oak Hill, and it never happened. It happened now, and I wasn’t surprised by it, to tell you the truth.”
By the overall numbers, it wasn’t an impressive performance from Block, who already has received plenty of recognition. He probably won’t spend the final round playing with a major champion like Rory McIlroy. But for a guy who qualified for last week’s tournament through a qualifier for club professionals and made his first major cut 16 years after his first appearance, any more moments in the sun are a nice sight in a sport that loves an everyman.
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