The 5 Best Comeback Stories In Golf History
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The 5 Best Comeback Stories In Golf History

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The 5 Best Comeback Stories In Golf History

In light of Anthony Kim’s shocking win at LIV Adelaide last week, we thought it would be a good time to look at some of the great comeback stories in golf history.

We’re not talking comebacks within a golf tournament (although that would be a fun story, too). This is exclusively golfers who have overcome adversity to return to some of the highest levels in the game.

Many observers were calling Kim’s story the greatest golf has ever seen. That is a bit obtuse—Kim’s story, while incredible, doesn’t rise to what a couple of others on this list returned from.

All of these stories are worth highlighting and remembering.

Here are the five best comeback stories in golf history.

5. Babe Zaharias wins U.S. Women’s Open after cancer surgery

Zaharias, one of the most notable figures in the game’s history, won the 1954 U.S. Women’s Open while wearing a colostomy bag following her 1953 cancer surgery.

Keep in mind that we’re talking about 1950s surgery. There was no guarantee of even surviving such an operation.

About a year and a half after the surgery, she won this tournament—the last of 10 majors in her illustrious career—by 12 strokes. That was the largest margin of victory in her major career. And she was 43 years old! It’s among the most dominating performances golf has ever seen and she did while wearing a colostomy bag. Unreal.

Two years later, Zaharias passed away at age 45 from the same illness.

4. Anthony Kim emerges from the darkness to win again

There will be some recency bias involved here since Kim just captured victory at LIV Adelaide, coming from five strokes back to beat Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau.

It’s a fair criticism that Kim’s victory is nowhere near as important as others on this list but you also have to tip your cap to the fact he is even playing professional golf at this level given how much he wrecked his body.

Kim was a standout pro in the 2008-2010 era, winning three times and doing so with style. By 2012, injury took him out of the game. Pretty soon, Kim basically disappeared for a decade. It looked like nobody would ever hear from him again in terms of professional golf.

When he surprisingly came back to LIV in 2024, it was clear life—whether it was substance abuse, mental challenges, injury and who knows what else he dealt with over the years—had done a number on AK.

It seemed as if he didn’t have much gas left in the tank. Kim was finishing dead last in tournaments and lost his spot on LIV after two years, only to gain it back through qualifying.

And then, out of the blue, Kim won a LIV tournament in dramatic fashion, beating two of the best players in the game to do it.

A lot of his adversity may have been self-inflicted but it’s inspiring Kim has come back to be this competitive against top pros.

3. Skip Alexander comes back from a plane crash

This is a name not everyone will recognize but Alexander’s comeback story is legendary in golf nerd circles.

A World War II veteran who played on the Tour, Alexander survived a plane crash following a tournament in 1950. The three other people on board died but Alexander made it out alive with third-degree burns all over his body. He was expected to die in the aftermath but beat the odds.

Having to endure many surgeries for the burns, Alexander convinced the surgeon to fuse his hands around a golf club.

Not only does he get to play golf again—he comes back to make the U.S. Ryder Cup team less than a year after the plane crash. And he won his singles match.

That generation was just built different.

2. Tiger Woods overcomes injury, demons to win Masters

I think the 2018-2019 period was one of my most satisfying as a golf fan.

I remember covering the Honda Classic and Valspar Championship early in 2018—Tiger had been lost at sea for about five years at that point and expectations were low. Other than a standout 2013 season, Tiger’s best golf seemed to be way, way in the rearview.

Too many surgeries to name, internal demons and a load of young talent infiltrating the game spelled the end of Cat’s relevance as a top-tier competitor.

Except it didn’t. Woods started to form a spark in those early 2018 events, playing well in the majors that year and eventually winning the Tour Championship. The following spring, he ascended the major mountaintop one last time by winning the 2019 Masters in epic fashion.

1. Ben Hogan comes back from near-fatal car accident

Hogan endured a head-on collision with a Greyhound bus in 1949, leading to a 59-day hospital stay and a nine-month hiatus from golf. In addition to multiple fractures (collar bone, ankle, pelvis), blood clots threatened his life.

Doctors didn’t know if Hogan, who was in the prime of his career, would ever walk again.

He did a little better than that. Just 16 months after the crash, he won the 1950 U.S. Open in a playoff. Hogan went on to win five more majors despite only being able to play a limited schedule because of his lingering effects of the crash.

Given the severity of the crash, this comeback takes No. 1 for me.

Which comeback story is the best in your book? Let me know below in the comments.

Top Photo Caption: Ben Hogan made a remarkable comeback after almost dying in a car accident. (GETTY IMAGES/Bettmann)

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

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      Space Waves

      3 months ago

      What a fantastic collection of comeback stories! Each journey is so inspiring, especially knowing how golf teaches resilience. I loved seeing the spotlight on players who’ve faced adversity head-on.

      Reply

      Don7936

      4 months ago

      No Lloyd Mangrum?? Purple Heart in Normandy for shrapnel wounds , multiple heart attacks, playing captain in post-war Ryder Cup? Kim is a joke compared to other more viable players.

      Reply

      Andrew

      4 months ago

      What about Tiger coming back from being attacked by a club wielding wife?

      Reply

      mg

      4 months ago

      I have to admit I laughed and laughed at that, Andrew. Nice birdie.

      Reply

      Fake

      4 months ago

      Zaharias tied with Hogan? I mean, even healthy golfers in their 40’s can struggle to compete with younger golfers. I can’t imagine golfing with a colostomy bag. At all.

      Reply

      LivIsWashed

      4 months ago

      Zaharias is ahead of AK, Vardon is ahead of AK, I don’t think a washed up 40YO junky winning a golf exhibition even comes close to qualifying.

      Reply

      WYBob

      4 months ago

      As Tiger himself has said: “I think that one of the greatest comebacks in all of sport is the gentleman who won here, Mr. Hogan; I mean, he got hit by a bus and came back and won major championships. The pain he had to endure, the things he had to do just to play, the wrapping of the legs, all the hot tubs and just … how hard it was for him to walk period. … That’s one of the greatest comebacks there is, and it happens to be in our sport.” Second in my opinion has to be Babe Zaharias winning a US Women’s Open after cancer surgery and while wearing a colostomy bag. Third would be Ship Alexander recovering from a plane crash and the associated burns. Harry Vardon over coming near fatal TB is fourth, and Tiger’s 2019 comeback from myriad of injuries is fifth. These are truly heroic comebacks from something beyond the athlete’s control.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      4 months ago

      Tom Watson one simple par away from a major at 58 can be considered a comeback, perhaps, despite losing in the playoff. No?

      Reply

      JK

      4 months ago

      No.

      Reply

      Bryan Buck

      4 months ago

      ‘Fused his hands around the club’ ?! Was that a permeant situation for Alexander?

      Reply

      Brian

      4 months ago

      Hogan No1 but No2 surely has to be Harry Vardon over coming near fatal TB illness that caused him to spend nearly a year in a hospital (cruely overlooking a golf course!) and permanent nerve damage in his hands (causing yips) he still won another Open.

      Reply

      ProjectX

      4 months ago

      I think what’s being discounted here with Kim is how long he was away from the game. The rest of these people while coming back from bad injuries all never took extended periods away from the game mentally. They had their injuries and issues and everything was fighting to get back in the courses ASAP. So while not physically capable they were all mentally still in the game. Kim had more than a decade where he was mentally removed from the game of golf and having any desire to compete at that level. That to me is much harder to come back from than any injury.

      Reply

      JK

      4 months ago

      To you, but not in reality.

      Reply

      Jim Rebey

      4 months ago

      I believe Hogan had to play 36 hole final rounds on those bad legs also.

      Reply

      James

      4 months ago

      He also covered his wife with his own body in the car wreck to protect her, which ironically saved his life.

      Iron will and iron character. My reason for him being the actual GOAT instead of Jack or Tiger.

      Some of the other golfers on this list created their own crises to come back from.

      Reply

      mg

      4 months ago

      Amen.

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