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    Turn Back the Clock

    What tour pros looked like back when they played in the Walker Cup

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    June 27, 2025

    The Walker Cup, which showcases some of amateur golf's best and brightest talents, will be held for the 50th time in September when breathtaking Cypress Point Club plays host. The biennial matches that pit the United States vs. Great Britain & Ireland have provided a stage for fans to see the next generation of stars competing before the distractions of professional golf come calling. The list of Walker Cup alumni is impressive, as witnessed below as we turn back the clock on some of golf's most notable players to get a glimpse at them before they were top-ranked tour pros.

    Jack Nicklaus, 1959

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    Bettmann

    Nicklaus twice played for the U.S. in the Walker Cup, first here at Muirfield in 1959 and again at Seattle Golf Club in 1961. He went a perfect 4-0 in the competition, with the Americans winning easily both years.

    Tom Kite, 1971

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    Ed Lacey/Popperfoto/Getty Images

    Kite played on the U.S. team that lost to Great Britain & Ireland in 1971 at St. Andrews, one of only two times the GB&I side beat the Americans in the first 32 editions of the match.

    Lanny Wadkins, 1971

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    Ed Lacey/Popperfoto/Getty Images

    Wadkins was playing in his second Walker Cup at St. Andrews, and won both of his singles matches on the Old Course.

    Curtis Strange & Jay Haas, 1975

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    The Wake Forest college teammates were naturally paired together in foursomes twice at St. Andrews, winning both times.

    Craig Stadler, 1975

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    Getty Images

    Stadler was 3-0 for the U.S. at St. Andrews, with the American team easily avenging its 1971 loss at St. Andrews, beating the GB&I side 15½-8½.

    Davis Love III, 1985

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    Love beat Peter McEvoy, 5 and 3, in the final singles session to help the U.S. team defeat GB&I 13-11 at New Jersey's Pine Valley G.C.

    Colin Montgomerie, 1987

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    Getty Images

    Foreshadowing some of his Ryder Cup prowess, Monty was the lone bright spot for the GB&I side at Sunningdale G.C. While the U.S. team won convincingly, 16½-7½, Montgomerie was the only GB&I player to win both his singles matches.

    Padraig Harrington & Paul McGinley, 1991

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    Popperfoto/Getty Images

    The fellow Irishman has a surprisingly rough time of it at Portmarnock. Teamed together in the first foursomes sessions, the pair lost, 2 and 1, to career amateurs Jay Sigel and Allen Doyle. Harrington lost in the only other match he played while McGinley did at least win one of his two other matches.

    Phil Mickelson & David Duval, 1991

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    In the lone Walker Cup appearance for each of these future major winners, Mickelson compiled a 3-1 record at Portmarnock, and Duval went 2-1.

    Tiger Woods, 1995

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    Phil Sheldon/Popperfoto/Getty Images

    Woods' appearance at Royal Porthcawl was his only Walker Cup start. He went 2-2 as the American side lost for just the fourth time in the history of the event.

    Justin Rose, 1997

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    Nine months before Rose famously finished T-4 at the British Open as an amateur, the then 17-year-old was the only player on the GB&I team to have a winning record at Quaker Ridge G.C. (2-1).

    Luke Donald, 1999

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    Donald will go down as one of GB&I's all-time Walker Cup stalwarts after compiling a 4-0 record at Nairn G.C. en route to a 15-9 drubbing of the Americans. Two years later, the future European Ryder Cup captain would go 3-1 at Ocean Forest to help GB&I repeat in the match for the first time in history.

    Bill Haas, 2003

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    Bill followed in the footsteps of his father Jay (1975) and uncle Jerry (1985) by playing in the competition, going 2-2 at Ganton G.C. as the Americans lost for a third straight time.

    Rickie Fowler & Rory McIlroy, 2007

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    Before the young guns started to go at it in the pro ranks, they clashed at Royal County Down. Fowler, alongside Billy Horschel, beat McIlroy (paired with Jonny Caldwell) in Sunday morning foursomes, as the Americans pulled out a 12½-11½ victory.

    Jamie Lovemark, Dustin Johnson, Rickie Fowler & Billy Horschel, 2007

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    Within four years of this foursome helping the U.S. win at Royal County Down, all four had earned PGA Tour cards.

    Danny Willett, 2007

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    David Cannon

    Before he'd become more well known as the 2016 Masters champion, Willett played for GB&I, posting an 0-2-2 mark at Royal County Down.

    Tommy Fleetwood, 2009

    Walker Cup - Day One

    David Cannon

    At 18, Fleetwood was the youngest member of the GB&I side at Merion, and did not have the long locks we've seen from him as a pro. He finished the week with a 1-1 record.

    Jordan Spieth & Patrick Rodgers, 2011

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    R&A via Getty Images

    Spieth went 2-0-1 at Royal Aberdeen, tieing his Sunday foursomes match when paired with Rodgers. The duo, however, were on the wrong end of the final tally, with the GB&I team winning 14-12.

    Patrick Cantlay, 2011

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    Matthew Lewis/R&A

    Cantlay was the No. 1 ranked amateur in the world and coming off reaching the final of the U.S. Amateur Championship a month earlier. He went 2-1-1 at Royal Aberdeen.

    Justin Thomas, 2013

    2013 Walker Cup - Previews

    Michael Cohen

    Thomas made the Walker Cup his amateur swansong, and did so in style, posting a 2-0-1 record include a 6-and-4 blowout win over Max Orrin in Sunday singles as the U.S. cruised to a 17-9 victory.

    Matt Fitzpatrick, 2013

    2013 Walker Cup - Day Two

    Hunter Martin/R&A

    Fitzpatrick, low amateur at the British Open that summer before winning the U.S. Amateur title, continued his solid play by posting a 3-1 record for GB&I in the team's loss at National Golf Links of America.

    Bryson DeChambeau, 2015

    2015 Walker Cup - Day One

    Jan Kruger/R&A

    Fresh off his U.S. Amateur win at Olympia Fields, DeChambeau was among the few bright spots for the American side that was drubbed by GB&I, 16½-9½, at Royal Lytham & St. Annes. He was one of just two U.S. players to win his Sunday singles match to go 2-0-1 for the week.

    Scottie Scheffler & Collin Morikawa, 2017

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    David Cannon/R&A

    Scheffler and Morikawa helped lead the U.S. to victory at LACC, the latter going 4-0. Both would go on to win major championships. They are two of nine players from that 2017 American team who have PGA Tour cards.