Eger, Padgett Join Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame
By Lee Pace
Eger, Padgett Join Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame
The Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame is a robust enclave of a hundred some-odd individuals who have left their imprint on the game of golf from Charleston to Linville and points in between or had indelible roots to the region while doing newsworthy golfing deeds nationally. The group is administered by the Carolinas Golf Association and inductees are saluted with plaques lining a hallway of the Carolina Hotel at Pinehurst.
There are great players, from Billy Joe Patton and Harvie Ward, both small-town North Carolina boys, to Arnold Palmer, who matriculated at Wake Forest College in the 1950s.
The ladies are represented by Chapel Hill’s Estelle Lawson Page, a pioneer in early women’s amateur circuits and winner of one U.S. Women’s Amateur and seven North & South Women’s Amateurs, and Beth Daniels, who grew in Charleston before a Hall of Fame career on the LPGA Tour.
There are noted golf instructors (Peggy Kirk Bell and John Gerring), architects (Donald Ross and Tom Fazio) and journalists (Dick Taylor and Ron Green Sr.).
Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame
The world of golf administration is represented by stalwart figures like Richard Tufts (Pinehurst owner and USGA president in the mid-1950s) and P.J. Boatwright (Spartanburg native and USGA executive director in the 1980s).
Two individuals who were excellent players but made an enduring mark in golf administration and in Pinehurst will join the august body in March 2025.
David Eger and Don Padgett II each wielded a pretty good stick in their day. Eger won the Donald Ross Junior on Pinehurst No. 2 as a 17-year-old, the North & South Amateur as a 38-year-old and, post 50 years old, won four tournaments on the PGA Champions Tour. Padgett was a member of the PGA Tour in the early 1970s and played in the one-and-done 144-hole World Open at Pinehurst in 1973.
But both played key roles in Pinehurst No. 2 evolving from a course that had lost some of its luster during the 1970s and into the 1980s before rebounding to become a four-time venue of the U.S. Open (with four more on the schedule through 2047). Eger helped reintroduce No. 2 to the world of competitive golf in the 1990s, and Padgett had the vision to suggest and then oversee the Coore & Crenshaw renovation in 2010-11.
“David was a key voice in the USGA’s decision to take the 1999 U.S. Open to Pinehurst,” says David Fay, the USGA executive director from 1989-2010. “He is someone whose opinions on golf courses were taken most seriously by me and others at the USGA.”
“Don created the vision for restoring No. 2 to is original state, an incredibly gutsy undertaking for a course that had hosted two very successful U.S. Opens,” says Mac Everett, the chairman of the Presidents Council that led corporate sales efforts for the 2014 U.S. Open and Women’s Open at Pinehurst. “But his vision was only a start. There remained the planning, execution and completion of the project. This is where Don excelled.”
It’s not at all by design but rather providential timing that two with such connections to Pinehurst should be recognized one year after Pinehurst staged its fourth U.S. Open and its first with the sparkling new USGA Golf House Pinehurst and World Golf Hall of Fame buildings sitting in the backdrop.
David Eger
Eger remembers when Pinehurst Resort and owner Bob Dedman Sr. were digging their way out of the Diamondhead bankruptcy messiness in the 1980s that the resort presented itself to the PGA Tour, hat in hand. Eger was five years into his career with the tour, running tournaments and serving as a rules official, and two of his mentors had deep Pinehurst roots, those being Boatwright and Clyde Mangum, who lived in Pinehurst in the mid-1900s while running the CGA as executive director.
One day in 1987, he got a call from Ron Coffman, a longtime editor with Golf World magazine (published in Southern Pines at the time), who was also friends with Don Padgett Sr., who had just been appointed director of golf at Pinehurst.
“Ron invited me to come up and play No. 2 with him and Padge,” Eger says. “I had always thought Pinehurst as a wonderful, wonderful place, but obviously it fell on hard times for a while. We were playing the course and Padge assured me if the tour was interested, they would bend over backwards to do anything within reason to have another event. Lo and behold, we were looking down the road for a new spot for our Tour Championship. Pinehurst in late October, after it had cooled off and the bent was healthy and firmed up, would be a perfect spot.”
Eger was impressed with everything he saw and heard and reported back to PGA Tour Commissioner Deane Beman. That’s how the 1991 Tour Championship came to be, with Craig Stadler beating Russ Cochran in a playoff for the title. Eger looked at the leaderboard during the final round and noted that only Stadler and Cochran were in red numbers.
“Two players under par,” he mused. “That looks like a U.S. Open.”
A portend of things to come, no doubt.
Fay was in Pinehurst that week, closely inspecting the logistics, the course, the accommodations, the traffic, the galleries and the overall ambiance. He came away with a thumbs-up. He believed a U.S. Open at Pinehurst could be “Tracy-and-Hepburnesque, a match made in heaven.” That week led to the announcement less than two years later that the USGA would stage the 1999 Open at Pinehurst.
“The players loved Pinehurst, but not all of them loved the golf course,” Eger says of that first Tour Championship. “So many didn’t understand this was a golf course where you did not necessarily shoot right at the pin to get the ball close. You had to play these undulations and angles. The sooner they understood that, the better. If they refused to buy into that philosophy, they were not going to score well. It was a difficult thing for players accustomed to taking dead aim at a pin to have to aim 30 feet away.”
Don Padgett II
Padgett II watched all of this from a distance as he was running the golf operation and later the entire resort at Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio, through the early 2000s. His father retired at Pinehurst in 2002, and two years later longtime CEO Pat Corso left to establish a club management firm. Padgett II became Pinehurst’s new CEO. He kept a low profile during the 2005 Open, all the prep work having been done before his arrival, but he watched and listened closely.
The man who had played three years on the PGA Tour shot a 66 in the third round of a U.S. Open and kept close ties with current players had quite the sharp eye. Padgett was struck the week of the 2005 Open by how much the buzz about the golf course seemed to have quieted from six years earlier.
“The difference between ’99 and ’05 was amazing,” Padgett says. “So much of what you read and heard in ’99 was how great the golf course was. But in ’05, you didn’t hear that.”
Over the next three years, Padgett came to believe that narrowing the fairways of No. 2 and allowing the rough to grow had stripped the course of the essence of the Sandhills and stricken the similarities in the landscape that architect Donald Ross had drawn to his homeland in Scotland. The final nail was playing No. 2 with Lanny Wadkins in June 2008 and Wadkins ripping the course as being a shell of what it was during its so-called “golden era” of the mid-1900s.
That gave Padgett the confidence to suggest to owner Bob Dedman Jr. (Dedman Sr. died in 2002) that they flip the palette from the lush green look everyone coveted in golf to a haphazard display of hardpan sand and wire grass, gnarly edged bunkers and fairways watered only with a single-row irrigation system. The work by Coore & Crenshaw began in February 2010 and was complete 13 months later.
Eger, who left golf administration in the late 1990s to play the PGA Champions Tour, was among the first golfers to play No. 2 in March 2011 after the course had been closed all winter.
“The distinction between grass and the sand is wonderful,” he said. “It’s the way golf courses from the golden age looked. Pinehurst had that distinctive look of the scrub rough areas and wire grass. Putting it back took a lot of courage, but ultimately it was the right thing to do.”
The modern age of Pinehurst No. 2 is four decades in the making. The Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame is properly saluting two of its major protagonists.
Read about Golf History Abounds in Pinehurst.
Lee Pace is a freelance golf writer who has written about Sandhills area golf for four decades and is the author of club histories about Pinehurst Resort & Country Club, Mid Pines, Pine Needles and Forest Creek.