Tom Watson gets emotional recounting final round with his dad

His favorite course up there was Belvedere Golf Club in Charlevoix, beautiful (Willie) Watson course up there. And we’re up there, this is 1999. The last round of golf we played in that trip was Belvedere. We got to the first tee and I said, ‘All right, dad, here’s the deal: No pick ups today.’ The reason I said that was he hadn’t broken 90 since the stroke. He got off to a great start. He was 3-over-par after 8. He’s got this wired. Nine, he makes a double bogey, damn, but still, he’s out in 41.”

Read More Here: Tom Watson tells the story of final time he teed it up with his dad

CREDITS Adam Schupak – GolfWeek Jan 26, 2025

Tom Watson was on the verge of tears.

On Wednesday, the 75-year-old eight-time major champion attended the PGA Show in Orlando and was honored by the National Golf Course Owners Association with its Merit Award, the association’s highest honor. He participated in an hour-long fire side chat with NGCOA CEO Jay Karen and touched on some of the highs and lows of his career, sprinkling in a few swing tips with advice on the business of the game that attendees could bring home to their clubs. But it was during the tail end of the session when Karen opened the questioning to members of the audience that one attendee asked what seemed like an innocuous question that struck a chord with Watson. 

“What’s your favorite memory you have about the game of golf whether it’s playing or anything else that you can share with this room?”

Watson went silent for 10 seconds. “Excuse me,” he finally said. Another 10 seconds of silence in the room as Watson tried to control his emotions.  

“It was the last time I played with my dad,” he began. “I’ll tell you the story.”

Raymond Watson was a retired insurance salesman and former club champion at Kansas City (Mo.) Country Club, who stuck a cut-down, hickory-shafted 5-iron in his son’s hands in 1955 at age six and immediately taught him the correct grip and stance. A scratch handicap player, Raymond died of a heart attack in 2000 at age 80 while in Hawaii to watch his son compete in a PGA Tour Champions event.

“My dad had a stroke when he was 78 years old but he loved to play. He’d go out in those 38-degree days with a stocking cap on, gloves and his long handles and corduroy pants and he’d go out with six clubs in a little bag and he’d walk around the golf courses and play nine holes,” Watson said. “I’d always ask, ‘What did you shoot, dad?’ He’d say, ‘Ah, I shot a newspaper 50.’ 

“Newspaper means to guess what you’d shot when you picked up. I gave myself a 7. I kept asking, ‘What did you shoot?’ He’d say, ‘A newspaper 94.’ Before he had a stroke he shot in the upper 70s, shooting his age at 78 years old. We’d go up to Michigan by Long Lake. We would spend 2-3 weeks up there every summer. His favorite course up there was Belvedere Golf Club in Charlevoix, beautiful (Willie) Watson course up there. And we’re up there, this is 1999. The last round of golf we played in that trip was Belvedere. We got to the first tee and I said, ‘All right, dad, here’s the deal: No pick ups today.’ The reason I said that was he hadn’t broken 90 since the stroke. He got off to a great start. He was 3-over-par after 8. He’s got this wired. Nine, he makes a double bogey, damn, but still, he’s out in 41.”

Tom Watson puts the Green Jacket on 1978 Masters winner Gary Player at Augusta National Golf Club.

Watson figured his dad could make 48 on the back side, no problem, but then he started making some double bogeys on the way to the house. 

“We get to the last hole and he needs to make a bogey to shoot 89,” Watson continued. “He hits a perfect drive, just smokes it out there. But the second shot, the stroke got him. He had a right-hand problem and he lost the club and the ball hit off the toe of this hybrid and went straight right and underneath a tree in fescue rough and bare dirt. Oh, shoot! 

“I didn’t have the heart to go over there. He took some club out and I’ll never forget his last swing, whoosh, he couldn’t take a full swing because of a tree limb that stopped his follow through but there’s dust and the ball comes rocketing out and lands about 20 yards short of the green and rolls up like this (hands held close together). He’s got it! I’m walking up there and I contemplated giving him the putt but knowing my father I knew he wouldn’t accept it. I made him putt it and he missed it.”

But Raymond Watson still finished with a bogey for 89 and broke 90 for the first time since suffering a stroke.

“Walking off the green, he probably reacted just how I would’ve reacted,” Tom said. “Dad, you know what you shot? Yeah, son, I know what I shot. He was pissed that he missed that short putt. That was the last round of golf I ever played with my dad.”

Watson’s favorite memory involving golf had nothing to do with any of his greatest accomplishments but rather a round with his dad, the man who introduced him to the game. And everyone in that room at the Orange County Convention Center that hung on Watson’s every word at the NGCOA conference closing luncheon will never forget the Hall of Famer’s emotional response to a softball, open-ended question. 

Charlevoix Chamber of Commerce

OUR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND LEADERSHIP  – July 2022 –

Home – Charlevoix Area Chamber of Commerce

Charlevoix Area Chamber of Commerce
109 Mason St., Charlevoix, MI 49720
(231) 547-2101 | Fax: (231) 547-6633
[email protected]

How fortunate we are in Charlevoix to have a Chamber of Commerce so dedicated to supporting our business owners and helping our community flourish!

In essence, the goal of our Chamber is to further the interests of our businesses……to improve the economic, civic, and cultural well-being of our Charlevoix community, and we can help by being members and being active.

Those who are our Chamber want to do all they can to support our business owners and their team members by providing leadership and support, e.g.,:

·        networking opportunities
·        promotional opportunities
·        advocacy opportunities
·        relationship building
·        educational and professional development opportunities

We have a challenging business environment as a resort community in the summer and many retirees heading to warmer climates during winter months.

Our Chamber works tirelessly to help in a variety of ways, aside from the above, just a few examples being the beautification of our town, our parks, and our recreation facilities……and numerous special events which draw residents and visitors alike to “downtown” Charlevoix.

Let’s all do our part to assure that Charlevoix is a great place to make a good living and to live.

Sarah Van Horn President of The Charlevoix Area Chamber of Commerce

We are blessed to have the leadership of Sarah Van Horn as President of our Chamber of Commerce. She is born and raised here and has a deep passion for Charlevoix.

Sarah graduated from our high school, then went on the Grand Valley State University, and immediately came back to work at Castle Farms, where she had worked during summers while in school. She has great admiration for Castle Farms, as the Muellers treat their team members so well, e.g., they provide pathways for learning, help their people grow, attend conferences and they definitely have a genuine interest in the well-being of their team members. What a lesson for all business owners.

It was the mission of our Chamber that prompted Sarah to apply to become President when the opportunity arose. Simply, she loves our town and our people and believed this was her “calling”.

Sarah is a leader – she embodies humility, is a lifelong learner, and is committed to do all she can to make life easier and better for our business owners, including and certainly not limited to helping people find careers here, having a strong school system, ideas to help develop and maintain fully engaged workforces, housing for our team members, and for increasing prospects for customers – and also with a goal to help us hold steady during the winter.

We are fortunate to enjoy a solid membership base, and those who are members and are active are enthusiastic about the benefits received by being dedicated, and not just to their own business, also by being helpful and kind to our Charlevoix businesses, nonprofits and churches. A good many active members encourage others and share advice.

Thank you, Sarah, and your talented team. Your humility and dedication to our businesses and community are greatly appreciated!