News

Journal Editorial Report: The week's best and worst from Kim Strassel, Bill McGurn, Kyle Peterson and Dan Henninger. Images: AP/Getty Images Composite: Mark Kelly You can’t blame children in the ...
Ben Hogan, a 42-year-old from Ohio, is in the field at this week‘s U.S. Mid-Amateur. It's hard to miss his name on the tee sheet.
Hogan won the 1942 Hale America Open, which included qualifying rounds during World War II. He always believed it should have counted as his fifth U.S. Open victory.
Ben Hogan from 1946-1953 won nine major championships in only 16 starts. From the 1948 US Open through the 1953 British Open he won eight majors out of 11 he played in. From 1940-1956, Hogan ...
Ben Hogan's secret influenced generations of golfers. Not always for the best—and it wasn't his fault. Let's break it down.
Hogan had won a team event with Vic Ghezzi at the 1938 Hershey Four-Ball, but when he arrived at Pinehurst a few months shy of turning 28, he had not experienced individual glory on tour.
At Colonial Country Club, home of this week’s Charles Schwab Challenge, the presence of Ben Hogan, who won five times as a professional on the course (1946, 1947, 1952, 1953 and 1959), is ...