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Duval's 59 came in a memorable final round that helped him win the 1999 Bob Hope Classic.
Geiberger shot the first 59 in the second round of the 1977 Memphis Classic at Colonial Country Club. Beck shot his 59 in the third round of the 1991 Las Vegas Invitational at Sunrise Golf Course.
Duval finished with a 67 Thursday while Goydos and everyone else talked about his amazing round. When several reporters greeted Duval after he signed his card, he knew what number they wanted to discuss.
"The score is kind of the golden egg," he said of Goydos' round. "You have to hit shots, you have to hit putts. Regardless of where it's done or who does it, it's amazing."
Goydos birdied every hole on the back nine except for No. 15, where he holed a 6-foot par putt to keep a sub-60 in sight. He finished with three birdies, the last one from 7 feet to top off his memorable day.
"Standing over that last putt, I was probably as nervous as I've ever been over a putt in my life," he said. "The putt would have gone in a thimble. Don't know why. That's just the way it went today."
Goydos raised his putter to a roar from the crowd when his 59th shot fell into the cup and he high-fived his way to the clubhouse.
It was quite a reception for a guy who came in at No. 137 in the world rankings. He had missed the last two cuts and had not broken par in his last six rounds.
"I thought my game was getting better," Goydos said. "Again, the quantum leap from where I thought it was getting better to where it went today, I can't explain. But it was trending in the right direction."
Goydos set himself up for a good round by playing the front nine at 4 under.
"And then the craziness just blurted out of me," he said.
Goydos sank a 6-foot putt on No. 10 to go 5-under. He looked to be in trouble on the par-4 11th when his approach didn't hit high enough on the green. The ball rolled back, leaving him with a 39-foot putt for birdie.
No problem. Goydos knocked it right into the hole.
"I made a bomb -- I mean dead center," he said.
With a 25-foot birdie putt on the par-4 13th, Goydos dropped to 8 under. He hit to within 6 feet on the par-4 14th and sank the putt to leave him 9 under.
Goydos finished with a flourish. He putted from the fringe to sink a 14-footer for birdie on the par-3 16th, dropped in an 11-footer on the par-5 17th, and knocked a 7-iron from 145 yards to within 7 feet on 18.
The crowd at 18 had grown steadily as Goydos' score kept dropping and the news spread through the gallery. Even fellow players Notah Begay and J.J. Henry dropped by to watch his run at history.
The final putt was like most of the others Goydos rolled in with his cross-handed grip, right in the middle of the cup.
"I think that is a goal in your career, to break 60," he said. "When I look back and I'm not playing anymore ... I've got 10 holes-in-one. I've got three double-eagles. Fifty-nine is one of those things I'm going to look at and say, 'That's pretty cool.'"
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