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It remains one of the most mind-boggling blunders in the history of men's major championship golf: Jean Van de Velde, Carnoustie, 18th hole. You don't have to dig far into your memory banks to ...
At the 2005 Open de France, Van de Velde had a chance for a dramatic home victory. But he, again, found water on the 18th hole and lost to countryman Jean-Francois Remesy in a playoff.
This choke did not happen on the golf course ... for first place and been in an 18-hole playoff the next day. Jean Van de Velde was a journeyman player who had a chance at history at the 1999 ...
What followed became one of the most famous collapses in sport. The sight of the haunted face of Van de Velde peering out of the Barry Burn with his trousers rolled up above his knees ...
RELATED: The Charming Choke: Jean Van de Velde, 25 years later This week, the Frenchman returned to the site of his infamous implosion for the Senior Open Championship, where he was asked about ...
CARNOUSTIE, Scotland -- With his name all but engraved on the Claret Jug, Jean Van de Velde made a decision that will be debated for as long as the Scottish days are long. Jean Van de Velde ...
So it was startling last week when a dashing Frenchman named Jean Van de Velde threw away the British ... if he understood that he was destined to choke like a dog on Sunday and disgrace himself ...
Slightly more than 17 years have passed since Jean Van de Velde gift-wrapped the Claret Jug for Paul Lawrie at Carnoustie and became a sports punchline. After some 6,227 days, Van de Velde has ...
More from Golf Digest Life Goes On ‘It never haunted me’: Jean van de Velde delivers great answer about ’99 Open collapse in return to Carnoustie local knowledge The Charming Choke ...
“This is only a golf tournament,” Jean Van de Velde said in 1999. “Who is going to remember this in 200 years?” How can anyone possibly forget? Van de Velde stood on the 18th tee at ...
Frenchman Jean van de Velde will forever be known for the three-shot lead he squandered on the 18th hole of the Open Championship at Carnoustie in 1999, but now he’s content in his full-time job ...