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William Harlan Haas (born May 24, 1982) is an American professional golfer who plays on the and won the 2011 FedEx Cup. He is the son of former PGA Tour player .


Early life
In 1982, Haas was born in Charlotte, North Carolina and was raised in Greer, South Carolina, a suburb of Greenville. He was the third member of his family to play golf at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, following his father, and uncle, .


Amateur career
Haas had a distinguished college career: he was a three-time first-team , four-time All-ACC, two-time ACC player-of-the-year and the 2001 ACC rookie-of-the-year. During his college career, he won ten college tournaments. In his 2004 senior year, Haas won the , Jack Nicklaus Award and the Ben Hogan Award. He also set an NCAA record for lowest scoring average. Haas was a member of the 2003 team as well as two Palmer Cup teams.


Professional career
In 2004, Haas turned professional. In 2005, Haas was a member of the after failing to earn his PGA Tour card in qualifying school. His best finish in a Nationwide Tour event was a solo second at the 2005 Scholarship America Showdown. At the end of the season Haas birdied the last two holes at the 2005 qualifying tournament to earn his card on the PGA Tour for the 2006 season.

In his debut year on tour, Haas finished 99th on the money list, making 19 out of 30 cuts. His best result was at the Wachovia Championship where he finished in a tie for fourth. He kept his tour card for the 2007 season, but he missed eight cuts in his first 13 events. He started to turn his form around during the fall series and recorded his best finish of the year at the with a tie for third place. He ended the year 104th on the money list.

In 2008 Haas had a remarkably similar year to 2007, finishing 104th on the money list for the second year in a row. He qualified for the first two playoffs events before being eliminated at the halfway stage, finishing 73rd in the standings. Haas also played well at the for the second year running with a T-4 finish. Haas enjoyed much greater success in 2009 with four top-10 finishes including a tie for third at the Valero Texas Open. This set him up for a good run into the playoffs and for first time in his career, Haas qualified for the third playoff event, the BMW Championship before falling short of the top 30 mark and ending the season 41st in the standings. He also finished 61st on the year-end money list, winning just under $1.5 million.

At the start of the 2010 season Haas won his first PGA Tour title at the Bob Hope Classic in La Quinta, California. A week prior to the event, Haas received advice from his father, Jay, and great-uncle Bob Goalby about his foot positioning during his swing. Haas won the event by one shot over , Tim Clark and . The win came at the start of his fifth year on the PGA Tour.

With his first win Haas earned his first appearance in the Masters Tournament, where he finished in a tie for 26th. In the fall he won his second PGA Tour title of 2010 and of his career, in October at the , winning by three strokes over Michael Allen. The following week he finished runner-up at the McGladrey Classic to by one stroke. This late-season surge elevated him to 20th place on the season's final money list. In addition, he finished 31st in the FedEx cup standings after narrowly missing out on a place in the Tour Championship by one position.

In 2011 Haas won the season-ending Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club, defeating in a sudden death playoff at the third extra hole. At the second playoff hole, Haas played an exceptional pitch from the bank of the water hazard to save par and extend the playoff. The victory propelled Haas to 2011 FedEx Cup title and the $10 million prize. Haas was ranked seventh on the final 2011 PGA Tour money list (the FedEx Cup money does not count toward that total).

Haas was one of U.S. team captain, ', two picks for the 2011 Presidents Cup team, along with . The USA went on to retain the cup, and Haas contributed 1.5 points to the team, with an overall record of 1-3-1 for the week.

Haas won for the fourth time on the in February 2012 at the Northern Trust Open at Riviera Country Club. He came from two strokes back on the final day to hold the clubhouse lead and force both and to hole lengthy birdie putts on the last hole to ensure a playoff. All three players then parred the 18th, the first playoff hole, and continued to the driveable par-4 10th hole. Haas squirted his drive out to the left to leave a tricky pitch, while Mickelson found the rough and Bradley the bunker on the right. Haas decided to pitch out to the middle of the green, as both Mickelson and Bradley could not find the green on their second shots. Haas then holed a 43-foot birdie putt, and when neither Mickelson nor Bradley could match him, his victory was ensured.

In June 2013 Haas claimed his fifth PGA Tour title with a win at the AT&T National at Congressional Country Club. He won by three strokes over after shooting a closing 66, including six birdies and one bogey. He had begun the final round in a four-way tie for the lead. Haas is now one of four players who have won PGA Tour events in each of the last four seasons, joining , and .

In April 2014 Haas led the Masters after an opening round of 68. However, he shot a second round six-over-par 78 to fall down the leaderboard. Over the weekend he finished with rounds of 74-70 to end T20th.

In January 2015, Haas won for the sixth time on the PGA Tour, at the . He shot a final round 67 for a total of 22-under-par and one stroke victory over five other players. This was the second time that Haas had won the Humana Challenge in his career, having previously won in 2010 (as the Bob Hope Classic). Haas said afterwards that the victory came as a surprise to himself after only recently returning from a fractured wrist injury that hampered him throughout 2014. Haas was selected to his third Presidents Cup in 2015, becoming the first American to play in three Presidents Cups without being chosen for the .

Haas played the 2018-19 season out of the 126-150 category after an injury kept him off the course for part of the previous season and he did not earn enough to retain full Tour privileges, the first time in his career that Haas did not have full status on the PGA Tour.


Personal life
Haas comes from a distinguished family of golfers. His father is nine-time PGA Tour winner, . His brother, Jay Haas Jr. and uncle, , are former PGA Tour players. He is a great nephew of 1968 Masters Tournament winner .

Haas and his father won the CVS Caremark Charity Classic in 2004, an unofficial PGA Tour event.

On February 13, 2018, Haas was involved in an automobile crash in Pacific Palisades, California in which the driver, Mark Gibello, was pronounced dead. The following day, Haas was released from the hospital after treatment for an injury from the incident and released a statement saying that he would withdraw from the ongoing .


Awards and honors
  • In 2001, Haas earned Atlantic Coast Conference rookie-of-the-year honors. Haas was also earned All-ACC honors every year while at Wake Forest.
  • Haas was a two-time ACC player-of-the-year while at Wake Forest.
  • Haas was a three-time first-team during his collegiate experience.
  • In 2004, during his senior year, Haas won the three most prestigious college golfer awards: the , Jack Nicklaus Award, and Ben Hogan Award.
  • In 2011, Haas won the , the PGA Tour's year-ending championship trophy.


Amateur wins


Professional wins (7)

PGA Tour wins (6)
FedEx Cup playoff events (1)
Other PGA Tour (5)
1Jan 25, 2010Bob Hope Classic68-66-66-66-64=330−301 strokeTim Clark, ,
2Oct 3, 201066-66-69-72=273−153 strokesMichael Allen
3Sep 25, 2011Tour Championship68-67-69-68=272−8Playoff
4Feb 19, 2012Northern Trust Open72-68-68-69=277−7Playoff,
5Jun 30, 2013AT&T National70-68-68-66=272−123 strokes
6Jan 26, 2015 (2)67-63-69-67=266−221 stroke, ,
Park Sung-joon, ,

PGA Tour playoff record (2–3)

12011Bob Hope Classic, Vegas won with par on second extra hole
Haas eliminated by birdie on first hole
22011Greenbrier Classic, Stallings won with birdie on first extra hole
32011Tour ChampionshipWon with par on third extra hole
42012Northern Trust Open, Won with birdie on second extra hole
52016Valspar ChampionshipLost to par on first extra hole


Other wins (1)
1Jun 29, 2004CVS Charity Classic
(with )
60-62=122−201 stroke and

Other playoff record (0–1)

12016CVS Health Charity Classic
(with )
and Lost to birdie on first extra hole


Results in major championships
Masters Tournament
U.S. OpenCUTT40
The Open Championship
Masters TournamentT26T42T37T20T20T12T24T36
U.S. Open T23CUTCUTT35CUTT51T5T36
The Open ChampionshipCUTT57T19CUTT51CUTT9CUT
CUTT12T32T25T27T65T56T54CUT

CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" = tied


Summary
8
6
4
7
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 7 (2015 PGA – 2017 U.S. Open)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 1 (twice)


Results in The Players Championship
The Players ChampionshipT72CUTCUTT39CUTT25CUTT26T4T43CUTCUT

CUT = missed the halfway cut
"T" indicates a tie for a place


Results in World Golf Championships
Results not in chronological order before 2015.
T6T31T29T43T6T7T49T32
R64R64R64R32T17R163
T33T63T19T7T41T25T38T36
ChampionsT21T4210T21T48 T4T62

QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play
"T" = Tied


U.S. national team appearances
Amateur
  • Palmer Cup: 2002 (winners), 2003
  • : 2003

Professional


See also
  • 2005 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates


External links
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