A memorable hole-in-one was made in the
1973 Open Championship by
Gene Sarazen at age 71. Earl Dietering of Memphis, Tennessee, 78 years old at the time, is believed to hold the record for the oldest person to make a hole-in-one twice during one round. During the second round of the 1971
Martini International tournament, held at the Royal Norwich Golf Club in England,
John Hudson had two consecutive holes-in-one. Teeing off, using a 4-iron, at the par-three, 195-yard 11th hole, Hudson holed his tee shot for a hole-in-one. At the next hole, the downhill 311-yard, par-four 12th, and this time using a driver, he once again holed his tee shot, for another ace. This is believed to be the only time a player has scored holes-in-one at consecutive holes in a major professional tournament. Despite the relative rarity of holes-in-one, there have been a total of six in
Ryder Cup matches.
Peter Butler scored the first in
1973 at
Muirfield followed by a 20-year gap before
Nick Faldo scored a hole-in-one in
1993.
Two years later,
Costantino Rocca and
Howard Clark both scored holes-in-one before an 11-year gap to
2006 saw
Paul Casey and
Scott Verplank both hole out in one on the 14th hole. On August 11, 2016,
Justin Rose shot a hole-in-one during the first round of the
golf tournament of the
2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, which is considered to be the first in Olympic history. For the 189 yards par-3 hole, he used a 7-iron. == Traditions ==