Note: The following appears in the Charlotte gameday football program.
It was only a recreational practice round with his older brother, Andrew, on a late summer afternoon, but there was some pressure on William Nottingham as he approached the 18th hole at Ridgefield Country Club in his hometown of Kingsport, Tenn.
The Clemson rising senior needed a birdie on the final hole to shoot 59, the most revered number in golf. He had already made 12 birdies in his first 17 holes, and one more would give him that number on the par-72 course.
“I shot a 29 on the front side with seven birdies,” recalled Nottingham. “So, the thought (of a 59) crossed my mind. I made a birdie on 10, then made a par on the 11th, the easiest hole on the course.”
He responded with birdies on 12 and 13.
“My brother wasn’t feeling well and wanted to go in,” admitted Nottingham. “But I made him stay.”
Nottingham wanted to make sure he had a witness to history.
After birdies on 15 and 16, he just needed a birdie on the last, a par-four, 380-yard hole, to reach the special number. Nottingham hit his second shot to within 10 feet and made the putt.
Nottingham is hoping that history repeats itself as he heads into his final season as a four-year starter for a program that has finished in the top 15 in the nation each of his first three seasons.
Former Tiger Bryson Nimmer shot a 59 in a practice round leading up to last season, and it turned out to be a foreshadowing of a great final year. Nimmer went on to be a first-team All-American, set a Tiger record for stroke average (69.7) and won a record four tourneys.