Alan Shipnuck (1973) is an American sportswriter, specializing in golf. He is a partner and content creator for the Fire Pit Collective. He was previously a senior writer at Sports Illustrated and Golf Magazine .
Shipnuck is a native of Salinas, in Central California. [1] His father David Shipnuck was an economics professor at Hartnell College. [1] His late mother Barbara Shipnuck was the first woman elected to the Monterey County Board of Supervisors, serving four terms. [1] Shipnuck grew up playing sports and reading about sports; he combined these passions by becoming the editor of his junior high newspaper and the Salinas High yearbook, while spending his summers working as a "cart boy" at Pebble Beach Golf Links. [2] When he was a junior in high school, Shipnuck answered an ad in The Salinas Californian under the headline "Sportswriters Wanted," beginning his career in journalism. [3]
While an undergrad at UCLA, Shipnuck maintained a two-year correspondence with Mark Mulvoy, the managing editor of SI whom he had met on the first tee at Pebble Beach. [3] This led to an internship beginning in January 1994, when Shipnuck took a leave of absence from UCLA to work out of SI's headquarters in New York City [2] on the nascent Golf Plus section, which provided supplemental coverage of the sport to subscribers. [4] Shipnuck earned numerous bylines during his internship, culminating with a cover story on Ken Griffey, Jr. in the August 8, 1994 issue. [2] After returning to UCLA to earn his Communications degree, Shipnuck was hired in April 1996 as the youngest staff writer in Sports Illustrated history. [5]
Shipnuck covered more than 70 of golf's major championships for SI and wrote two dozen cover stories on subjects [3] including Sportsman of the Year pieces on Brett Favre and Michael Phelps. His 7,000 word feature about Donald Trump made international news when it revealed the President had referred to the White House as a "dump." [6]
In April 2018, Shipnuck left SI to join Golf Magazine . [7] In 2021, he won his 12th first-place citation in the annual awards contest conducted by the Golf Writers Association of America, breaking the record held by Dan Jenkins, a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame. [8] In March 2021, Shipnuck left Golf Magazine to serve as partner and executive editor at a new media company, the Fire Pit Collective. [9]
In 2001, Shipnuck's first book, Bud, Sweat & Tees, was published by Simon & Schuster. It became a national best-seller in 2002 after the protagonist, Rich Beem, won the PGA Championship. [10]
The Battle For Augusta National was published in 2004. It is a revisionist club history of the home of the Masters and chronicles the controversy around its then all-male membership; Publishers Weekly hailed it for "superbly recounting all of the debacle's hilarious, sad, serious and absurd details." [10]
Swinging From My Heels: Confessions of an LPGA Star (2010) is a diary of Christina Kim's triumphs and tribulations on the LPGA Tour.
Shipnuck co-wrote the novel The Swinger with his friend Michael Bamberger. A national best-seller in 2011, [11] it goes inside the world of a cross-cultural golf superstar whose life is torn asunder by scandal; there is some resemblance to the life and times of Tiger Woods. [12]
In 2017, Shipnuck's coffee table book Monterey Peninsula Country Club: A Complete History was published. In 2018, he co-wrote with Harriet Diamond her memoir The Best Is Yet To Come.
PHIL: The Rip-Roaring (and Unauthorized!) Biography of Golf's Most Colorful Superstar was published by Avid Reader Press/Simon & Schuster in May 2022. In February 2022, an excerpt from Phil appeared on FirePitCollective.com, containing Mickelson's provocative statements about Saudi Arabia and the PGA Tour. [13] In the ensuing controversy, three corporate sponsors ended their affiliation with Mickelson [14] and he announced he would be taking time off to "prioritize the ones I love most and work on being the man I want to be." [15]
Shipnuck is a member of the 2022 class of the Salinas Valley Sports Hall of Fame. [16] He lives in Carmel, California and is the head coach of the girls basketball team at Carmel High School. [2]
Pebble Beach is an unincorporated community on the Monterey Peninsula in Monterey County, California, United States. The small coastal residential community of mostly single-family homes is also notable as a resort destination, and the home of the golf courses of Cypress Point Club, Monterey Peninsula Country Club, and Pebble Beach Golf Links. Nonresidents are charged a toll to use 17-Mile Drive, the main road through Pebble Beach, making it a de-facto gated community.
Philip Alfred Mickelson is an American professional golfer who currently plays in the LIV Golf League. He has won 45 events on the PGA Tour, including six major championships: three Masters titles, two PGA Championships, and one Open Championship (2013). With his win at the 2021 PGA Championship, Mickelson became the oldest major championship winner in history at the age of 50 years, 11 months, and 7 days. He is nicknamed "Lefty", as he plays left-handed.
Hal Evan Sutton is an American professional golfer, currently playing on the PGA Tour Champions, who achieved 14 victories on the PGA Tour, including the 1983 PGA Championship and the 1983 and 2000 Players Championships. Sutton was also the PGA Tour's leading money winner in 1983 and named Player of the Year.
Stevenson School is a coeducational, private school for boarding and day students in preschool through 12th grade. Its high school campus is in Pebble Beach, while its PK-8 campus is in an unincorporated area of neighboring Carmel.
The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is a professional golf tournament on the PGA Tour, held annually at Pebble Beach, California, near Carmel. The tournament is usually held during the month of February on two different courses, currently Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill Golf Course and previously, Monterey Peninsula Country Club.
Spyglass Hill Golf Course is a links golf course on the west coast of the United States, located on the Monterey Peninsula in California. The course is part of the Pebble Beach Company, which also owns the Pebble Beach Golf Links, The Links at Spanish Bay, and the Del Monte Golf Course. The PGA golf head pro at Spyglass Hill is Patrick Gannon.
Pebble Beach Golf Links is a public golf course on the west coast of the United States, located in Pebble Beach, California.
The Monterey Peninsula Country Club (MPCC) is a 36-hole golf club on the West Coast of the United States, located on the Monterey Peninsula in Pebble Beach, California.
The 2004 Masters Tournament was the 68th Masters Tournament, held April 8–11 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia. Phil Mickelson, 33, won his first major championship with a birdie on the final hole to win by one stroke over runner-up Ernie Els. The purse was $6.0 million and the winner's share was $1.17 million.
Ernest W. "Trip" Kuehne III is an American amateur golfer. He is most remembered for his defeat at the hands of Tiger Woods in the 1994 U.S. Amateur, and his subsequent refusal to turn professional in favor of a successful amateur career.
Michael F. Bamberger is a senior writer for Golf.com and the author of multiple books.
Samuel Finley Brown Morse was an American environmental conservationist and the developer of Pebble Beach. He was known as the Duke of Del Monte and ran his company from the 1919 until his death in 1969. Originally from the eastern United States, Morse moved west and fell in love with the Monterey Peninsula, eventually owning and preserving vast acreage while also developing golf courses and The Lodge at Pebble Beach.
The Pacific Improvement Company (PIC) was a large holding company in California and an affiliate of the Southern Pacific Railroad. It was formed in 1878, by the Big Four, who were influential businessmen, philanthropists and railroad tycoons who funded the Central Pacific Railroad, (C.P.R.R.). These men were: Leland Stanford (1824–1893), Collis Potter Huntington (1821–1900), Mark Hopkins (1813–1878), and Charles Crocker (1822–1888). They owned the company, each with 25% interest. Archived records date from 1869 to 1931.
Monterey Car Week is a week in August in which a number of car-related events are held in and around Monterey, California.
Thomas Albert Work was an American businessman and banker of Pacific Grove, California, known around Monterey as T. A. Work.
LIV Golf is a professional men's golf tour. The name "LIV" refers to the Roman numerals for 54, the number of holes played at LIV events. The first LIV Golf Invitational Series event started on 9 June 2022, at the Centurion Club near St Albans in Hertfordshire, UK. The Invitational Series became the LIV Golf League in 2023.
Santiago Jacob Duckworth, known locally as S. J. Duckworth, served in the California State Assembly for the 61st district from 1893 to 1895. He was as an early Monterey pioneer businessman, real estate developer, and visionary of the short-lived Carmel City. In 1889, he wanted to build a Catholic summer resort, bought the rights to develop the area, filed a subdivision map, and started selling lots.
Honoré Escolle, was as a French businessman from Monterey, California. In 1878, he purchased 1,400 unsettled acres (570 ha) acres of the Sanchez's ranch near Gonzales, California. In the late 1880s, he sold 324 barren acres (131 ha) to Santiago J. Duckworth to build a Catholic Summer resort. This land later became Carmel-by-the-Sea, California
The Carmel Arts and Crafts Club was an art gallery, theatre and clubhouse founded in 1905, by Elsie Allen, a former art instructor for Wellesley College.