Growing up in Central New York in the 1980s and ’90s, the B.C. Open was our Masters, our U.S. Open, our major championship. For one week every September, the best players in the world came to our little corner of the golf universe at En-Joie Golf Club in Endicott. And year after year, Fuzzy Zoeller showed up.

I got his autograph more times than I can count. As a kid clutching a golf ball or a tournament program, waiting by the ropes with dozens of other fans, Fuzzy never rushed past. He’d stop, sign, crack a joke that would make the adults laugh, and move on with that distinctive whistle and easy gait that made him look like he was out for a Sunday stroll rather than competing for a paycheck. Even then, I understood that not every player was like that. Some treated autograph seekers like an obligation. Fuzzy treated us like we mattered.

Years later, long after I’d moved to Florida to work in the golf industry, I had an encounter with Fuzzy that perfectly encapsulated who he was. He was in town playing a Champions Tour event at the King and the Bear course at World Golf Village, and I happened to be at Bill Murray’s Caddyshack Restaurant in St. Augustine. Nature called, and I walked into the bathroom — and there was Fuzzy Zoeller, standing at the urinal.

Now, there’s an unwritten rule about bathroom etiquette, especially when it comes to celebrities. You don’t make eye contact. You don’t start conversations. You certainly don’t ask for autographs. But Fuzzy, being Fuzzy, looked over and said something that broke the ice — I can’t remember the exact words, but it was funny enough that we both laughed. We ended up having a brief conversation right there, as absurd as that sounds, and he was exactly the same guy I’d met as a kid at the B.C. Open: warm, funny, completely unpretentious.

That was Fuzzy’s gift. He won 10 PGA TOUR events, including the 1979 Masters in his first appearance at Augusta National and the 1984 U.S. Open at Winged Foot, where he demolished Greg Norman by eight shots in an 18-hole playoff. Those are Hall of Fame credentials. But what made Fuzzy special wasn’t just what he accomplished — it was how he carried himself while doing it.

He played with a smile. He whistled between shots. He joked with galleries and seemed genuinely happy to be out there, even when things weren’t going his way. In an era when golf was becoming increasingly corporate and buttoned-up, Fuzzy remained refreshingly human. He never forgot that golf was supposed to be fun, and he never forgot the fans who made it all possible.

Yes, his career had its controversies, most notably the racist comments he made about Tiger Woods at the 1997 Masters — remarks that rightfully haunted him and for which he apologized. It’s a stain on his legacy that can’t be ignored. But it’s also true that people are complicated, capable of both great kindness and terrible mistakes. Those of us who knew Fuzzy through his interactions with fans saw someone who was generous with his time and genuine in his warmth.

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