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The moderator at the World Golf Hall of Fame induction ceremonies couldn’t have said it better, “A native son of Richmond, Virginia will stand before up tonight to take his rightful place in the World Golf Hall of Fame.”


After a distinguished golf career, which saw him win numerous amateur titles and 21 PGA TOUR Victories,  including the 1977 PGA Championship, Lanny Wadikins entered the shrine where his accomplishments will forever be portrayed.


Jim Nantz:
I’m thinking, though, how much and how long Lanny has deserved this recognition tonight. I’m also thinking about two things I’ve heard him say so many times. We all have this kind of floating through our heads, thoughts, wishes. I’ve heard Lanny say so many times: Boy, I wish my dad were alive to see this. I heard him many times say: I wish my boys, Chad and Tucker, had a chance to see me in my prime.


Lanny’s father was a prideful man who loved his boys, Lanny and Bobby, and his daughter Ann. He was driving a truck for a living when Lanny learned how to play the game. During the week he was on the highway for Blue and Gray Transportation, and the weekends were all about any activity in which he could involve his kids.


Lanny at age six would pull his dad’s pull cart so that he could spend time with the man he idolized. And by ten, well, he was playing the game at such a high level they were writing about him in Richmond.


He was breaking 80 at the age of 10. So notable that when he did that at Meadowbrook country club, the Richmond Times Dispatch wrote a story about it. A picture ran in the paper. There was Lanny. There’s the picture. Standing next to his golf bag, the bag bigger than the boy. Still the case, too, by the way.


A few years later he would meet a PGA TOUR professional for the first time. It was a big occasion there in the Richmond area when he played an exhibition match at Country Club of Virginia with Arnold Palmer. He remembers beating his hero that day.


I’m thinking it’s been a long time coming for Jerry Lanston Wadkins, Jr., to take his rightful place in the World Golf Hall of Fame with the best who ever played. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome to the Hall of Fame Lanny Wadkins.



Said Wadkins of this momentous occasion, “It’s something that I never dreamed of. You start out playing golf, you don’t think about playing for a Hall of Fame. You think about trying to win tournaments and support your family and maybe accomplishing some wins and stuff, you never think it will culminate in something like this. It’s just very exciting. “



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