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"PGA Champion" Steve Marino Hand Signed 3X5 Card Todd Mueller COA

$ 6.85

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Sport: Golf-PGA
  • Original/Reprint: Original
  • Product: Index Card

    Description

    Up for auction "PGA Champion" Steve Marino Hand Signed 3X5 Card. This item is certified authentic by Todd Mueller Autographs and comes with their Certificate of Authenticity.
    ES-4842
    Stephen Paul Marino, Jr.
    (born March 10, 1980) is an American
    professional golfer
    who plays on the
    PGA Tour
    . A
    military brat
    , Marino was born in
    Altus, Oklahoma
    , where his father, Steve Sr., was stationed as a
    navigator
    in the
    U.S. Air Force
    . The family moved to Alaska when he was an infant, and later to Ohio and Alabama. In 1991, they relocated to
    Fairfax
    ,
    Virginia
    , a
    suburb
    southwest of
    Washington, D.C.
    , where they continue to reside. Marino's golf game began to blossom at age 14, when he worked and played at the Army Navy Country Club in Fairfax; he graduated from
    W.T. Woodson High School
    in 1998. During his senior year he won the Virginia High School championship, and received a golf scholarship to the
    University of Virginia
    in
    Charlottesville
    . At the end of his freshman year, he won the 1999 Virginia Amateur championship. He was a member of the
    Beta Theta Pi
    fraternity
    and graduated from U.Va. in 2002 with a degree in
    sociology
    .
    Marino embarked on his professional career in 2002 on the Tar Heel Tour, and moved to Florida to practice and play year-round. He qualified for the
    Canadian Tour
    for the 2003 season, and went to Canada again in 2004, but then headed back to Florida. There he played on the
    Golden Bear Tour
    , a developmental circuit backed by
    Jack Nicklaus
    in which all the events were within 60 miles (100 km) of
    West Palm Beach
    , near where he lived then (and now).
    Before reaching the PGA Tour, Marino won the 2006
    Sidney Frank
    Memorial
    Gateway Tour
    Championship, where he carded a 13-under-par 59 during the third round. It was his second Gateway Tour win of 2006.
    [8]
    Marino was a
    Monday qualifier
    on the
    Nationwide Tour
    in
    2006
    , where he earned 4,000 and finished 42nd on the money list, which was insufficient to earn a PGA Tour card. Instead, he qualified through the six-round
    qualifying school
    in December, earning his card for the 2007 season. In his rookie season of 2007, Marino finished 80th on the PGA Tour money list and retained his tour card for 2008, with winnings exceeding ,100,000. He had four top-10 finishes in 31 events. In 2008, Marino finished 34th on the PGA Tour money list, earning over ,000,000, and retained his tour card for 2009. He had six top-10 finishes in 32 events, highlighted by a career-best second-place finish in the
    Mayakoba Golf Classic at Riviera Maya-Cancun
    in
    Mexico
    . In May 2009, Marino and
    Tim Clark
    lost to
    Steve Stricker
    in a two-hole playoff at the
    Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial
    in
    Fort Worth, Texas
    . Marino received international attention in 2009 when he was co-leader (with
    Tom Watson
    ) at the halfway point of the
    2009 Open Championship
    at
    Turnberry
    in
    Scotland
    . However, Marino faltered over the weekend and finished the event tied 38th. He finished the 2009 season 35th on the PGA Tour money list. Marino finished tied for second at the 2011
    Sony Open in Hawaii
    . He led the 2011
    AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am
    after the second and third rounds, but on the final day, eventual winner
    D. A. Points
    passed him. Marino had to make an eagle on the par-5 18th hole in order to tie Points, who had finished. But Marino hit into the
    Pacific Ocean
    and took a triple-bogey eight, which dropped him into a tie for fourth place.
    Marino led the 2011
    Arnold Palmer Invitational
    during the fourth round, as late as the 17th hole. But he suffered two buried lies in bunkers on the 15th and 17th holes, and despite making a birdie on the final hole, ended in second place, one stroke behind winner
    Martin Laird
    .
    [12]
    Marino advanced his position on the
    Official World Golf Ranking
    to a career high of #54. Marino was identified as the best PGA Tour player without a victory by writer Craig Dolch, who noted that he has posted 21 top-10 finishes in his 124 Tour starts to date.
    In January 2012, Marino was diagnosed with a bone contusion on the tip of his tibia and femur in his left leg. He did not play again until May.
    In 2012, he played at total of six PGA Tour events, making the cut in two of them. In 2013, he played in 12 PGA Tour events, making the cut five times. In March 2016, Marino lost in a sudden-death playoff to
    Tony Finau
    at the
    Puerto Rico Open
    . In the playoff, both players birdied the 18th hole twice. But playing the 18th for the third time in the playoff, Marino three-putted from just off the green for a par, while Finau birdied the hole again for the win. This was Marino's fifth runner-up finish of his career but he is still winless in 182 events on the PGA Tour.