The odds of an amateur golfer making a hole-in-one are 12,000 to 1, according to the National Hole-In-One Registry.
Pfft. That's nothing.
Now calculate the odds of the same golf ball being used to make an ace on the same day at the same course by two different players.
"I don't think there are even odds for that," St. Louis Park High School golf coach Dan Becker said.
Probably less than a person getting struck by a meteor after winning the lottery.
"I don't know if it's ever happened in the history of golf," said Dan Simpson, head pro at the Minneapolis Golf Club.
That exact scenario happened Thursday evening at Simpson's course.
It started when 13-year-old Preston Miller carded his first career hole-in-one on No. 4 from 121 yards. Miller, a seventh-grader who plays on St. Louis Park High's varsity team, hit a 7-iron into the wind. The ball hopped a few times and rolled into the hole.