Ron Streck was 24 and in his third year on the PGA Tour in 1979. He was in the field for the season-opening Tournament of Champions after winning the San Antonio Texas Open the previous season.
The tournament was played at Rancho La Costa, the resort in Carlsbad, Calif. Streck was on the practice range when a friend of Gary Adams approached with a request.
Adams had mortgaged his house to finance a revolutionary idea in clubmaking: a metal wood. And his pal on the range asked Streck to take a couple of swings with Adams' driver.
Streck has described the scene that followed often over the past three decades:
"Back then, the range had a fence about 260 yards away, and the balls usually hit 10 yards short of the fence. The first time I hit the metal club, the ball flew all the way to the fence. I immediately stuck it in my bag as a 2-wood."
Streck also painted it black and put a wrap around the clubhead, out of fear that the club would be declared illegal.
In 1980, Streck was at Jack Nicklaus' tournament. He set up near Jack on the range and started hitting balls with the metal club.
"It was so much louder," he said. "Jack started looking around. Finally, he said, 'What's that ... let me see that.' He stared at it and then said, 'That looks like a practice club. I'll never use one of these.' "