10. Jim Furyk's disastrous U.S. Open tee shot
Furyk played the final round of the U.S. Open at Olympic without making a birdie, but he didn't drop out of the lead until he snap-hooked his tee shot at the par-5 16th, opening the door for eventual winner Webb Simpson. (Getty Images)
9. The rise (and hasty exit) of Jungle Bird
If you were watching Bob Costas interview Webb Simpson after Simpson's U.S. Open win, you might have thought you were hallucinating when you started hearing bird calls and saw a strange man rise up out of the bottom of the TV picture. (Getty Images)
8. I.K. Kim's 18-inch miss
Usually when a caddie hugs a player, it's in congratulations. But John Limanti offered I.K. Kim a sheltering arm in consolation after she lipped out a 1 1/2-foot putt that would have won the Kraft Nabisco Championship. (Getty Images)
7. Webb Simpson's U.S. Open-winning par save
To have a chance of winning the U.S. Open, Simpson had to par 18. That possibility loomed when his approach ended up in a hole in the greenside rough. The ball could have gone anywhere on his next shot, but it wound up 3 feet from the cup. (Getty...
6. Tiger Woods' major teases
After failing to factor at the Masters, Woods shared the 36-hole lead in the U.S. Open and PGA Championship, and was third after 36 holes in the British Open. But all resulted in weekend fades. (Getty Images)
5. Louis Oosthuizen's Masters albatross
Oosthuizen made only the fourth albatross in Masters history when he knocked a 253-yard 4-iron shot to the front of the green on the par-5 second hole and watched the ball roll almost 100 feet into the hole for a 2. (Getty Images)
4. Ernie Els' British Open-winning putt
Els won his fourth major when few thought he still had it in him. Els, whose putter had bedeviled him all year, sank a 15-footer for birdie at the last that turned out to be the winning stroke. (Getty Images)
3. Adam Scott's British Open collapse
It was finally going to happen - Scott was going to win a major. Leading by four shots with four holes to play, he couldn't miss, could he? Turns out missing was all he could do, as he bogeyed all four holes to lose to Ernie Els. (Getty Images)
2. Rory McIlroy's PGA walkover
If anyone still thought McIlroy's eight-shot win in last year's U.S. Open was a fluke, McIlroy had an answer in the PGA Championship: ANOTHER eight-shot win. McIlroy became the youngest player since Seve Ballesteros to win two majors. (Getty Images)
1. Bubba Watson's miracle Masters shot
Watson's jaw-dropping, through-the-trees, half-a-football-field-hook approach to the 10th green on the first playoff hole set up his Masters victory over Louis Oosthuizen and taught us all the meaning of 'Bubba Golf.' (Getty Images)