One moment Bill Murray is addressing his ball deep in a bunker at Spyglass's sixth hole.
The next his shot is sailing over the green and into the gallery.
An elderly gentleman swats it down from his chest to his feet and then starts to kick it around, before someone tells him that—if he's going to affect PGA play—he should shove it toward the green and improve ol' Billy's chances.
Murray approaches the scrum, tells the crowd that it's too bad they have to move, but their hands should be stamped (which isn't happening).
He proceeds to smack the ball back the other direction.
What happens next is vintage Murray.
He plops himself onto a unexpecting female fan's lap—and stays there while the rest of his group plays.
When he gets up, she says he needs to lose some weight.
As Murray moved over to the next tee, a woman asked for his autograph.
On her belly.
One moment, an unexpecting female. Then next, an expectant mother.
And then, suddenly, two more, none of whom knew one another, all on one specific golf hole in Del Monte Forest, materialize with their own swollen stomachs and Sharpies.
This would be an official only-at-the-AT&T-Pebble-Beach-Pro-Am situation.
So many come to the surface annually, which inspired a Weekly compilation of the last decade's worth.
Because it's more than golf, at least the way we treat it.
It's celebrities doing good and bad, it's charity on a massive scale, it's wildly and devoutly unique and all happening right here.
Like one NBC Sports announcer said, "Keep your head on a swivel, because there are players everywhere, and jokes everywhere, and you don't want to miss them."
Find those stories at a new website, www.mcweekly.com/attproam.
Call the collection Only in AT&T Pebble Beach Pro Am Land.

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