

Introduction
William Jennings Brask Jr. (born December 12, 1946) is an American professional golfer. Although he did not have much success on the PGA Tour he won a number of minor international tournaments. Due to this success overseas – where they used a smaller golf ball – he was referred to as "the king of the small ball" by Lee Trevino.
Early life
Brask grew up in San Diego, California. He attended the University of Minnesota for college and played on the golf team. He was an All-American in 1967 and 1968. He won the Big Ten Championship in 1968 and finished third in the 1968 NCAA Championships.
Professional career
Brask successfully got through PGA Tour Qualifying School and played full-time on tour in 1970. He was paired with Arnold Palmer at the first event of the year, the Los Angeles Open. Despite being "nervous as a cat" he played relatively well, finishing T-24. He would record five more top-25s on tour in 1970 and kept his card. In 1971, he made the cut in 7 of his 14 PGA Tour events but with no high finishes he lost his card. He would not play full-time on the PGA Tour again.
Brask would have much better luck overseas. At the 1970 Dunlop International in Canberra, Australia he was tied for the lead in the final round and ultimately finished a shot back of Gary Player. He tied Lee Trevino and Kel Nagle for second. Brask was elated with his performance, stating "I'm so excited it is just like winning." Four years later he won his first professional event at the Western Province Open on the South African Tour with a score of 280 (−4).
Brask would great success during the Australian Tour's 1975/76 season. He won his first event down under in November 1975, winning the inaugural New Zealand Airlines Classic by one shot over Australian legend Peter Thomson and four shots over 3rd place finisher Tom Kite. At the New Zealand Open he and fellow American Bruce Fleisher finished four shots back to Australian Bill Dunk. At the Australian Open he finished runner-up, three shots back of American Jack Nicklaus. On January 1, 1976 Brask fired a nine-under-par 61 at the opening round of the New Zealand PGA Championship. He held the lead through much of the tournament but New Zealand's John Lister caught him at the end of regulation. Lister would defeat Brask in a playoff. This extraordinary play down under would help Brask a second place finish on the 1975 Australian Tour's Order of Merit.
Brask's good international play continued through the late 1970s. In late 1976 he finished a distant runner-up to Bob Shearer in defense of his New Zealand Airlines Classic title. He also seriously contended at the European Tour's 1977 Callers of Newcastle tournament, finishing two out of a playoff. Brask won the South Seas Classic in Fiji in September 1977, fives shots ahead of Guy Wolstenholme. In March 1978 he won the Indian Open, shooting a final round 67 to defeat defending champion Brian Jones, Taiwan's Kuo Chie-Hsiung, and Australia's Stewart Ginn by four shots. Brask out-shot the trio of second-place finishers by 9 shots over the final round. Three months later he was on the first page of the U.S. Open leaderboard. Brask shot an opening round 71 (E) to find himself in a tie for 5th, two back of Hale Irwin. He stumbled with a second round 76, however, and was not near the lead after that.
In 1978, with his touring career largely over, Brask took a job at Pauma Valley Country Club in San Diego. He moved back to Minnesota in 1980 and worked at Olympic Hills Golf Course until 1998. In the winter, however, he continued to play overseas. He finished runner-up at the 1983 Singapore Open, losing in a playoff to Taiwan's Lu Chien-soon. A year later he won the Hong Kong Open over defending champion Greg Norman. After 1985 season, however, he would only record one more top-10 in an official regular event.
In 1998, shortly after during 50, Brask gave up his job at Olympic Hills to compete on the European Seniors Tour. In 1999 he had his three runner-up finishes in 16 events. He also played full-time on the Senior PGA Tour in the United States from 2000 to 2002. His best finish was a runner-up to Larry Nelson at the Bank One Senior Championship in 2000.
In 2002 he returned to Minnesota to work at Edina Country Club. As of 2018, he still works there.
Professional wins (10)
South African Tour win (1)
- 1974 Western Province Open
Australian Tour win (1)
- 1975 New Zealand Airlines Classic (New Zealand)
Asia Golf Circuit wins (2)
- 1978 Indian Open
- 1984 Hong Kong Open
Other wins (6)
- 1975 Southland Charity Golf Classic
- 1976 California State Open
- 1977 South Seas Classic (Fiji)
- 1983 Minnesota PGA Championship
- 1985 Minnesota PGA Championship
- 1987 Minnesota PGA Championship
Results in major championships
| Tournament | 1973 | 1974 | 1975 | 1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979 | 1980 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. Open | CUT | CUT | T57 | |||||
| The Open Championship | T47 | CUT | T38 |
Note: Brask only played in The U.S. Open and The Open Championship.
CUT = missed the half-way cut (3rd round cut in 1976 Open Championship)
"T" indicates a tie for a place
Team appearances
- Praia d'El Rey European Cup: 1999