What came next was rarely pretty to watch or read about though. Campbell's golfing prowess took a long hike into the deep rough. Ranked as high as 12, he flirted with the 800s, a once booming career tragically nose-diving soon after that US Open victory.
Cruelly, CBS ranked him the fifth worst major winner ever.
It's a matter of perspective. You can look at Campbell as a fairly tale or cautionary one.
We'd all take that major victory and all the !@#$ which came next, no problem. They can't take that trophy of his mantelpiece. Yet there should have been so much more, of the great stuff.
Campbell can't remember the euphoric hours just after he won the US Open trophy, "a complete blank." A lot of us wish we could do the same with the remainder of his career — that may sound tough, but it was sad to watch the plummet.
The trappings of being a major winner quickly snared him. At one point he missed 32 cuts in 41 events, with 11 rounds over 80. It's not going to get any better I'm afraid Michael, just because you've had four enjoyable years off.
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Campbell himself said he's nervous about playing up to 10 events on the European tour this year, as he prepares to become a senior player when he turns 50 early next year.
It will get ugly, you can be assured of that. It's his life, his game, his reputation, his frustration. But you can hear the doubt in Campbell's voice already, even as he talks about his plans. I'm not so sure he will even go through with the European tour idea, once the reality hits him.
As Campbell himself says, players hit the ball too long now, the game has changed, he'll have to pick his courses. He's nervous, and admits he might not like being on the road again, after four years in retirement.
Cambo you won't like it, not one bit, when the drives go wide and the putts won't drop. When will the penny drop?
Here we are, into the New Year, summer is well underway, and New Zealand cricket has yet to serve us up anything remotely interesting. And they say New Zealand tennis is in the doldrums.
The tennis tournaments in Auckland will beat the heck out of the cricket offerings so far. Tennis has to fight for every bit of attention it gets - cricket seems to think it loll about in the sunshine (and the rain) and we'll lap up whatever they want to dish up. Cricket is riding for a fall. New generations have a lot of new things to do. Just saying.