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Collin Morikawa's caddie aces 'Island Green' at TPC Sawgrass

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Collin Morikawa's caddie makes hole-in-one at famous 17th hole (0:38)

Collin Morikawa's caddie, JJ Jakovac, sparks wild celebrations with this fantastic ace on Hole 17 at the Players Championship. (0:38)

As a caddie, you can be sure JJ Jakovac had a pretty good idea as to the yardage and club to be used while standing on the tee box at the famed par-3 "Island Green" hole at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra, Florida, on Wednesday.

But it's not often that it's the caddie -- and not the professional -- making the hole-in-one in front of a raucous crowd.

But Jakovac, who is the caddie for world No. 4 Collin Morikawa, did just that. Using a pitching wedge from 131 yards, his ball landed on the downslope of the green and rolled back into the hole for a memorable ace.

"It had to ride the wind to get there," Jakovac said, according to Golfweek. "Right as it came off, I was like, that's a perfect line if it lands the right distance. It started spinning, and I was like, 'This has a heckuva chance.'"

It all happened as part of the annual "Caddie Contest," which has been held on the Wednesday before the Players Championship since 2000 and allows caddies to take a shot at the famed hole. It's the first time in the history of the contest that a caddie has made a hole-in-one, according to The Florida-Times Union.

In addition to Morikawa, the other players in the group -- Jason Day, Min Woo Lee and Isaiah Salinda -- and their caddies chased down Jakovac, who was running around in celebration after the ball went in the hole.

"Any hole-in-one is special," Morikawa said of Jakovac, a veteran caddie who was a two-time Division II national champion and two-time national player of the year at Chico State. "A hole-in-one on 17 against every other caddie ..."

The winner of the closest-to-the-pin contest receives an undisclosed prize fund consisting of donations made by the professionals in the field, a $10,000 sponsor award, a VIP parking space for the rest of the week, an engraved money clip and their name on a plaque inside the Tunnel of Champions.

While he was the only caddie to find the bottom of the cup on his tee shot, Jakovac wasn't the only golfer to achieve the feat on Wednesday.

Tour pro Alejandro Tosti, who will be competing Thursday in the Players Championship for the first time, also had a hole-in-one, capped by a celebration that found him being pushed into the lake just off the elevated tee box.