- Associated Press - Saturday, June 30, 2018

ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) - If you’ve ever wanted to own one of the world’s largest collections of golf balls, start teeing up. A Rochester man who’s amassed roughly 70,000 unique golf balls, is ready to part with them.

“I don’t want any of the money,” 90-year-old RJ Smith told KARE-TV . He plans to donate every penny to charity. “It’s just payback time for all the good health I had to hunt golf balls all these years.”

Smith collected his first ball as an 11-year-old caddy. Aside from a break for military service in the 1940s, he never stopped.

Today, Smith’s collection fills 460 milk crates, stacked floor to ceiling, in a garage in his backyard.

The crates contain some 70,000 balls - no two alike.

“The magnificent obsession,” Smith said his pursuit of nearly 80 years.

In his entire life, Smith has never paid for a golf ball. Instead, he hunted them down, mostly in the roughs, ponds and woods at Rochester’s golf courses.

“This is my office,” Smith said with a laugh as he hunts in a wooded stretch along the 1st hole at Northern Hills Golf Course.

“He’ll come in and get a cart, ’I’m just heading to my office quick, hold my messages,’” said Mike Manahan, the pro at Northern Hills.

Manahan compares Smith’s ability to navigate thick brush in search of a wayward ball, to that of a goat.

“Midsummer, its 95, 100, he’s out there,” Manahan said, “(He) comes back, dripping wet - he comes back with burrs in his hair.”

Smith shows little sympathy for those who lost the balls, he’s found.

“No,” he laughed, “You’re supposed to play on the fairway.”

Smith’s collection includes thousands of logo balls from automakers, colleges and professional sports teams. His oldest ball is from 1917.

“My wife always knew where I was at,” Smith said. “I wasn’t sitting in the bar.”

Smith does like to sit, these days, for a few minutes, at Northern Hill’s 3rd hole. That’s where the bench was erected to honor Smith’s wife Dee, who died in 2002.

“I couldn’t get her off the golf course and she couldn’t get me on to play with her,” Smith said. “So, I’d just go hunting golf balls while she played.”

Three months ago, Smith was diagnosed with cancer. He’s awaiting further tests to determine how quickly it’s spreading.

But Smith has concluded it’s time the sell his collection and donate the proceeds.

“God has given me everything I’ve ever wanted in life and I’ve never had to ask,” he said.

Now RJ Smith will be able to say he gave at “the office” too.

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Information from: KARE-TV, http://www.kare11.com

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