One of the most rarest feats in golf is not the hole in one, but the double eagle, aka as the albatross. It is getting a 3 under in hole. You can't even get it in par 3 whole, but only in a par 4 or par 5.
The only double eagle that is also a hole in one accomplished by Andrew Magee in 2001. Here are the details:
In the history of the PGA Tour, there has been only one ace on a par-4, and it came at the TPC Scottsdale, home of the FBR Open.
The hole was No. 17, the year was 2001, and the golfer was Andrew Magee. But the circumstances were anything but normal.
Magee, just an average driver of the ball, didn't think he'd be able to reach the green on the 332-yard par-4. So he didn't wait for the group ahead to clear the green. Instead, he teed up, and - steaming over a double bogey two holes earlier - muscled up. He let her rip, and the ball went farther than he expected.
So far that it ran up onto the green while the group of Steve Pate, Gary Nicklaus and Tom Byrum were still putting. The ball raced past Pate and Nicklaus, who both saw the ball, then clanged off the putter of Byrum, who was caught by surprise.
The ball ricocheted off Byrum's putter, caromed about eight feet, and dropped right into the cup. Hole-in-one. Still the only par-4 ace on the PGA Tour, and surely one of the more unusual aces of any kind on the tour.