Tony Blundy's shot went in first. He used a 7-iron from 135 yards out to sink the first hole-in-one of his career.

"You're gonna be really mad at me when I put mine in," Janet Blundy said as she prepared to take her shot. Her premonition came true when the ball dropped into the cup 110 yards later.

Witnesses confirmed the the shots to the Lansing State Journal.

"I want to call the Guinness Book of World Records — that's gotta be one," said Scott Kelly, owner of the Ledge Meadows Golf Course, to the paper.

Guinness does not keep hole-in-one records, according to the paper, but the chances of the Blundys' hole-in-one scenario occurring in a foursome are one in 26 million, an insurer from the National Hole-in-One Association said.

As for a pair getting a hole-in-one on the same hole on the same day?

"Astronomical," the adjuster said.