Birdie Eagle Golf
Birdie Eagle Golf Magazine Jersey Shore Golf Links
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Birdie Eagle Golf Magazine - Vol. 1 #1
Birdie Eagle Golf Magazine Vol. 1 #1
Jersey Shore Golf Links
Cover - The Atlantic City Country Club
Table of Contents
• Gadhafi's Precedent Golf Club Car
• Golf Books - The Money Game
o Charlie Rose Interviews Arnold Palmer (Transcript)
o Kenny Robinson - Keeper of Traditions
o The Old Golfer Dies - By Edgar A. Guest
o The 19th Hole Tradition - By George Morton
o When Arnie Met Winnie
o Arnie Palmer and Bucky Worsham
o Arnold Palmer's Coast Guard Days
o Birth of the Birdie - ACCC 1903
o John McDermott's Mashie
o Birdie Eagle Golf
- Jersey Shore Golf Links - Comprehensive Listing of Clubs and Courses
Gadhafi's Precedent Golf Club Car
Colonel Gadhafi's Golf Cart is a prized possession looted by rebels from his Compound Garage.
What is it? It's a Precedent Club Car with Optional Cabin.
President Obama was playing golf at Martha's Vineyard when the revolution in Libya reached a "Tipping Point."
More on the Precedent Club Car
From: http://www.angeloscarts.com/id13.html
DRIVE IT ONCE AND YOU'LL KNOW - The Precedent Golf Car
Precedent wasn’t created overnight. It’s the result of a long, thorough collaboration between Club Car and customers. Here’s a glimpse of how much thought and attention to detail are built into every car.
Features:
• AlumiCore Chassis
• Non-corrosive, Bonded Seat
• 4-battery, 48V Power Plant
• 40% Fewer parts
• Front Suspension
• Monsoon Top
Research
Before designing and creating the ultimate golf car, we had to discover exactly what that ultimate golf car should be. So we spent two years talking with head professionals, owners, managers, superintendents and players. We found out what they loved about their golf cars. And what drove them crazy. We asked them what they absolutely had to have. And what they thought would be great to have.
At the end of those two years, we had our answer: the ultimate golf car needed to be stronger, more intelligent, more agile and more comfortable.
AVAILABLE, 48 VOLT ELECTRIC & GASOLINE POWERED
OPTIONAL HARD CAB
Design
Instead of starting with the industry-leading DS as our foundation, we began with a clean sheet of paper. We gave our designers and engineers the customer research, and then gave them free reign.
Customers stayed involved through the entire design process. Round after round, we worked together to build this new golf car from the ground up.
And two years later we had the winning Precedent prototype.
Testing
But design—even design that includes everything a customer could wish for—is only the beginning. Getting each new feature, innovation and convenience right requires exhaustive testing.
So everything that could be tested, was tested. Every component that could be improved, was improved. And at the end of this exhaustive process, Club Car had a golf car with all the strength, intelligence, agility and comfort characteristics customers wanted.
Manufacturing
We knew that we couldn’t build an all-new car in the same old way. Re-inventing the way a golf car is designed also meant re-inventing the way that car is made.
That meant that every design innovation had to be accompanied by a manufacturing innovation. And it meant building a entirely new manufacturing plant dedicated solely to Precedent.
So instead of starting with just one clean sheet, we actually started with two; designing a new car—and the way that car was built—from scratch.
More Testing
We then placed more than 500 new Precedent cars on 15 courses, covering all terrains, climates and playing conditions.
Over the course of a year, Club Car representatives, designers and engineers kept up a steady dialog with owners to refine each fleet’s performance.
Only then were we willing to say Precedent was ready. That it had the strength, intelligence, agility and comfort customers had asked for. And that it would live up to our reputation for reliability and durability.
The Evidence
Everyone who comes in contact with Precedent loves the look, power, handling, storage, reliability and ease of maintenance. The attention to detail is apparent and appreciated.
The cost-saving implications for a better return on investment—and a better bottom line—make Precedent today’s obvious fleet of choice.
Precedent is much more than a car. It’s the result of hundreds of ideas, points of view, suggestions, solutions and possibilities all coming together for a single goal.
Testimonials
Brady Godfrey, Head Professional
Harbor Hills
Lady Lake, FL
"When we first got them I thought to myself, ‘sure they ride great now but how will they hold up after a few months?’ So far the ‘honeymoon’ isn’t over. They’re still performing as good as when we got them. They just kind of glide; you go over bumps and rough terrain and you just don’t feel a thing. Club Car’s definitely setting the pace with Precedent. Others will have to catch up."
***************************
Jim Hartley, Director of Outside Operations
PGA Estates
West Palm Beach, FL
"We’ve had Club Car fleets for as long as I can remember, because no other car even comes close to their dependability and durability. Well, now they’ve taken another step up. This is one of the most accessible cars I’ve ever worked on, and some maintenance jobs have been cut in half in terms of time and effort. I’ve been in the business more than 40 years, and this is the easiest I’ve seen it. Plus, the bag room guys love the drain spouts. They don’t have to worry about pulling into the barn, taking a turn and throwing a wall of water around."
**************************
Ian Nicoll, GM and Head Pro
Golf Club of Jacksonville
Jacksonville, FL
"We were quiet about the introduction, and let the players discover Precedent for themselves. We immediately heard positive feedback about the cars:
They love the aerodynamic shape. The car has a really unique design that says "I’m different" right from the get go."
We're still waiting on a testimonial from Colonel Gadhafi.
And there is a short nine hole golf course that runs along the beach about five miles north of Tripoli near the former Wheelus Air Force Base - airport.
Sunday, August 14, 2011
Golf Books - The Money Game
Money Golf: 600 Years of Bettin' on Birdies
by Michael K. Bohn
You can't play Major League Baseball and bet on a game; just ask Pete Rose. Don't try running a betting ring in the NHL, either. Want the surest ticket out of NCAA sports?
Betting's the way to do it. In stark contrast, however, the United States Golf Association officially sanctions betting among players during their games. And it's not just the pros who bet. Every man, out with his buddies, asks at the first tee, "Shall we make this interesting?" Yet there has never been a betting scandal in organized golf.
Money Golf is the first book that tells the complete story of golf's unique association with wagering and how that relationship evolved. It features anecdotes from fifteenth-century Scots to Tiger Woods and all the smooth-swinging flatbellies, movie stars, athletes, politicians, women golfers, Joe Six-Packs, hustlers, and sharks in between. It also serves as a primer for novice golf bettors, providing explanations of Calcuttas (betting auctions), odds-making, on-course games, and the art and history of golf hustling. It even highlights movies and books that include golf wagers, showing that even writers understand the marriage of the two.
Wagering on golf has been part of the game since it migrated to the United States in 1888. All of the early icons of American golf bet when they played-Francis Ouimet, Walter Hagen, and Gene Sarazen. Even Bobby Jones, the simon-pure amateur, wagered on his game. Sam Snead and Ben Hogan always had a little something on the side; so did Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, and Gary Player. Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson learned how to bet on golf when they were little kids. All the personalities, stories, and history of betting on birdies are included in Money Golf.
Michael K. Bohn is the author of "Money Golf," a history of the gentlemanly wager on the golf course, and more recently, "Heroes & Ballyhoo: How the Golden Age of the 1920s Transformed American Sports."
Bohn also has written "The Achille Lauro Hijacking: Lessons in the Politics and Prejudice of Terrorism" (2004), and "Nerve Center: Inside the White House Situation Room" (2003). He served as director of the White House Situation Room, the president's alert center and crisis management facility, during Ronald Reagan's second term. Bohn was a U.S. naval intelligence officer from 1968 to 1988.
A Conversation with Michael K. Bohn
Isn’t betting in sports illegal?
Not in golf. The United States Golf Association and the Royal & Ancient Golf Club, the two organizations that govern the game worldwide, officially sanction wagering between players.
Why has golf accepted betting, but major league baseball ostracized Pete Rose?
The game developed in Great Britain away from the antigambling influences of puritanical America. U.S.-born sports—basketball, American football, and baseball, for instance—carry the social mores of the society that created the games.
More important, principle and etiquette govern the game’s core. Golfers rely on an ancient and tested honor code to regulate matches by themselves, without the separate referees and umpires who are central to other games. This code, along with lessons about manners and standards of conduct that accompany instruction on the golf swing, steer the sport away from scandal and betting’s frequent disreputable handmaiden, cheating. Organized golf has never suffered a betting scandal.
How did betting start in golf?
Golf grew out of stick and ball games in continental Europe but began developing its distinct characteristics on the east coast of Scotland in the 1400s. From the beginning, the game pitted two players, or a pair of two-man teams, against each other with something at stake, most often coin, food, or drink.
How widespread is betting on golf?
Among the twenty-six million male and female American golfers, the vast majority bet when they play. More specifically, a 2006 Golf Digest online poll revealed 93 percent of the respondents bet at least some of the time when they played. Additionally, more than half of seventy-two teenage players (thirty-six boys and thirty-six girls) surveyed at a 2006 national junior tournament said they bet on their games.
Do women bet on the golf course?
Yes, especially at the professional level, but overall women generally bet smaller amounts than men and usually talk about it less. A 2006 survey of women amateur players indicated only a third of the women had never bet on their golf game.
Do the PGA Tour players bet on their games?
Today most enjoy a friendly wager during practice rounds before the tournament starts. Some even have a discreet side bet during a tournament. As recently as the 1960s, players freely bet among themselves during tournaments, even with bookies who accompanied the players on tour.
While playing in the British Open, some of the pros enjoy betting on themselves, a common and legal practice in Britain. No one in golf views the custom as scandalous. It’s just golf.
Among the pros, who has bet the most?
Walter Hagen, the first successful tour player, always played for money. Sam Snead was the high priest of money golf, but upon his death in 2002, that title shifted to Arnold Palmer. Palmer is as courteous and friendly while betting as he is during every part of his life, but he plays hard for his own money. Lanny Wadkins bets as aggressively as he plays, and Phil “The Thrill” Mickelson has said that he needs a sizable bet to keep his focus during practice rounds.
Does Tiger bet?
Woods bets on most everything that moves on a golf course. He doesn’t bet much, considering his earning power, but enough to satisfy his keen competitive nature. He started putting for quarters as a three-year-old, and has always enjoyed a friendly bet during informal rounds.
What is a golf hustler?
Stories abound throughout golf’s history about players who win wagers by concealing a special skill or knowledge—the “edge.” At one end of the hustling spectrum is the handicap cheat, a golfer that lies about his skills to gain the edge in a game. All golfers revile these people. On the other end are hustlers whose colorful personalities and creative imaginations obscure much of the larcenous facet of the edge. Titanic Thompson was the most storied golf hustler and his cleverness earned him folk hero status in golf.
How do golfers bet?
Players use dozens of betting games to add interest to their games. The most common is skins, made famous through an off-season TV show called the Skins Game. Played by two or more golfers, whoever has the lowest score on each hole wins a skin, the value of which the players determined at the round’s start--$1, $10, and so forth.
Another common game is a Nassau, which as a minimum involves three bets—one on the first nine holes, another on the back nine, and a third on the entire round. The value of each bet varies with the players, from $1 and up.
The simplest bet is on who shoots the lowest score for the round.
Side bets, often called garbage or trash, enliven the round, and involve payouts for birdies, sandies (getting out of a bunker and into the hole in two shots) or other pre-determined successes or mistakes. Chapter 9 of the book describes betting games and summarizes betting advice from the experts.
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Charlie Rose Interviews Arnold Palmer
Charlie Rose interviews Arnold Palmer
An hour with Arnold Palmer from Latrobe, Pennsylvania. http://www.charlierose.com/view/interview/11823
Arnold Palmer is with us for this hour. He is a legend who came out of the hills of Pennsylvania with his father’s hard driving lessons deep in his soul. He had the strength of a linebacker, and the magnetism of a movie star. All of that and he could hit a golf ball a mile and then roll it into a small hole with the touch of a master.
He won 4 Masters, 1 US Open, 2 British Opens and 62 PGA tour events.
But never, never the PGA, although he came close, coming in second three times.
He was once chosen the athlete of the decade, not only in his sport but in all sports.
Golf has never been the same. It is bigger, better and more popular in every dimension. He changed the game. Everyone that followed is indebted to him.
No one has had an army like Arnie’s Army. No one has been so quoted by presidents, from Eisenhower to Obama. No one has had so much respect from his piers.
He and Jack Nicholas defined great rivalry. Like Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, like John McEnroe and Bjorn Borge, like the Red Sox and Yankees, like Duke and North Carolina.
When Jack Kennedy was in power. Arnold Palmer was winning everything.
He was the best. So good that the president wanted Arnie to look at his swing and come play around.
Arnold Palmer is a pilot and a hugely successful businessman. He and the late Mark McCormick showed us what endorsements were all about. He was most of all a competitor and a gentleman, and he still is as he approaches his 82 birthday.
We visited his home in Latrobe Pennsylvania – he still lives there and also in Florida with his second wife during the winter, right across by the golf course his father helped builds. Nearby is an office with enough awards to fill a museum.
We began with a tour of so many memories, and then a conversation about so many experiences.
CR: This is a Norman Rockwell.
AP: That was done a number of years ago. Obviously.
CR: You asked me if I recognized this guy?
AP: Well I wasn’t sure you would recognize who it was.
CR: So Norman Rockwell did your picture.
CR: Not bad.
AP: This is a number of times I’ve been on the cover of Sports Illustrated.
CR: You and Sam (Snead).
AP: We played in the World Cup and won both times we played.
CR: You and Jack.
AP: Palmer: Casper.
CR: Billy Casper
AP: That’s the one we talk about every once in awhile.
CR: The toughest one. It’s the toughest one to win or the Masters?
Well you won more Masters.
AP: Of course I hung out at the Masters, that was social, I loved it.
CR: That’s your favorite.
AP: It had to be, but you can’t ignore the Open. It’s, it’s…
CR: The denizen of America.
AP: That’s one, that’s it.
CR: It’s the American national Championship.
AP: That’s it. The American Championship.
CR: Here’s when you turned 40 – 40 years ago. See how much you have changed.
CR: This is you and the famous Winnie.
CR: Sports Illustrated, that’s 1967. There you are. Let’s look at that swing.
AP: Our of the water.
CR: You Jack, and Gary. US Open.
CR: We won both times we played together.
CR: You and Jack again. It says, “Golf Kings Must be selfish.” Are you selfish?
AP: I don’t think he’s selfish and I don’t think I am.
CR: Whose that?
AP: Those are my buddies. That The Blue Angels.
CR: Tell me about flying for you. It’s a second passion.
AP: You know I started by being scared. When I was an amateur I played a couple tournaments and I had to fly, and got into weather and stuff, and it scared me, and I decided that would not work, I had to learn to fly, I had to find out about airplanes and aeronautical engineering and what it was all about.
CR: You stopped flying now?
AP: Just. I still have my license. I have to do some return training. If I wanted to fly again I’d have to go back and get recertified.
CR: Did you fly all those famous jets.
AP: I will show them to you when we finish this tour.
CR: Yes, sir. So this is your office. Pictures of family.
AP: Everything.
CR: This is your dad, Deke, his given name was Deacon?
AP: Milfred Jermone. Now you know why he’s called Deacon.
CR: There’s the guy.
AP: He was a great guy, a strong dude, not a real big guy, but very strong.
CR: By the time after the amateur, did he fully appreciate it?
AP: It was great, he was great.
AP: This was my first tournament win - the Canadian Open
CR: That was what year?
AP: 1955.
CR: That was three years before you started killing it.
AP: Now, as you know, I’m approaching 82 and I’ve never shot four rounds in an official tournament lower than that.
CR: 64 67 64 70 – pretty good.
CR: Do you think if you were playing today back with the same skills you had when you won all your major tournaments, when you won all your grand slams, if you were playing today, would you be number one?
AP: (Laugh) I can’t answer that.
CR: But you have the will to win, clubs are different, you’d be stronger. You’d like to give it a shot wouldn’t you?
AP: You’re damn right. I’d like to give it a go.
CR: Well, Wake Forest (degree). I’ve spoken twice at commencement there – that’s a picture of the school at Winston Salem
AP: Pebble Beach (photo), which I’m a partner in.
AP: That’s the hole I drove at Cherry Hills.
CR: When you actually reached that green you were so infused with what …said to you.
AP: At the termination the thing we talked about…..all over….
CR: Everybody believed that if you had wanted to be you could have been governor of Pennsylvania. Did you think about it?
AP: I had no choice, you know people pushed for me, Tom Ridge was a good friend,
CR: The future Governor of Pennsylvania.
AP: So that was something that, – I’m not a politician.
CR: But you are a citizen, you love America.
AP: I love America. I wanted to play golf.
CR: You don’t have to be a politician to make a contribution to the country.
AP: Here’s degrees I got from speaking at schools around the country. Here’s something I got recently – My Degree from St. Andrews. Well come on, we’ll show you some more.
CR: Tell me what I’m going to see here, as this is legendary, where you come to hide,
AP: I love it. I come in here and work on golf clubs. Some say I destroy more than I build.
CR: What you do here is make the club better for your sing.
AP: I always said that if I have the perfect club then I should play the perfect game.
CR: You grind and you build.…
AP: I can do anything. I put them together, I take them apart. People say that I’m very good at taking them apart.
CR: What kind of clubs do you play with today?
AP: Calloway.
CR: Of course.
CR: Let’s talk for a moment about President Eisenhower. Your 37 birthday he shows up at your front door on your house to pay tribute to you on your birthday. He comes with his wife to This is the President you had the deepest relationship with?
AP: Yes. I played with him on the day after I won the Masters at his request. We became everlasting friends. I was with him the day before he died at Walter Reed, which is familiar because they are closing Walter Reed. We just became very good friends, we played golf, we played heart exhibitions. Then his doctor said he should not play golf anymore. He’d spend his winters at Palm Springs, and he’d call me and say what are you doing? I’m going to play golf I think. And he’d say if you get the time come by the house and we’ll have a beer. And I wouldn’t play golf, I’d go over and sit with him and talk about golf, and business, the military, the whole thing, the country.
CR: His passion for golf helped make the game popular.
AP: You can say that in spades.
CR: Then there was JFK, who also sought you out.
AP: Yes, unfortunately.
CR: He was a guy who loved winners.
AP: And he was a good golfer.
CR: When you saw his swing, they said he was a good golfer and had a more fluid swing than any other president, and you could make it better.
AP: It never happened.
CR: Why didn’t it happen?
AP: Actually I was on my way to Palm Springs to play with him.
CR: This was 1963.
AP: 1963. We were going to play some golf and the White House called me and said, Arnie, forget it. I said why, I want to do it. They said he hurt his back and was going to take some time off and not play for awhile, and just couldn’t do it, and that was it.
CR: Here’s a plaque. “No house calls.”
CR: You always had a good relationship with the press.
AP: I enjoy the press. I understand their business. Doc has helped me with that, but the press were guys that I could get with. I could talk to them.
CR: Part of what made Arney’s Army famous because there was a sense of you being this brawny guy who liked to win, but it was like you were with them.
AP: Buddies.
CR: They were buddies.
AP: We had a beer together.
CR: Presidential Medal of Freedom
AP: It is the highest award that the United States can give to a civilian.
AP: This is the one (medal) from Portugal. The highest civilian award. I built a golf course there and became friends with the president.
AP: This is the Hitchcock belt – 1960 I won it for professional athlete of the year.
CR: You also won as professional athlete of the decade.
AP: Yes sir, yes sir. That’s what this relates to.
CR: This is President Bush giving you the Medal of Freedom.
CR: The National Amateur medal. That is a great honor, isn’t it.
AP: Yes it is.
CR: What’s this?
AP: That is the National Amateur.
CR: So that’s 1954. That stands pretty high up in importance…
AP: That’s Major.
AP: Charlie, this is my Presidential Corner. Things that happened with various Presidents I was associated with.
CR: Here’ s Nixon. Did Nixon play golf?
AP: Yes he did.
CR: Gerald Ford. Great athlete
AP:. Played football.
AP: This is a conference Nixon called of all his friends to talk about how to negotiate the war. Kissinger, the whole crowd.
CR: To see how to negotiate the end the Vietnam War.
AP: Yes.
CR: Wow.
CR: George Bush 41 –
AP: A great guy.
CR: Played fast golf.
AP: Very.
CR: Here’s Ronald Reagan.
AP: These are White House dinners.
CR: Whose the lady in white?
AP: Oh, she happens to be the Queen.
CR: Here we go with trophies.
AP: Ryder Cup, Open Championship…..
CR: The Ryder Cup.
AP: It’s a great international competition.
CR: There’s more enthusiasm for it.
AP: We hope so. I’ve always been a big thinker that the more international competition that we create through sports the better relationships we’ll have with countries.
CR: More common ground and the better off we’ll be.
AP: Exactly, that’s the name of the game.
CR: Bill Clinton.
AP: Loved golf.
CR: How’s his golf?
AP: The balls didn’t have a zip code on it.
CR: Here’s a letter from President Eisenhower.
AP: We played golf one day, and you can see the date on it. This is a letter from Eisenhower, he and I were playing golf one day, you can see the date – it’s 1965 – DDE Gettysburg. August 15, 1955. “Dear Arnie, enclosed is payment for my bet ($10) and never was there one more reluctantly paid. Also attached is a picture cut from the Philadelphia, Inquirer. It indicates dejection. Please remember that a couple of accidents will not be important a year from now. You will win a lot more tournaments and forget all the wounds caused by bridges, rocks and complaints about a tree, love to Winnie, all the best, DD.”
CR: The bet was?
AP: He bet me that I’d win the PGA championship that year, and I didn’t.
CR: A hell of a life.
PART II – CONVERSATION
CR: It’s an honor to be here.
AP: That you, it’s an honor to have you here Charlie.
CR: You once said this about golf:
“It’s deceptively simple, endlessly complicated. A child can play it well, and a grown man can never master it. Any single round of it is full of unexpected triumphs and perfect shots that end in disaster. It is almost a science, yet it is a puzzle without an answer. It is gratifying and tantalizing, precise and unpredictable. It requires complete concentration and total relaxation. It satisfies the soul and frustrates the intellect. It is at the same time, rewarding and maddening. And it is without doubt the greatest game mankind has ever invented.”
CR: That is well said, sir.
AP: Well thank you very much, that was a long time ago.
CR: When did you fall in love with this game?
AP: Well Charlie, I’ve got to start at the beginning I guess and it was right here, about 200 yards from where we are sitting. My father started on this golf course at Latrobe when he was sixteen years old. He was digging ditches when they were building the golf course.
CR: You were raised right here?
AP: I was raised here, I was playing cowboys and Indians in the trees, and then I started hitting the golf club with clubs he sawed off for me, and I began playing right here with my father.
CR: Did he tell you to hit it hard and worry about accuracy later?
AP: He did, he said, “Hit it hard, boy, then go and get it and hit it again.”
CR: It served you well.
AP: It did. He was a tough guy, Charlie. I was the first son and first child. When my sister came along, well, she was two years younger, and I had to go to the golf course because my mother couldn’t handle all the action going on. So I came with him to the golf course since I was a year and a half old and I spent the day with him here, and it worked in naturally. And it was fun for me being with my father, and doing things that a kid did it was great.
CR: What part of your game today is something that you can look back and say it was because of Deak?
AP: Everything, my manners, I wanted to emulate him. I wanted to be as tough as he was. I wanted to do the things that he did. I watched him. We had some guys who worked on the golf course. When I was born in 1929, as you know, that was the depression, so the golf course was manned by my father and two guys, they worked for my dad and they took me with them everywhere they went. And it was fun. And of course, Pat was a guy who had infantile paralysis when he was born, a year after he was born, so his upper body was very strong, he chinned himself with a straight bar and could do either arm ten or fifteen times, and he did it every day, his upper body was very strong. And I did that too.
CR: Most people who have gone on to get the fame and fortune like you, did don’t comeback to their hometown, but you do and you will to the day that you die.
AP: You’re right and I will, I love it.
CR: I think you said, “You’re hometown is not where you are from, it is who you are.” Your father was here, you were here. When did you know you could play the game well?
AP: That’s another thing about my father. He made me very conscious of the fact I wasn’t very good and I had to prove to him that I was good. And that hung with me, and I always wanted to play golf with him and show him. He said Never, Never tell anyone how good you are. Show them!
CR: Every man wants to prove himself and say, dad, did I do okay?
AP: When I won the amateur he came from here to Detroit, to see me play the final round and I just barely won, and beat out Bob Sweeney. I was national amateur champion. I was 24 years old. My father was there, and I couldn’t wait to see him, and my mother. I went up and was waiting for all the accolades, and my mom was teary and happy and my dad looked at me and said, “Well, boy, you did good,” and that was it.
CR: You said after that, that was the greatest triumph in your life.
AP: It was the one that was most important.
CR: Most important, because it got your dad’s approval. Why Wake Forest?
AP: Well, again my father, you’re going to get tired of hearing about my father.
CR: It defines who you are.
AP: Well I worked for dad on the grounds and I was in high school and I said I wanted to go to college, and he said, well, you figure it out. He said I will pay for your college but you’re going to go to St. Vincent. St. Vincent College right here. That’s about as much as I can afford, you work here, right here at home. I said, what if I can get somewhere else? And he said if I can get there, that’s your call.
So I played high school golf, I played amateur golf and I started getting officers. The offers started coming in. I was playing pretty good, won amateur tournaments as a junior, and the whole thing. I was playing in the national juniors in Los Angles, with a buddy of mine who was from Washington DC. His name was Marvin “Bud” Worsham, and his brother was Lew, the pro at Oakmont who won the Open in ’47.
That was the year we graduated. We were out there playing in the juniors. And he said, Ernie, where you going to go to college? And I said I was looking at a couple, I had some officers, I had feelers from Penn State and Pitt, and Miami, and I like the Miami because I could play golf all winter.
He said, “Hey, if I get you a scholarship will you go with me?”
And I said, where?
And he said Wake Forest.
I said, where’s that?
He said it’s in North Carolina.
And I said, that’s great, you can play golf all year.
He said if I contact them and they give you a scholarship, will you go?
I said, “You bet.”
The athletic director was a guy named Jim Weaver. Did you ever hear that name? You should, as he’s the guy who founded the Atlantic Coast Conference.
CR: Exactly. And I grew up as you know some 30 miles from Wake Forest.
You should have because he founded the Atlantic Coast Conference.
AP: Well Jim Weaver, I had no idea who it was. I didn’t even know where Wake Forest was. I came home from that tournament, played another one and then got on a bus and went on a bus to Wake Forest. I’ll never Jim Weaver became one of the best friends I ever had. He was athletic director, golf coach, he did the whole thing. And that’s how I ended up at Wake Forest.
CR: So you were there, and Bud Worsham was there, and Jim Flick was there too, was he not?
AP: He and I roomed together after the accident. Bud got killed in an automobile accident our senior year and my roommate then became Jim Flick.
CR: Bud’s death had a big impact on you.
AP: Terrible. (Pause, choking up) He was…..(pause)….he was like a brother. We did everything, we played golf against each other, we did everything you could do… and when he got killed, it was for me about as bad as you could get. I finished the semester and I couldn’t stand it, so I decided I had to do something else, and get my mind cleared up, so joined the Coast Guard. And spent three years in the Coast Guard after that.
CR: So you got out of the Coast Guard and you were ready to be a golfer?
AP: Yea. What the Coast Guard did for me in three years was as much as what Wake Forest did for me as a school. It matured me and allowed me grow up. When I went back to Wake Forest for my final year I knew then that things were better. Meaning I knew I could handle myself.
CR: More mature.
AP: Exactly. I enjoyed it. I went back after school, after my senior year I went back to Cleveland to work there for the summer and that’s when things started happening, the amateur and so.
CR: What was it about the charge that so electrified people and made them feel that you connected to them more than anything else?
AP: I’m not sure that I answer that but the thing – I was scared that I was going to lose, and I didn’t want to lose. It wasn’t so much I was going to win, anytime I got close I felt I had to win, and couldn’t lose, I couldn’t let that happen to me. And it worked, it worked for me. A lot of tournaments that I can remember I made a few bad shots and I was afraid I would lose the tournament and it seemed to work, the putts seemed to go in. Just the Desire.
CR: The run – 58-62, you swing?
AP: I had a system, and the system worked. It lasted, it was better later - 62 or 63. I suppose that I have a psychological feeling about things – and if I have something that I need to accomplish and I accomplish it, I let down after that, and that happened to me in golf. But I played better golf from oh, 65-75, from the standpoint of hitting the golf ball, and getting it where I wanted to, and doing what I wanted to better than those years I won all those events.
CR: You didn’t win a major between 65 and 75 – but you were playing better golf?
AP: That’s what I mean.
CR: Take me to the 1960 US Open.
AP: Well, the Open in 1960 I was playing good. Cherry Hills, I had been to Cherry Hills to practice and then I went up there and I practiced, and for 64 holes I hit the ball on the green and two putted, and hit the green and two putted, and if I missed the green I got a bogie.
AP: And I’ll never forget. You heard the story? About Bob Drum?
CR: Yes.
AP: My friend from Pittsburgh. A Friend of Bob Gibson. I was in the locker room and getting ready to play the second round. I ran into Drum and was munching on a hamburger. I looked at Bob, and we always kidded with each other. I said you know, I was so upset, I was playing good, and nothing is happening. And I said Bob, what do you think, and this was real serious, and I said, what do you think if I could hit a 65 this afternoon. And he looked at me and totally insulted me and said “you can’t do anything.” I didn’t finish the hamburger and went out and hit a few drives and then they called me.
CR: And you kept the driver in your hands.
AP: Now I will tell you something you might known or might not know, but that driver was a Hogan driver. I was with Wilson sporting goods and we were talking, and Ben gave me two drivers and that was one of them. Of course I doctored them. And I went to the tee and took the driver and I drove it on the green.
CR: On the green, a par four 3oo some yards,
AP: 336 yards. And two putted for a birdie. Almost three putted I was so excited. That got me going.
I was walking down the eighth hole and I knew things were happening, and I knew people were talking and the crowd was getting bigger, and who was coming down the middle of the fairway? Bob Drum.
I said, “what the hell are you doing here?”
And he said “You’re playing pretty good.” I wouldn’t even talk to him. I ignored him and walked past him, and what did I do? I bogied the hole. I shot out of a sand trap and missed the put. But then shot a 30 on the nine. And that’s what I needed.
CR: And won the US Open.
AP: Won by two.
CR: Do you remember the great shots or the bad ones, where you were doing good and then boggied the final hole?
AP: I remember ones I lost. I remember the ones I won, but I remember the ones I lost, something that I will never forget. Did it ruin me or hurt my career? It taught me about life, how to take the bad with the good. And yes they hurt, they really hurt, but when I reflect on it now, and I look back, it taught me something – it taught me how to live, how to be a better guy, not let defeat be the end of my life. And I am thankful for that, and I would never felt good if I hadn’t experienced losing, because losing is part of your life. And it something that if I could teach people to understand that I think it could help them a lot.
CR: When you think about the army that followed you, did that help? Did it give you
something nobody else had on the course.
AP: Of course. The fans, I loved them. My mother would be in the gallery, just to give you an example. I would look right at my mother and not remember.
CR: When did you first see and play with Jack Nicholas.
AP: Well, I’m considerably older than Jack.
CR: Ten years maybe?
AP: Eleven. First time I met Jack I had heard about his golf and prowess – I was playing in the Ohio amateur I think, and this was even before I turned pro, and then Cal Festerwald had an exhibition out in Ohio and asked me to come and play with Jack and Howard Sanderson, and I went, and met Jack for the first time. We hit it off immediately, and we became friends. But we competed, and Charlie, that was about so many years ago I don’t even remember now, but we have played against each other and we are still friends, and he’s one of the best friends that I have. He’s a guy,- we don’t spend a lot of time together, but if I felt like I needed something and he was the guy I needed to talk to I would go see him.
CR: They say that the rivalry is part of the magic of what made modern golf - you, Jack Nicholas and television made modern golf.
AP: I don’t know. I hope so. I hope that it helped. I think about television, I think about Ike, I think about Jack, I think about Hogan, and how that influenced me a little bit, and the people that had an affect on my life. And certainly the relationship with Jack was a good one, but it was competitive. And it still is today.
CR: How is it competitive today?
AP: We do business.
CR: Oh, yea. He builds courses, you build courses.
AP: We build golf courses. We don’t disagree a great deal. When it comes to something good, we agree. If we have something to do as a team, we do it.
CR: Did the competition make you better?
AP: I think so. I know it helped me, having Jack playing the way he did.
CR: You had the competition. The challenge made you better.
AP: Exactly. And the fact that he was so determined. He had a personality that was good for what he did. He shut everything off and could concentrate. Of all the time I’ve known him, all our lives for the most part, I never seen him waver on the golf course. The only time that ever happened that I recall, we tried to beat each other. Sometimes when we started trying to beat each other, and it happened this way, there were occasions that when we were playing somebody else would come along and beat both of us.
CR: 18 majors. Does, his record make him the best golfer of all time?
AP: Until somebody shows me a better game, it makes him the best.
CR: Do you believe Tiger will break his record?
AP: No. But I shouldn’t say that. I think Tiger is as close to it as anyone has ever been.
CR: Jack has 18, Tiger has 14 you have 7. In between there’s three or four others.
AP Yea, and Tiger still has a shot at it, but…
CR: You’ve got to believe don’t you, that if somebody has a game as good as he has, you can recapture it?
AP: No.
CR: Why not?
AP: I’m not sure about that. You know, once you, once you vary, then you lose that – thing that you were talking about earlier. What is it? Sometimes it’s hard to put in place. What is it? I’m not sure I know. I’m not sure Jack knows. I know what he did, and I know how good he was. But to have him describe to you or to anyone, what was that thing that you grab? I know that his concentration was so good, that he could play, and play the way it was, but I’ve seen it wander, even with Nicholas, as good as he was. And now when you have a disturbance in your life that’s major, can you get it back? Can you get that thing that you can’t put your finger on, and get hold of it and choke it and keep it. Boy that’s a tough deal. That’s something you see it in every sport –I’ve seen it golf, in baseball players, football players. I seen them so good, and then all of a sudden something happens. It could be a psychological thing, like you say, well, “I’ve done it,” and then that’s it. Then you say, “I want to do it again,” but it isn’t there, you can’t find it, you can’t grasp it. You can’t hold on to it.
CR: Some call that an X factor.
AP: Exactly.
CR: You don’t know what it is. You can’t define it, but you know when it’s there.
AP: Yep.
CR: You had it. Jack had it.
AP: A lot of people. Hogan. Nelson.
CR: Byron Nelson had it.
AP: Yes.
CR: Sam Snead?
AP: Sam Snead was probably a little further from what we are talking about, and had an ability that was more natural than anybody that I knew in golf. Snead was as close to a natural player as anything that ever happened. But you know, now here’s a guy like you say I never won the PGA, well Snead never won the Open. My goodness, if anybody, if you think about it, anybody that should have won the Open was Snead, but didn’t. And why? That X factor.
CR: But you kept that, that thing about winning in you to this very day. You have it, feel it. In business.
AP: It’s a drive, it’s a thing that you feel like when I go to bed at night I go to sleep.
CR: I never met a winner who had a work ethic. Not somebody who says I have so much talent that naturally I won.
You work at it.
AP: That’s it. I talk to golfers, I talk to my grand kids about their game, and tell them to develop a system, Now, when they’re young. And if they develop that system, it will be the crutch they need to be good. To know that system and make it work for you, know what it is and make it work.
CR: Tell me what a system is?
AR: It could be anything. It could be so many things.
It all has to do with doing it day in and day out. When you get into competition and get under pressure, and get over that ball and are looking at it, and know you have to hit it, it is having that system to depend on to get that ball to where you want it to be.
CR: You said you didn’t have the perfect swing but was your swing, something you could depend on.
CR: It was your system. DNA.
AP: It was just fun. As my father said, “Hit it, go get it and hit it again.”Or when there’s two trees there in front of you and there’s an opening to the pin between them, you go through them. I had to.
CR: Sometimes you lose some tournaments you should win and you win some you should lose.
AP: That is very true. I’d like to think I won more than I lost.
CR: Your most painful loss?
AP: Gee, I can think of a lot of them, but I suppose San Francisco, the Open, with the lead that I had.
CR: How big was the lead?
AP: Seven shots, going into the back nine, nine holes to play.
CR: You were ahead by seven strokes ahead with nine holes to play?
AP: Yep.
CR: How tough is it about not having won the PGA?
AP: Well, I make excuses for that. I finished second a number of times. And I played good a couple of times and felt I should have won the PGA. And it hurts, the fact that I didn’t win, and I suppose there is some x factor that says why you didn’t win. My excuses are that I have won the Australian, I won the British, all PGA championships, but I haven’t won the PGA championship.
CR: ….Because of the style and drama you brought to the game, and you brought new fans to the game, and that’s your legacy….
AP: I hope I’ve done some of the things that you say I’ve done. The game is so fantastic, and people who get into it love it so much….I’d be pleased with that. There’s no game like it. You go out there and tee it up on the first tee, and it’s you, the golf ball and the golf course. And there you go. And if you can handle it, go at it, and do it good. But what other game - there’s always someone else in the other games, a guy hitting the ball to you, or you throwing the ball somewhere, something else, there’s other people involved in it, but in golf you are the person that’s doing it.
CR: You’re playing yourself and the course.
AP: That’s it. And it can’t change. That’s the way it is.
CR: Gary Player and others have said all of us should all give you a percentage of our earnings because without you there would be no television contracts and without you it wouldn’t be as good for anyone.
AP: The truth is that it is such a great game and for me to be a part of it. Like the
Golf Association, and when I played right here in the Western Pennsylvania Golf Association, and the USGA, what those people - whether you like them or dislike them, what they have done is so great, play the game, the history of the game. Those things are so important to me. People. You talk about the galleries, the people that have inspired me to do what I’ve done and the pleasures of my life – my wife Winnie, my kids, my wife now, what they have helped me do what I wanted to do is so important, and I am so grateful for that, and I could thank people who have helped me, and the fact that I have had a big success. Mark McCormick – we haven’t talked about him too much, but he was great for me. We had differences. But he was good for me because he taught me about business and the world. Doc Gibbons. Te people I am associated with in my life and business, what they did for me mentally is something that I could never thank them enough.
CR: Thank you.
AP: I tell you what, I don’t play golf much anymore, but you find the time, come here and we’ll try Latrobe Country Club.
Thank You.
Thursday, August 4, 2011
Kenny Robinson - Keeper of Traditions
Even on his day off every morning Kenny Robinson routinely makes his way over to the Northfield clubhouse of the Atlantic City Country Club to feed Bogie the cat, who has been a resident there for the past 19 years.
Kenny’s been coming to the ACCC every morning for a dozen years longer than Bogie, has worked there in a half dozen various capacities over the years, and has been left with the job of maintaining the history and traditions of the club.
The history is long and embroidered, while the traditions are few but steadfast, one of which includes feeding Bogie the cat, who can usually be found either napping or sitting sentry on the shelf next to the bag room door. From where he sits, if cats could talk, Boggy has seen it all, but so it seems, has Kenny Robinson. Sitting down with him to talk about his experiences in golf is a lesson in history, traditions and the growth of the game.
Born near Philadelphia, the son of a Vauderville entertainer and a Broadway showgirl, Kenny Robinson first became associated with the game of golf when still in school while caddying at his neighborhood Old York Road golf club.
Playing the harmonica was a family tradition, and Kennedy and his brothers played often, for both fun and profit, and broke their father’s marathon harmonica playing record at a charity event in the 1930s. Still proficient at the harp, once in awhile, like on St. Patrick’s Day, Kenny can be persuaded to play “Danny Boy” and a few other appropriate tunes.
After serving in the Army in Korea, from where he returned a decorated hero, Kenny continued to work in Vaudeville. He had left a job working at the historic Country Club at Brookline, Massachusetts when he came to Atlantic City to entertain at the old Globe and Capitol Burlesque Theaters when he met Leo Fraser at a boardwalk hotel event.
From one Army vet to another, Leo Fraser asked Robinson to come to work for him at the Atlantic City Country Club, and he’s never left. Taking on practically every job around the clubhouse, Kenny’s been a housekeeper, maintenance man, caddy, caddy master, starter and pro shop manager.
When the most distinguished and influential members of the community were also members of the elite, private club, Kenny knew them all and they knew Kenny, and depended on him for their tee times. His job also allowed him to meet many celebrities who played the course, including Bob Hope and Perry Como and others he knew from the old Vaudeville circuit who now came around as casino headliners.
Of all the championship tournaments and celebrated golf events he’s been associated with, Kenny says the 1980 PGA Senior Tournament was the most memorial. “Seeing all of those guys get together was something else. The champions of the game who hadn’t played together in awhile and were happy to just see each other again.” That was even before Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicholas were old enough to play as seniors. Among those who were there included Al Besselink, Sam Snead, Art Wall, Sr., Tony Pena, Tommy Bolt and the Herbert brothers.
As the third senior event of the year, just after the Senior Open, that tournament is considered the first and beginning of the PGA Senior Tour, now called the Champions Tour, one of the most prestigious golf tours in the world. That tournament also raised money for charity – Juvenile Diabetes, and was sponsored by Bally Casino, whose parent company now owns the club.
It was also the tournament, Kenny notes, that the longtime course single round record of 63 was set by Charlie Sifford, one of the first blacks to play on the PGA tour. It was a record that was only recently eclipsed during Duke Delcher’s tournament by Frank Dobbs, who shot a 62 while overcoming a boggy.
But Kenny doesn’t think the course records will be seriously threatened by any new, hot shot youngster, but rather, the seniors again, if they ever hold another senior tournament again.
Other than Boggie the cat, Kenny survived the casino take-over of the club, along with Denise Petrino, the clubhouse manager, who succeeded her mother at that position. Robinson credits casino executives Wally Barr and Ken Condon, who were club members before the sale, for their efforts to continue the historic legacy of the club.
Robinson also notes that Director of Golf Operations Billy Ziobro, along with architect Tom Doak, were primarily responsible for restoring the course along traditional links lines, and that Ziobro’s association with the club goes back to when he won the Sonny Fraser Cup, the New Jersey Amateur and New Jersey Open all in the same year, before turning pro.
While the Sonny Fraser tournament, which once rivaled the Crump Cup as the premier amateur invitational tournament in this area, has yet to be revived, other charity tournaments and traditions continue – the Northfield Mayor’s Cup, the Marine Corps tournament and scholastic events have been maintained, and new tournaments and new traditions are being inaugurated.
As the old players knew him, the new players will come to recognize the knowledge and wisdom Kenny Robinson has acquired over the years. Many people have benefited from and have appreciated knowing Kenny Robinson over the years, but today, on his day off, he is best appreciated by Bogie the cat, the bag room sentry, awaiting his meal.
Requiem for a Feline – Bogie the Clubhouse Cat
November 1982 – January 2001
We are sad to report that Bogie the cat who has called the Atlantic City Country Club his home for nearly twenty years has passed away.
Since he first arrived at the Northfield Links in November 1982, a kitten that could curl in the cup of your hand, Bogie was an ever-present if unobtrusive fixture around the venerable old clubhouse. Named by Drew Siok, the son of the golf pro Don Siok, Bogie could usually be found laying around the bag room door, unless there was a tournament.
When there was a tournament Bogie would usually perch himself on the corner by the registration table, ensuring that he would get a playful pet or pat on the head from passing players. Other times he would sit in an empty golf cart, looking for some attention and waiting for the action to begin. Among those who took a particular liking to Bogie were Perry Como, Sam Snead, Julius Boros, Joe Nameth and Frankie Avalon.
With his bright orange fur, white underbelly and blue eyes that begged to be petted, Bogie often mingled with the golfers on the practice green and accompanied them to the first tee before retreating for a nap back in the bag room.
When the casino first purchased the club, longtime employee Kenny Robinson obtained assurances from company executives that Bogie would always have a home. With his passing, Kenny buried Bogie on the course, where a small shrine recognized his friendly contribution to the kindred spirits of the club.
(This article originally appeared in Golfer's Tee Times)
Kenny’s been coming to the ACCC every morning for a dozen years longer than Bogie, has worked there in a half dozen various capacities over the years, and has been left with the job of maintaining the history and traditions of the club.
The history is long and embroidered, while the traditions are few but steadfast, one of which includes feeding Bogie the cat, who can usually be found either napping or sitting sentry on the shelf next to the bag room door. From where he sits, if cats could talk, Boggy has seen it all, but so it seems, has Kenny Robinson. Sitting down with him to talk about his experiences in golf is a lesson in history, traditions and the growth of the game.
Born near Philadelphia, the son of a Vauderville entertainer and a Broadway showgirl, Kenny Robinson first became associated with the game of golf when still in school while caddying at his neighborhood Old York Road golf club.
Playing the harmonica was a family tradition, and Kennedy and his brothers played often, for both fun and profit, and broke their father’s marathon harmonica playing record at a charity event in the 1930s. Still proficient at the harp, once in awhile, like on St. Patrick’s Day, Kenny can be persuaded to play “Danny Boy” and a few other appropriate tunes.
After serving in the Army in Korea, from where he returned a decorated hero, Kenny continued to work in Vaudeville. He had left a job working at the historic Country Club at Brookline, Massachusetts when he came to Atlantic City to entertain at the old Globe and Capitol Burlesque Theaters when he met Leo Fraser at a boardwalk hotel event.
From one Army vet to another, Leo Fraser asked Robinson to come to work for him at the Atlantic City Country Club, and he’s never left. Taking on practically every job around the clubhouse, Kenny’s been a housekeeper, maintenance man, caddy, caddy master, starter and pro shop manager.
When the most distinguished and influential members of the community were also members of the elite, private club, Kenny knew them all and they knew Kenny, and depended on him for their tee times. His job also allowed him to meet many celebrities who played the course, including Bob Hope and Perry Como and others he knew from the old Vaudeville circuit who now came around as casino headliners.
Of all the championship tournaments and celebrated golf events he’s been associated with, Kenny says the 1980 PGA Senior Tournament was the most memorial. “Seeing all of those guys get together was something else. The champions of the game who hadn’t played together in awhile and were happy to just see each other again.” That was even before Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicholas were old enough to play as seniors. Among those who were there included Al Besselink, Sam Snead, Art Wall, Sr., Tony Pena, Tommy Bolt and the Herbert brothers.
As the third senior event of the year, just after the Senior Open, that tournament is considered the first and beginning of the PGA Senior Tour, now called the Champions Tour, one of the most prestigious golf tours in the world. That tournament also raised money for charity – Juvenile Diabetes, and was sponsored by Bally Casino, whose parent company now owns the club.
It was also the tournament, Kenny notes, that the longtime course single round record of 63 was set by Charlie Sifford, one of the first blacks to play on the PGA tour. It was a record that was only recently eclipsed during Duke Delcher’s tournament by Frank Dobbs, who shot a 62 while overcoming a boggy.
But Kenny doesn’t think the course records will be seriously threatened by any new, hot shot youngster, but rather, the seniors again, if they ever hold another senior tournament again.
Other than Boggie the cat, Kenny survived the casino take-over of the club, along with Denise Petrino, the clubhouse manager, who succeeded her mother at that position. Robinson credits casino executives Wally Barr and Ken Condon, who were club members before the sale, for their efforts to continue the historic legacy of the club.
Robinson also notes that Director of Golf Operations Billy Ziobro, along with architect Tom Doak, were primarily responsible for restoring the course along traditional links lines, and that Ziobro’s association with the club goes back to when he won the Sonny Fraser Cup, the New Jersey Amateur and New Jersey Open all in the same year, before turning pro.
While the Sonny Fraser tournament, which once rivaled the Crump Cup as the premier amateur invitational tournament in this area, has yet to be revived, other charity tournaments and traditions continue – the Northfield Mayor’s Cup, the Marine Corps tournament and scholastic events have been maintained, and new tournaments and new traditions are being inaugurated.
As the old players knew him, the new players will come to recognize the knowledge and wisdom Kenny Robinson has acquired over the years. Many people have benefited from and have appreciated knowing Kenny Robinson over the years, but today, on his day off, he is best appreciated by Bogie the cat, the bag room sentry, awaiting his meal.
Requiem for a Feline – Bogie the Clubhouse Cat
November 1982 – January 2001
We are sad to report that Bogie the cat who has called the Atlantic City Country Club his home for nearly twenty years has passed away.
Since he first arrived at the Northfield Links in November 1982, a kitten that could curl in the cup of your hand, Bogie was an ever-present if unobtrusive fixture around the venerable old clubhouse. Named by Drew Siok, the son of the golf pro Don Siok, Bogie could usually be found laying around the bag room door, unless there was a tournament.
When there was a tournament Bogie would usually perch himself on the corner by the registration table, ensuring that he would get a playful pet or pat on the head from passing players. Other times he would sit in an empty golf cart, looking for some attention and waiting for the action to begin. Among those who took a particular liking to Bogie were Perry Como, Sam Snead, Julius Boros, Joe Nameth and Frankie Avalon.
With his bright orange fur, white underbelly and blue eyes that begged to be petted, Bogie often mingled with the golfers on the practice green and accompanied them to the first tee before retreating for a nap back in the bag room.
When the casino first purchased the club, longtime employee Kenny Robinson obtained assurances from company executives that Bogie would always have a home. With his passing, Kenny buried Bogie on the course, where a small shrine recognized his friendly contribution to the kindred spirits of the club.
(This article originally appeared in Golfer's Tee Times)
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
The Old Golfer Dies - By Edgar A. Guest
The Old Golfer Dies
By Edgar A. Guest
Old Andy was a dying man. The
Doctor shook his head.
“You’d better call the family in,”
unto the nurse he said.
“He tries to speak,” the nurse replied,
and bending low she heard:
“I want the boys, I want the boys –
for them I have a word.”
His loved ones gathered round his
Bed and watched him weaker grow.
“I must,” he gasped,’ say something
to the boys before I go.”
“They’re coming, Pa; they’ll soon be
here,” a daughter softly said.
“Give me the message you would
leave,” but Andy shook his head.
They wondered what he had to tell
And what was on his mind,
But none could guess the counsel
Which he wished to leave behind.
“The boys, the boys,” he spoke again,
“’tis them I wish to see,
I hope they will get here in time to
Hearken until me.”
Into the room they came at last,
The old man called them near.
“My boys,” said he in faltering tones,
“not long will I be here,
But this I want to say to you once
More before I die:
Never play your brassie when you
Have a down-hill lie!”
By Edgar A. Guest
Old Andy was a dying man. The
Doctor shook his head.
“You’d better call the family in,”
unto the nurse he said.
“He tries to speak,” the nurse replied,
and bending low she heard:
“I want the boys, I want the boys –
for them I have a word.”
His loved ones gathered round his
Bed and watched him weaker grow.
“I must,” he gasped,’ say something
to the boys before I go.”
“They’re coming, Pa; they’ll soon be
here,” a daughter softly said.
“Give me the message you would
leave,” but Andy shook his head.
They wondered what he had to tell
And what was on his mind,
But none could guess the counsel
Which he wished to leave behind.
“The boys, the boys,” he spoke again,
“’tis them I wish to see,
I hope they will get here in time to
Hearken until me.”
Into the room they came at last,
The old man called them near.
“My boys,” said he in faltering tones,
“not long will I be here,
But this I want to say to you once
More before I die:
Never play your brassie when you
Have a down-hill lie!”
The 19th Hole Tradition
The Apple Tree Gang at the 19th Hole
From the Rough, with George Morton
Every golf game usually ends at the 19th hole. The 19th Hole is part of the ritual of golf that most players have in common. From the novice to the expert, they all have the same handicap at this hole.
“As local golfer Jimmy Care says, “I’m short on the course, but long at the 19th hole.”
The location of the 19th hole can be many places, including the clubhouse of the golf course, the home of one of the group’s players or the local bar around the corner.
As a player as well as a bartender, I am both a participant and constant observer of many 19th hole experiences. Playing the game allows me to participate in the 19th hole, while working at a local bar with several golf courses in the vicinity lets me watch the excitement of the 19th hole.
The history of the 19th hole in American golf can be traced back to St. Andrews in 1889. Not St. Andrews in Scotland, but St. Andrews in Yonkers, New York, a course that consisted of six holes laid out in an apple orchard.
Founded by (amateur) John Reid, the club consisted of thirteen members, known as the “Apple Tree Gang.”
According to “The Story of American Golf” by Herbert W. Wind, a book from the extensive collection of sports books in the library of Kenny Robinson, the gang pitched a tent behind the sixth hole and hung a picnic basket from a branch of an apple tree. The tent with the basket became the 19th hole as we know it today.
The first thing I noticed about the 19th hole is that the game doesn’t end on the course, although the hostilities that might arise on the course do. Players who had differences on the course resolve them at the 19th hole, and the players who have just played together for the first time are now friends for life.
One confrontation on the course I was involved in started at the fifth hole of the Greate Bay Country Club in Somers Point when it was the Sands. A friend who did not finish out the hole by putting, recorded a six on the scorecard and had not noticed that one of the other players was also having a bad hole. The other player finished with a seven.
I asked, “Did you finish the hole?”
He said, “Yes.”
I replied, “When did you putt?”
His reply was, “I didn’t, it was close enough.”
I said, “Nobody gave it to you, did they?”
“No.”
he lost the hole and had a fit that lasted the rest of the day. We did not say two words until we reconciled differences at the 19th hole in the clubhouse.
The 19th hole is the place where players discuss the day’s round and past rounds. The great shots are remembered by the player who made them, and the bad shots re remembered by everyone in the group but the person who hit them.
I remember five years ago when a friend took a ten on a par three sixth hole at Greate Bay. He could not recall most of the ten shots in the clubhouse but everyone else in the group could recall all the shots and laugh about each one. I can remember most of my great shots, but I forget the bad ones, which my close friends continually remind me of.
Business is always concluded at the 19th hole. All bets are paid off and discussed and plans are made for the next tee time. The money usually exchanged is spent by the winners on food and drinks, which the loser also enjoys. The score cards are totaled and everybody is told their score. Even after being told their score however, a player usually wants to take a look at the card to see if he is satisfied, or can find a way to shave strokes off his score.
The competition doesn’t always en don the course, merely transferred to other battlefields at the 19th hole, like billiards, shuffleboards and darts, allowing a competitor to redeem themselves after losing on the golf course.
The 19th hole is also a place where a golfer can catch up on the gossip of the club, since the bartenders and waitresses are always ready to supply the latest information in exchange of new gossip.
Being a part of this phenomenon from both sides of the bar, I have both given and received information that has created laughs that have lasted for several days.
The 19th hole always leads to at least one person giving or getting a lesson.
The 19th hole is indeed a great place. A place where business is concluded, the day of golf is relived, a lesson can be given or received for free, and friend are made and kept forever.
(George Morton is a bartender at the old Rugby Inn, now Ventura’s Offshore CafĂ© in Northfield)
CONTINUE TO FEATURE ARTICLE - WHEN ARNIE MET WINNIE -
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