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Our first 'Homebred' U.S.Open Golf Champ, Johnny McDermott

As you might have guessed, I collect stories about great players from the past. Stories from when golf was more of a game, less of a television show. Here’s one about Johnny McDermott, the first American to win the U.S. Open, in 1911 and 1912. This week, as you may know, the 2007 U.S. Open begins at the Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, PA., so if nothing else this is a timely tale.

 

Following his U.S. Open wins, Johnny McDermott, our first “homebred” U. S. Open winner, entered the 1914 British Open, but because of travel delays he arrived too late to tee off. Returning home to the States his ship, the Kaiser Wilhelm II, collided with an English ship and sank. He drifted in a lifeboat in the middle of the Atlantic for over twenty-four hours before being rescued.

 

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JFK the golfer

TIME Magazine in their July 2, 2007 issue features JFK with the cover line: What We Can Learn From JFK. It is the 6th Annual Making of America Issue of the magazine. Now, Richard Stengel, the Managing Editor, writes in his note to readers, "With the U.S. in a pivotal moment similar to the one in 1960, we take a hard look at Kennedy and his legacy." That said, I'm happy to add TIME also used a page [64] to write about JFK the golfer.


That page was written by Van Natta, author of First Off the Tee: Presidential Hackers, Duffers, and Cheaters from Taft to Bush. Van Natta says Kennedy was the best of the presidential golfers, shooting an average score of 80 for a full 18 holes. That would give him an 8 handicap, [if par was 72] which is pretty good for a sitting president.

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Horror Golf!

While it is true that most golfers have, from time to time, “a horrible round of golf,” what is not clear is how a “horror writer” ends up writing a golf novel!

In the 1970s and ‘80s I wrote a series of horror novels (The Piercing, Hobgoblin, The Shroud, The Legacy) and others, several of which made best seller lists across the country. While golf courses were never a scene for my horror novels, golf really wasn’t that far from my mind.

In fact, during those years one side of my brain was writing magazine articles about golf and editing golf instructional books (Better Golf, New Golf for Women, and Playing with the Pros). Also during those years I kept nurturing the idea of writing a golf novel. Golf has been a passion of mine since I was 12 years old and first began to caddie at Midlothian Country Club in Illinois.

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Hogan at Carnoustie

This is the week of the British Open, known as the “Open.” It is being held at Carnoustie. [The nick name for the course is Carnasty; it is called one of the toughest courses to hold the Open.] This is the 7th time the Open has been held at Carnoustie. It is the course where Ben Hogan won his only Open, back in 1953. He won this Open the same summer he won the Masters and the U.S. Open. That year is called Hogan’s Great Slam. It was his greatest year and also his final great year as a golfer.

As some of you know, I have written about Hogan in my novel, The Caddie Who Knew Ben Hogan. My novel takes place before 1949 when at the top of his golf career Hogan and his wife, Valerie, were in a terrible automobile accident. It nearly killed them both and the doctors did not believe Hogan would even walk again, let alone play golf.

Going to England was not easy in ’53, but Hogan went, according to James Dodson, who wrote Ben Hogan: An American Life, because Bobby Jones and Gene Sarazen said he would never be considered a great player unless he played in the Open. Ben Hogan wanted to be remembered as the greatest player who ever played the game.

Hogan and his wife arrived 10 days before the tournament took place to play and practice at Carnoustie. He had to learn how to play a “links” course, as well as, how to play with a smaller British golf ball.

Hogan was two strokes off the lead going into the third round, having shot 73 and 71, par is 71. The final two rounds at that time were on Friday but many people thought Hogan, because of his damaged leg, wouldn't be able to walk 36 holes on Friday. Ben was also battling a 101-degree fever from a Scottish cold.

That Friday, 40-year-old Ben Hogan went out and shot 70 in the third round. In the afternoon round, he shot 68, a new course record. His 282 was then the best score ever in the Open Championship.

When Hogan returned to the States, he was given a ticker-tape parade down lower Broadway in New York City. It was only the second ticker-tape parade given to a golfer [the first was Bobby Jones.] There has been none since.

Dodson writes in his book, “Ben Hogan embodied a lot of American self-determination. He was probably the most mentally complex athlete who's ever lived. Of all the great players, he was the least physically gifted, and he was by far the hardest working. I think Carnoustie was the ultimate, final test for Hogan. And it was the final hurdle to immortality. Coming on the heels of 1950, his miraculous comeback from death, I think it really confirmed that this was maybe the most successful underdog ever."

This weekend all eyes will be on Tiger, but remember that in many ways if it wasn’t for Hogan, Tiger would not have such a place in the sun. Still, given Scotland, it might also be wind, rain, and cold weather. Ben Hogan weather.

15 Votes

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Caddie Days On The PGA Tour

I was reminded the other day while watching the US Open at Oakmont how the great golfers of today do not come out of the caddie yard. They have not spent their adolescent years looping at private country clubs the way pros once learned the game.

Walter Hagen was a caddie, Ben Hogan, Gene Sarazen, Byron Nelson, even the great players who never turned pro, Francis Ouimet and Chick Evans. They were all caddies, and they all won the U.S. Open, starting with the amazing win by 20-year-old Francis Ouimet [pronounced wee-met] in 1913 at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts. Ouimet's win changed the perception of golf in America, or as golf’s great writer Herbert Warren Wind put it, “the shots heard round the world.”

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