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Title: | Welcome to the Golf Notes Conference! |
Notice: | FOR SALE notes in Note 69 please! Intros in note 863 or 61. |
Moderator: | FUNYET::ANDERSON |
|
Created: | Tue Feb 15 1994 |
Last Modified: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 2129 |
Total number of notes: | 21499 |
537.0. "Bobby Jones..." by MSEE::KELLEY (Custom clubs/club repair) Tue Feb 28 1989 11:51
Robert T. Jones
(1902-1971)
I know the name Bobby Jones is familiar to a large majority
of golfers, but I for one didn't know much of anything about
him. I just finished reading DOWN the FAIRWAY by Robert T. Jones
and O.B. Keeler (excellent book). I thought I would post some
of the major events of his career here...
1911 - age 9, won the junior championship cup of the Atlanta
Athletic club
1912 - age 10, lost the junior championship cup of the
Atlanta Athletic club in the final round
1913 - age 11, shot his first score of 80
1915 - age 13, lost in the finals of the second flight,
Montgomery invitation
qualified third in Southern amateur, lost
second match to Commodore Heard, and lost
in final of beaten-16 championship division,
called second flight
won invitation at Roebuck Springs, Burmingham
won Davis and Freeman cup at East Lake
won East Lake club championship
won Druid Hills club championship
1916 - age 14, lost to Perry Adair in semi-finals, first
flight, Montogomery invitation
won invitation, Country Club, Birmingham
won invitation, Cherokee Club, Knoxville
won invitation, East Lake
won Georgia state amateur championship at
Brookhaven, Atlanta
lost to Robert A. Gardner in third round of
national amateur at Merion, Philadelphia
1917 - age 15, lost to Louis Jacoby in second round of Druid
Hills invitation
won Southern amateur championship, from Louis
Jacoby, at Roebuck, Birmingham
1918 - age 16, Red Cross matches
War Relief matches at Balustrol, Englewood,
Siwanoy and Garden City. Won three singles
and two foursomes; lost one foursome with
Perry Adair to Emmett French and Jack Dowling
1919 - age 17, lost to Nelson Whitney in semi-finals of
Southern amateur at New Orleans
runner-up Canadian Open to Douglas Edgar
runner-up to Jim Barnes in Southern Open
runner-up to S. Davidson Herron in National
amateur
qualified in Western amateur, lost in first
round to Ned Sawyer
first entered national open at Inverness,
Toledo, finishing with 299, four strokes
behind Ted Ray's 295, which won the tourney
1920 - age 18, tied with Willie Mcfarlane for eighth place
national open, Toledo
won Southern amateur, Chattanooga
won medal, Western amateur, Memphis and lost
to Chick Evans in semi-finals
won medal, national amateur, Engineers Club,
and lost to Francis Ouimet in semi-finals
won medal and first flight, Morris County
invitation, Morristown, N.J.
runner-up to J. Douglas Edgar in Southern Open
1921 - age 19, lost to Allan Graham in fourth round, British
amateur, Hoylake, England
won singles and foursome matches in team
matches, America vs. Britain
withdrew 11th hole, third round, British Open
St. Andrews
tied for fifth place in national open, Columbia
Washington, D.C.
tied with Joe Kirkwood for fourth place in
Western Open, Oakwood, Cleveland
lost to Willie Hunter in third round, national
amateur, at ST. Louis
1922 - age 20, tied with John Black for second place, national
open, Skokie
won Southern amateyr, East Lake
finished in fourth place, Western open,
Cleveland
won singles and foursome matches in Walker Cup
matches, National Links, Southampton
lost to Jess Sweeter in semi-finals, national
amateur, Brookline
1923 - age 21, won national open at Inwood after playoff
with Bobby Cruickshank
won medal, national amateur, Flossmoor, Chicago
after playoff with Chick Evans. Lost to Max
Marston in second round
1924 - age 22, runner-up to Cyril Walker in national open,
Oakland Hills
won national amateur, Merion, Philadelphia
won singles, lost foursome, in Walker Cup
matches, Garden City
1925 - age 23, lost to Willie Macfarlane in play-off of
national open, Worcestor, Mass
won natinal amateur, Oakmont
1926 - age 24, lost special match, 72 holes in Florida
to Walter Hagen, 12-11
second in West Coast Open, Pasadena, won by
Walter Hagen
lost to Andrew Jamieson in fifth round of
British amateur, Muirfield, Scotland
won sigles and foursomes in Walker Cup
matches, St, Andrews
led Southern section qualifying for British
Open at Sunningdale, England 66-68-134
won British Open, St. Anne's, with score of
291
won American Open, Columbus, Ohio
won medal, national amateur, and lost in
final to George Von Elm
1927 - age 25, won Southern open East Lake
finished in quadruple tie for eleventh place
natinal open, Oakmont, with 307 total
I will post more when I have the time....
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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537.1 | "THE LOCAL CONNECTION TO GOLF" | OURVAX::GLASS | | Tue Feb 28 1989 13:36 | 4 |
| Hi,
Do not forget that Bobby Jones played in the 1935 U.S.Open at Worcester
Country Club while using his hickory shafted clubs.
Tom
|
537.2 | | BOSHOG::VARLEY | | Tue Feb 28 1989 15:36 | 2 |
| I thought the only U.S. Open at Worcester was 1926, but I could
be wrong. I believe Willie MacFarlane beat Jones in that one.
|
537.3 | more... | MSEE::KELLEY | Custom clubs/club repair | Wed Mar 01 1989 09:21 | 26 |
|
RE: .1 AND .2
According to DOWN the FAIRWAY, the "national open" at Worcester
was in 1925 and Bobby lost in the play-off to Willie Macfarlane.
DOWN the FAIRWAY was published in 1927. The book I have is a
reprint and has an "Afterword" in it by Francis M. Bird, the
following info is from that. Bobby was only a part time golfer
during his championship years, he was also going to school.
He got his B.S. degrees from Georgia Tech and Harvard by 1924
(the same year he got married). He also went to Law School at
Emory University preparatory to admission to the bar in 1928.
Bobby retired from tournament competition in 1930, which was
the year he won the British Amateur, the British Open, the
U.S. Open, and the U.S. Amateur. He was the first and only
golfer to pull off the feat known in those days as the Grand Slam.
He retired from competition golf at the age of 28...!
He went to work in his father's law firm and part time course
architect. He, along with Dr. Alister MacKenzie designed and
built the Augusta National course in 1931 and 1932. In 1934
Bobby and Cliff Roberts established the Masters tournament.
It was originally called the Augusta National Invitational
it was changed to be called the Masters in 1938...
|
537.4 | "TYPERS MAKE MISTAKES" | OURVAX::GLASS | | Wed Mar 01 1989 14:29 | 8 |
| Sorry about that!
It was 1925 and not 1935 as I had typed in NOTE 537.2.
Sorry about that.
Should have known better, since steel shafts won their first tournament
in 1929.
Tom
|
537.5 | how good was Jones... | TONTO::GORDON | | Thu Mar 02 1989 10:20 | 76 |
|
from article in may/1986 golf digest, without permission
--------------------------------------------------------
I have paraphrased portions of the article here, anyone wanting
a copy of complete article send me mail at CSS::GORDON including your
internal DEC mail stop and I'll send a copy. Dick Gordon
How Good Was Bobby Jones Really?
-----------
by
Charles Prince
From the book: A GOLF STORY-Bobby Jones,Augusta National,and the Masters
Tournament.
> Jones' mere presence on the first tee had a way of disarming most
of the amateurs and even some of the professional opponents he was paired
against or just with.
> Professional Tommy Armour, after playing numerous friendly matches
with Jones and never winning, started accepting a stroke per 9 holes from
Jones and when asked how he could accept strokes from an amateur replied:
"Because, that's how goddam good he was."
> Jones was the first man to hit the par-5 16th hole in two, at
Olympic Club in San Francisco, all 604 yards of it and this with hickory
shafts and a ball that was easily 30 yards shorter than todays.
> From 1923 through 1930, Jones won 13 of the 21 major national
championships he played in.
> Jones never took a formal golf lesson in his life.
> While in Chicago for the Walker Cup Matches in 1928, he set
a course record on a course he'd never played before then proceeded to
break it two days later. Someone added up Jones last dozen rounds of
golf he had played and they were as follows:
69, 71, 69, 68, 68, 68, 67, 68, 67, 70, 69, 67
again all with hickory shafts and a ball that was 30 yards
shorter than todays.
> What was the best part of his game? All of it.! Damm, he was long!
He was the greatest putter who ever lived. Nobody could do with the irons
what he did with them. And he's the only man I ever saw who could back
up a 3-wood on a green.
> In the 1925 Open Championship at Worchester, Mass. he insisted
on penalizing himself a stroke when his ball accidentally moved slightly
as the blade of his iron touched the grass. No one else could have
possibly seen the ball move, not even his caddie. That stroke cost him
the title as he lost in a playoff with Willie Macfarlane.
> In 1934 he appeared in his own Masters Tournament but no longer
had the competitive fires...Jones finished 76,74,72,72 tied for 13th.
He would play in 10 more Masters but never finished as high as his
13th place finish in 1934.
> Men might hit longer and straighter shots, sink more puts, win
more championships even. In short, play better golf than Bobby Jones
had, but nobody would ever play "like" him.
side note: Nicklaus goal as a youngster was to break Jones' record of
13 wins in the majors...I beleive he now has 20...!!!
|
537.6 | more by Jones | WOODRO::GORDON | | Fri Mar 03 1989 08:20 | 12 |
| Also a good book on general concepts of the game:
Bobby Jones on Golf
Doubleday & Co. 1966
Can be obtained as part of Golf Digest Classic series which includes:
Golf Fundamentals by Seymour Dunn
The Complete Golfer by Harry Vardon
Five Lessons by B�en Hogan
Swing the Clubhead by Ernest Jones
all excellent books...
|
537.7 | Bob's the name Golf's the game | GRANPA::KVENEZIO | | Tue Mar 07 1989 14:39 | 10 |
| I once read that he hated to be called "Bobby" and always preferred
"Bob". It is ironic that every reference made of him is always Bobby
Jones. I believe the media dubbed him Bobby and thats what stuck.
If you here of him referred to as Bob, it is probably a close friend
or a historian of the game.
Crenshaw said his video that's out these days is the best instructional
tape available. Bar none.
Ken
|
537.8 | Jones Tapes (by Sybervision) | DIXIE1::WESTCL | Gator Golfer | Tue Mar 07 1989 17:18 | 8 |
| There are two B. Jones videos. The two tape set with accompanying
book at $200+ is absolutely the greatest instruction/entertainment
you can buy. What a swing!! And his concepts are solid today.
The single tape version is in the $70 range. I haven't seen it,
but understand it is made up of some of the spots from the two tape
set.
Closs
|
537.9 | Are they "HOT" | TRACTR::OSBORNE | | Wed Mar 08 1989 13:18 | 5 |
| RE: .8
I thought CBS said they had EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS to Bobby's tapes.
How can these be purchased elsewhere?
Stu,
|
537.10 | Maybe just for TV...? | MSEE::KELLEY | Custom clubs/club repair | Wed Mar 08 1989 14:00 | 12 |
|
RE: .9
Stu, I think they were only referring to rights as far as being
shown on TV goes. I heard the same thing when I was watching
the tourney this past weekend, but I do know the tapes are for
sale through various sources, including the USGA...
This is just my impression of what I have seen and heard...
Gene
|
537.11 | supply and demand = price!!! | TONTO::GORDON | | Wed Mar 08 1989 16:05 | 11 |
| confirming gene's comments in .10, they said they had the rights
to broadcast the tapes and would be doing so during telecast this
year....if what they are doing are as they did this weekend...well
I suppose something is better than nothing....
I been dying to get my hands on these tapes of Jones but REFUSE
to pay the outrageous prices they are asking....I wish more people
would wait as I do to force the companys to stop gourging the public
enough is enough.....
my 2 cents...
|
537.12 | $$$$$$ | DARTS::DIAZ | CMG/CDG/SAMG | Wed Mar 08 1989 17:21 | 11 |
| Re:< Note 537.11 by TONTO::GORDON >
I second the motion. I can't see why tapes like Nicklaus "Golf my
way" are still priced at $60-$70 reflecting the price videotapes had
when it was introduced, I guess about 3-4 years ago. Now filmed
videotapes average $30.
I have seen some of the short broadcasts of Jones's tapes and they
look fantastic, but I won't pay $200+ for them.
Tavo
|
537.13 | Instructions from the master | MSDOA::BEAZLEY | | Mon Jan 13 1992 19:04 | 22 |
| This last weekend I watched a fundamental lesson given by Bobby Jones.
It was on out local HSE(Home Sports Entertainment). I don't know the
age of it, but one of the students was Joe E. Brown.
He taught the interlocking grip and a smooth two part swing consisting
of a takeaway in one motion followed by the weight shift and swing.
When asked about adjusting your grip to compensate for a hook or slice
he answered by saying the grip should NEVER be altered. There are
fundamentals you must always be able to return to. You should be able
to see three knuckles while sighting down your right arm(right-handers)
and your left hand should hold the shaft across your palm, not just
your fingers.
He was told by one of the students that if he took lessons from many
instructors he would have as many diverse instructions. Bobby replied
that the PGA was currently committed to teaching a uniform instruction
process and he would receive the same from any of them.
Interesting, I don't know how often they run these or if they have the
entire series. BTW Joe E. Brown played left handed.
Bob
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