When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
R.I.P. Billy Casper
/One of the game's all-time greats-particularly with a putter--has passed. Billy Casper was 83. While I never saw him play in his prime, the three-time major winner and 51-time PGA Tour winner displayed his controlled hook with grace and precision on the Senior Tour where he was a 9-time winner.Tod Leonard, of Casper's native San Diego, on the legend's passing.
In an email, Bob Casper said his father had suffered from pneumonia after Thanksgiving, spent five weeks in the hospital and then returned home. He was doing rehabilitation four days a week, but last Thursday became weak.
“He went downhill quick,” Bob Casper said. “It was quick. But he didn’t have any pain. It was peaceful.”
The AP’s obituary, by Doug Ferguson.
The New York Times' obituary, by Richard Goldstein.
Jaime Diaz’s Golf World feature on Casper prior to the 2012 U.S. Open at Olympic Club.
Rex Hoggard on Casper's legacy in golf, including one remarkable stretch.
Dubbed “the most underrated golfer of all time” by Johnny Miller, Casper’s 27 Tour victories from 1964 to ’70 topped every player during that timeframe, including Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and Gary Player.
Jack Nicklaus took to Facebook to remember his friend. Just part of the statement:
“Billy Casper was one of the greatest family men—be it inside the game of golf or out—I have had the fortunate blessing to meet. He had such a wonderful balance to his life. Golf was never the most important thing in Billy’s life—family was. There was always much more to Billy Casper than golf. But as a golfer, Billy was a fantastic player, and I don’t think he gets enough credit for being one. I have said many times that during my career, when I looked up at a leaderboard, I wasn’t just looking to see where a Palmer or a Player or a Trevino was. I was also checking to see where Billy Casper was.
Here's a fairly recent clip of Casper telling David Feherty how even Tour Players are unaware if his accomplishments.
**Golf Channel's obit narrated by Rich Lerner, which aired today on Golf Central with follow-up talk (in lieu of Farmers Insurance Open talk).
**Michael Bamberger writing for golf.com:
He will be missed throughout golf, a gentle man who welcomed questions on any subject and who never seemed to be in hurry for anything. He will be especially missed at Augusta. During the Masters, he would have long lunches on the upstairs clubhouse veranda, in his green coat -- 50L would be a generous guess -- surrounded by friends and many family members. Casper and his wife, Shirley, who survives him, had 11 children, six of whom were adopted. Casper was a devout Mormon, a proponent of the health benefits of eating buffalo meat, and a successful businessman. He started a golf-course management company, Billy Casper Golf, that operates well over 100 golf courses.
Golf Channel will re-air Feherty featuring Casper on Monday at 9 a.m., 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. ET.
Golf In America Even Older Than First Thought
/A hat tip to Luke Kerr-Dineen for a fun Tommy Braswell story in the Post and Courier of Charleston on a University of Edinburgh find suggesting the first golf clubs and balls were shipped to America in 1739, not 1743 as first thought. To put that date in perspective, Kerr-Dineen points out:
The first train was nearly 100 years away from being conceived, the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews was 15 years away from being founded and George Washington was just 7 years old.
The "First Shipment of Golf Clubs to America" inspired this print in 1990.
They don't ship 'em like they used to!
Last Call: Hogan & Nelson's Glen Garden To Close
/Thanksgiving Re-Broadcast: "Jack's First Major"
/Auction Alert: 2014 Lot Includes Jack Fleck Memorabilia
/St. Andrews: 250 Years Ago Today, Golf Became 18-Holes
/Baltusrol Designated National Historic Landmark
/Wow: Rory's Ball At $5558 And Climbing
/So much for the collectibles market drying up.
Yesterday when I read Luke Kerr-Dineen's item on Rory's final Nike ball from Hoylake going up for sale at Green Jacket Auctions it was at $2852.
Now? $5558 and going up with the bidding ending August 9th.
If you were thinking of bidding and sending me the ball for Christmas, I'd prefer some more nostalgic stuff from the auction.
This painting would look nice in my office. Or this set of Tom Stewart irons would look mighty spiffy in my bag. Just thinking out loud.
Historic Atlantic City Country Club Sold
/Hogan's 1953 MacGregor Irons Up For Live Auction
/Sid Matthew's Bobby Jones Collection Goes To Emory
/Q&A With Dan Jenkins, Vol. 7 "His Ownself: A Semi-Memoir"
/Dan Jenkins has published his 21st book, His Ownself: A Semi-Memoir (Also available in Kindle edition here).
There have been some super write-ups and reviews, including this one from Golf World's Bill Fields, this one from Grantland, this one from the New York Times and this one from Texas Monthly. Each is worthwhile if you're a Jenkins fan or wanting to learn more about the craft of writing.
Dan has participated in with six previous Q&As. In order: here, here, here, here, here and here.So here goes, eight semi-questions for the masterful Jenkins, including an all important Downton Abbey season 4 inquiry.
GS: The most shocking revelation from the semi-memoir is that in your youth, you were a semi-Californian. And yet you became a smoker. On a serious note, do you think your love of cinema and exposure to it made you a better writer?
DJ: I only spent four summers in California as a kid, but I treasure every memory. For a prairie dog Texan, it was all so damn glamorous. I'd never even seen a double-dip ice cream cone before. And as S. J. Perelman said, "Hollywood is the place that gave us the shirt worn outside the pants." Movies had everything to do with me wanting to be a newspaperman. During those summers when my aunt was working in wardrobe at Paramount I'm quite sure I saw more stars than I mention in the book. There used to be a diner just outside the Paramount gates, and there were days when I would sit in there with my grandmother waiting for my aunt to get off work. She would have a coffee and I would have a piece of pie. One day a guy sat next to me on a stool and ordered a bowl of chili. It was Jack Oakie. I was stunned. All he said was, "How ya doin', kid?" File under Big Moments in Small Lives.
GS: You open the book lamenting the demise of writer apparel and the bar. Do you sympathize with today's media having to feed the 24/7 media machine and not having the luxury of hanging out?
DJ: The top writers and columnists don't have to feed the 24/7 machine today. They do what we always did. And the others are just doing what "the others" always did on newspapers, stay late to get the agate in and the notes and the fishing reports. You have to somehow make your own way in this business, strive to be better, don't turn down assignments, don't complain about days off, have typing machine, will travel, carve out a niche. Read. Read everything. Keep up with the world. And if you don't love the business, get out and do something else. End of lecture.
GS: You write on a computer now. How does it affect the end product compared to a typewriter? Anything you miss about the old manuals?
DJ: I was late to computers, but I certainly like them now. So much easier to correct and change stuff. I don't miss the typewriters so much as I miss the friendships and humor and cigarette smoke and clatter of the old city rooms. It was exciting. Every damn day.
GS: Could you get Semi-Tough or You Gotta Play Hurt published today? Or would political correctness have doomed you to self-publishing?
DJ: I think you could get Semi Tough published today. I haven't picked up a novel today that doesn't drop more f-bombs than I ever thought about. The charm or uniqueness of Semi was taking the reader backstage and into the locker rooms and hotel suites and bar rooms that I'd known---and then had sport with. Making friendships with athletes and keeping their secrets was most helpful. I wound up using it in fiction.
GS: You explain in the book some of your favorite media sources and writers. How much more are you getting news from the Internet vs. print?
DJ: I read as much as I can to keep up with the world. Newspapers, books, the net, all kinds of columns---sports, politics, show biz, all that. Too many sportswriters and "golf" writers don't seem to care about anything else. They're missing something, and possibly something helpful in their work.
GS: Is there any tool or trick in today's media world you wish you had when you were starting out?
DJ: Not that I can think of. I couldn't have had better teachers. They came on the printed page---John Lardner, Red Smith, Henry McLemore, Damon Runyon, Grantland Rice, Wolcott Gibbs, James Thurber, Dorothy Parker. As Red once said, "You start out lifting from your heroes and eventually you find your own voice." If I tried to imitate anyone, it was John Lardner and Red Smith, their smoothness, their tongue in cheek look at things. I always had an attitude about things, so I like to think I took what I could from Lardner and Red---the two greatest who ever lived ---and perhaps gave it an edge, or occasionally drew blood, but unintentionally at times. Couldn't help myself. I'll say this, and hope I can stand behind it: I hope I never sacrificed truth or fact for a joke, and I don't think I ever wrote a line I didn't believe.
GS: So is Bates a murderer?
DJ: I'm tired of Bates. I'm deeply concerned about who Lady Mary is going to wind up with.
GS: Ike's Tree is gone, everything else is about the same at Augusta. What excites you most about going back to Augusta besides getting to hear an update on Tiger's back?
DJ: What I love most about the Masters is the nostalgia. It's always a great event, sure, but I've never known a nicer sporting arena to live in the past. The Rose Bowl would be in that list. I don't know any other way to say this, but I have always been an old-fashioned, traditionalist kind of guy---even as a kid. What happens today wouldn't mean as much to me if all that other stuff hadn't happened in earlier years. We're all part of history---from Jones's hickory, to Hogan's white cap, to Tiger's back spasms. I hope a lot of this comes across in "His Ownself."