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BACK NEXT Chapter 16 The Twilight of a Professional Career Page 120

Peter Thomson signing for a 62One player who nearly always produced the ‘goods’ and had little difficulty with the Oakdale course that year was the 21-year-old Australian Peter Thomson. In the final stages of that 1951 North British the future five-time Open Champion shot a 62 – a world record at the time, beating the 63s first set in the thirties. As I said, the course was short, but it was no push over. Thomson averaged under 70 for the five-round tournament, but it was only good enough for second and the £500 went to Flory van Donck, who totalled 337 to beat him by four shots. I matched Thomson’s final round 69, but was again twenty shots adrift of the winner. Defending champion, Bobby Locke did not feature, but another South African was in the field that year- Jock Verwey. His son-in-law would arrive on these shores a few years later - his name is Gary Player.

I did not enter for the 1952 North British won by Scot John Panton, who lowered the record for the outward 9 in a British tournament with 28 on the Harrogate GC’s Starbeck course, but came back in 39. My outing that year was at the Open, back at Royal Lytham for the first time since Bobby Jones’ famous victory in 1926. In the early fifties the organization of the event was not by any means the professional job it is today and some of the arrangements for spectators left much to be desired. Stewarding was some way short of championship standard and there was controversy concerning the exclusion of spectators from the eighth, ninth and tenth holes, where the bottleneck could have created congestion and held up play. Catering facilities were poor, probably the worst I ever experienced. Competitors had the use of the member’s tent, but had to join the queue and, after waiting twenty minutes without receiving attention, five of us handed back our lunch tickets and dashed into the town. I qualified with a 74 at Fairhaven, a course that used to have a bunker for every day of the year, and a 75 at Lytham itself, which I remember was in great condition. It was a long, demanding course with narrow fairways and many new bunkers had appeared since my last visit, putting a premium on accuracy from the tee. I missed the cut, along with a few of the young British hopes. On my return to Beamish I wrote in my newspaper column that they had not yet developed sufficient determination to go through with the job and would have to practise a lot more if they were to meet the challenge from the overseas stars. It would be another seventeen years before a young man named Jacklin gave the Lytham crowd the next British victory.

After the previous year’s Open at Portrush I had written that many were of the opinion that the ‘slow play’ rule should be more strictly enforced. Like many others I had expected defending champion Locke to win in 1951 and make it a hat trick, but should he be disqualified if he refused to comply with the rule? “You can’t very well disqualify the reigning champion”, was the general feeling, but in a discussion I was very much in agreement with one leading player who said that the rules were the same for everyone and no exceptions should be made. Bobby always walked in a slow and stately manor between shots and this was a sore point with some of his fellow pros. During the third round at Royal Lytham he lost three holes on the group in front and Norman von Nida, playing in the match behind, lodged a formal complaint. In fact Locke’s group was round in 3 ½ hours, which doesn’t sound long today, but 3 hours was more than enough in those days. How times have changed! You have to remember that we were playing two rounds on the final day, with only four hours between starting times - you had no time to hang about. The pairing of Peter Alliss and the fifty year old Gene Sarazen, making his first appearance since 1937, raced round in 2 ¼ hours. In his book The Open, Peter wrote that he found it difficult to concentrate as Gene played his shots so quickly and hit his putts without seeming to even glance at the line. He got the feeling that Sarazen was not interested, but I recall that he was always a headstrong player who went for everything. Bobby Jones said of Gene: “It was Bang! Bang! Bang! all the time”. It later occurred to Peter that his performance on the greens could have been a way of combating the dreaded ‘yips’. Before the final round Locke was finally issued with a warning, but he blamed the inadequate crowd control and continued on his stately passage. Fifty years later slow play is still a controversial subject, but time limits are somewhat longer these days.

On that final day Bobby had a similar experience to that of Alf Padgham in 1936. Locke kept his car and clubs in a lock-up garage near to his hotel and that morning the owner overslept and was not there to unlock the garage when Bobby arrived. He hitched a lift on a passing milk float and roused the garage owner from his slumbers, got his car and arrived at the course with only ten minutes to spare, but, like Padgham, the unflappable South African remained as calm as ever. Fred Daly had started the day with a four-shot lead after a 69 in round two, but it required remarkable recovery play to compensate for his unreliable long game. On every green in the back nine he holed putts of between 5ft and 6 yards and single-putted each of the last five. It couldn’t last and in the wind-blown final round, when a quarter of the field failed to break 80, he took 76. The wind did not deter Locke who, despite finishing with two fives, won his third post war Open; with his hickory-shafted putter with the rusty iron blade working it’s customary magic, except at the 17th where he missed an 18 incher. That was almost unbelievable for he was one of the best putters I ever saw - in the same league as Bobby Jones



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