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			Amongst the famous golfers featured in the book were 
			Harry Vardon, Bobby Jones, Gene Sarazen, Henry Cotton, Alf Padgham, 
			Alf Perry and. Jimmy Adams. He chose to compare a picture of my 
			back-swing position with one of Archie Compston “---A position worth 
			practising in front of a mirror”, he wrote. There was another aspect 
			of the swing that Archie and I had in common, which appeared in 
			newspaper extracts from a short book written by Archie and Henry at 
			that time. Henry asked Archie to name the main fault that prevented 
			handicap golfers from progressing. He said that the most important 
			factor was control of the club by the left hand and arm, which form 
			the radius of your swing and the arm should remain straight at and 
			through the ball. It was this, more than anything else, that most of 
			his pupils did not do. This corresponded with my own view and it 
			formed the basis of my teaching. ![]()  Archibald Edward Wones Compston was a very tall striking man and one 
			of the outstanding personalities of our era. He is most famous for 
			his defeat of Walter Hagen by 18 & 17 in 1928, in a £500 72-hole 
			challenge match at Moor Park. Two weeks later Hagen won his third 
			Open at Sandwich by two shots from Sarazen and Archie was third a 
			further shot adrift. Like Hagen he was fond of a wager and, when pro 
			at Coombe Hill, was reckoned to make around a couple of thousand a 
			year from betting on his own matches. The typical stake was £50 for 
			which he would play anyone off handicap and giving them a two-hole 
			start. In the winter of 1931 Henry Longhurst, then Captain of 
			Cambridge University, took a team to play the Coombe Hill club. 
			After the match Archie told them in his typically blunt manner that 
			they were “just a bunch of lousy goffers”, “I could beat any three 
			of you”, he said. Henry and two of the undergraduates thought they 
			were on to a good thing and placed heavy bets on their better ball. 
			Archie accepted, but insisted on playing off the very back tees. In 
			winter conditions six holes were out of range in regulation for the 
			amateurs, but not for the big hitting pro, who shot 68 and won on 
			the last green. The result came under the heading of “Learning the 
			lessons of life the hard way”, wrote Longhurst, who had to sell his 
			car to settle his percentage of the wager. NEXT  |