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BACK NEXT Chapter 12 The Storm Clouds Gather Page 94

A Record for Gadd

The Leeds GC pro was Bert Myers, who was at the club for fifty years. He was a very good player who won the Northern Professional Championship and had finished with a fine 72 in the deluge at the Dunlop Northern at Newcastle the previous year, to be just three shots behind me in 5th place. He had an incredible eclectic score at Cobble Hall of 32 strokes, including holes-in-one at eight separate holes on a course that has only five par-3s. It would qualify for the Guinness Book of Records, but some witnesses had passed on before proof could be provided.

In contrast to the previous year, the News Chronicle Tournament at East Brighton was played in conditions that were possibly worse than we had experienced at the Open a few weeks before. The wind was not quite as strong, but the 18th, almost drivable in 1937, could not be reached with two full drivers by most of the field and, to add to the misery, there was driving rain which made it very hard to see the ball. The Open Champion, Reg Whitcombe, gave another display of remarkable wind-play to take the title and £200. His winning total of 300 was 32 shots more than his brother Ernest’s record score twelve months before. Scores soared into the eighties and Alf Padgham was ‘blown away’ again and took 88 - his highest ever score in a major event. I handled the conditions a bit better than I had at Sandwich and shot two 77’s for a 303 total and 6th place, behind four players who shared second on 302: Cecil Denny, Herbert Rhodes, Don Curtis and Arthur Lacey, who had played brilliant golf in the morning for a 71 and looked certain to win, but lost his balance in the last round and took 82.

It was at East Brighton that I became indirectly involved in an incident that may well have brought about a change to the rules of golf. At that time the method of marking the ball on the green was not clearly defined by the rules. Usually the ball was marked at the request of a partner and how it was marked was up to the player. Some used a coin, but most made a mark on the green with a teepeg. A friend of mine, I will call him Bob, had just finished his round and he came off the last green extremely agitated and muttering: “I can’t believe it”, over and over again. When he had calmed down he told me what had happened. On every green his playing partner had been picking the ball up without request and had ostensibly drawn a line from his ball at right angles to the line of the putt. Actually no mark was made and he was picking up the ball with his right hand and

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