Tom,
Here is someting from a year or so ago and the from August.
Quote from: Bob_Huntley on August 11, 2008, 07:26:02 pm
Between watching the Olympics and the PGA Championship I re-read Mark Frost's 'The Match."
I must say that it was a jolly good read but I closed the covers thinking that he is one sloppy writer.
Some the the irritants to me were his description of Hogan looking like a middleweight at 145lbs...when 160lbs was the limit for that particular class. He claims that Hogan holds the course record at Cypress, with a 63. If he thinks that conceded putts in a match play event constitutes a record, then his golfing knowledge is sadly lacking.
On page 31 he writes "that Coleman never owned his own mansion in Monterey but rented a New England Style cottage in the hills above Pebble Beach." I wrote to George Coleman's daughter in Venice and her letter below disputes that and also that Hogan did not stay with Crosby.
"Hello Bob,
No, we owned a house on the corner next to the Lodge. It is the Cottage
which is for sale now. Mother and Daddy rented before the war, but after the war
they bought the house and never rented again They always rented the old Morse
house which isn't there any more. Not everything in the book is right. Hogan
never stayed with Crosby. I can't say the house they bought was a mansion.
They kept building on.
All the best to you and your wife,
Sarah"
Back in 1970/71 I was invited to play in a fourball match at Cypress by Jack Westland. He would partner Art Bell and I would play with Harvie Ward. Harvie teased Bell by never conceding him a putt and causing him untold anguish as by that time Bell was an awful putter. We won the match and had a drink afterward and Ward mentioned the match with no great appreciation that it had changed the game forever. He was still using the same rusty old putter and said " I may change wives but never this."
He was as good as I have seen.
Bob
Tom you were right about Lowery, he did no favors for Harvie in transgressing the amateur code but Harvie always swore that he did sell cars and did a good job at it as well.
Bob