yes, Joe should be in the World Golf Hall of Fame. He was the only public course operator named one of the 100 Heroes of American Golf in 1988. He's the only PGA professional who served on the USGA Executive Committee. He helped create "All-Star Golf," the first filmed TV golf show. He was one of eight charter members of the Illinois Golf Hall of Fame, along with CBM and Chick Evans, among others.
Golf would be the lesser without him. The Hall is the lesser without him.
Hi Tim:
You've made the best case here.
As I said earlier, it's really a matter of campaigning for his inclusion to the people who vote for the WGHOF, which, unlike baseball or football, is not the prerogative of golf writers, but of the administrators and Hall of Fame players.
You should be part of that campaign.
But, do you think you can get through to them? The voters have a way different perspective on golf than any of us do.
Tom,
Thank you. Halls of Fame are curious things. To the outsider, they celebrate achievement. To the insider, they are more complicated.
I write that as an insider. I chair the selection committee for the Illinois Golf Hall of Fame. All the major golf groups in Illinois, plus a sprinkling of media and Hall members, are on the panel. We elect inductees every two years via a multi-stage selection process. If it was a matter of just ranking worthy candidates and tallying the votes, that would be one thing. Striving for the best to be inducted, we meet to narrow the field, then meet again several weeks later to hear presentations from those proposing the candidates.
That second stage changes opinions. Sometimes, those who were seen as locks after the first stage don't get inducted in the second stage. It's my view that every worthy candidate gets in eventually, but it's not easy. (There are several outstanding people from yesterday and today who need to be nominated.)
Before I was chair, I was amazed it took several tries for Tommy Armour, who only won the U.S., British, Western and Canadian opens and the PGA, plus wrote an all-time instructional, to be inducted. (He was a Medinah mainstay for more than a decade.)
The same was true more recently of Carol Mann, who learned to play at Olympia Fields. Finally, she made it, alas after her passing.
I suspect those on the selection committee of every Hall of Fame have similar stories. It's still amazing to me it took Nellie Fox so long to get into baseball's shrine.
I would think it would be difficult to convince an international panel of Joe's standing in the game unless a Tour or major tournament visited Cog Hill again, especially as the World Hall inducts by category. (Illinois has all candidates in a single pool, players and architects and superintendents, etc., all together.) I would be happy to offer an endorsement, backed by evidence, to anyone who wishes to carry the torch.