Hoffman covered golf for over 60 years
WESTFIELD, N.J. -- Arthur K. "Red" Hoffman, a golf writer for more than 60 years, has died. He was 86.
Hoffman died Saturday at Muhlenberg Regional Medical Center after a brief illness, his daughter, Lisa Hoffman Apperman, said Tuesday.
"I think it's just disappointing that he didn't make it until August with the PGA being played at Baltusrol," she said. "He really wanted to see Tiger Woods play."
A Minneapolis native, Hoffman was also a skilled player. A seven-handicap, the Plainfield Country Club member had six holes-in-one.
Hoffman played rounds at more than 550 golf courses in the United States and 15 foreign countries. He twice qualified for the Metropolitan Amateur, and once for the New Jersey Amateur.
His first association with the game was as a caddy in Minnesota.
"He found out he could make more money as a caddy than delivering newspapers," his daughter said.
After five years in the military during World War II, Hoffman got a job with the Newark News, covering news and sports, with golf being his primary beat.
After the newspaper folded in 1972, Hoffman spent 11 years as a publicist for golf architect Robert Trent Jones. He also wrote stories for Dorf Features, which appeared in the Star-Ledger of Newark and GolfWorld magazine and worked as a publicist for the New Jersey State Golf Association.
"You could ask Red Hoffman anything about golf and he had the answer, whether it was about a tournament, a player or an architect. Red was an encyclopedia," New York Times columnist Dave Anderson said.
Anderson started to chuckle, noting that most people know about the great golf course designers, Jones, Donald Ross and A.W. Tillinghast.
"Red would know guys like 'Steamshovel' Banks," Anderson said. "He had courses with big, deep bunkers that he made using steam shovels. Only Red would know that."
Hoffman was a member and former president of the Metropolitan Golf Writers Association and a lifetime member and former director of the Golf Writers Association of America.
In addition to his daughter Lisa, Hoffman is survived by another daughter, Loren Kyle Hoffman of Southwick, Mass. He was predeceased by his wife, Erna Augusta Hoffman.
Funeral services will be private.