Bob,
Very interesting.
I've been around a few organizations where there could only be one rooster in the chicken house. No doubt that Roberts guarded his yard with very sharp spurs.
What I would have given to been a fly on the wall when Patton and Roberts went at it. Why Jones "allowed" Patton to be exiled would be interesting to know.
By the way, what does "clubable" mean? Do you think it has to do with how the prospective member fits socially and economically with the membership?
I would love to read a book on Mr. Jones that deals with all aspects of the legend, including those which may not be so laudable based on today's standards. I have no documented basis for my suspicions, but I think that perhaps Cliff Roberts took some of the heat for actions and policies that may have been directed from higher up.
Mr. Jones was not the greatest amateur champion because he was weak-willed. To have conquered his very bad temper and become the best golfer in the world by his late 20s demonstrates quite the opposite. Battling his dreaded disease with such grace, and delivering one of the most moving short speeches I have ever heard (while receiving an important award in the UK) provide further evidence as to his internal fortitude.
For these reasons, the suggestion that Jones had to put up with Roberts' bad behavior has not made a lot of sense to me. An alternative explanation might be that Roberts didn't mind playing the bad cop, and the reputation actually enabled him to run a club full of very strong egos.
This would also have served Jones well in his legal, PR, and entertainment endeavors, all which benefited from him having an impeccably clean, national hero image. In that light, perhaps Roberts was really a more admirable character than how he is being portrayed in the literature.
On the other hand, maybe "he was a first class shit".