Just finished a superb book concerning the stellar golf career of Johnny Goodman -- the Omaha native who was an orphan turned caddy from the stockyards of that unique Nebraska city.
The book will be released publicly on June 6 of this year by Houghton Muflin and is well written by authored by avid golfer Michael Blaine. It heralds the obstacles Goodman overcame in becoming one of the finest Amateur golfers the USA has ever produced.
Consider the fact that his meager background competed against the likes of deep pocket rich folks who insisted upon "amateur" rules because they knew it would keep the riff raff at bay.
Goodman in so many ways is reiniscent of Sea Biscuit -- the legendary horse that beat the odds and triumphed over the eastern horse establishment.
Goodman did no less -- beating Bob Jones in the '29 US Amateur at Peble Beach and more importantly winning the US Open in 1933 over the likes of defending champion Gene Sarazen, Walter Hagen and a future two-time Open champion Ralph Guldahl. He is the last amateur ever to win the National Open and he joins a very select club of Jones, Chick Evans, Francis Ouimet and Jerome Travers as men who have won both the Open & Amateur as non-professionals. Goodman captured the Amateur title in '37 at Alderwood in the Northwest. Sadly, he passed away too early at the age of 60 in 1970.
Goodman was shunned until the latest of moments by the blue bloods of the USGA and his love for the game is told in rich prose by Blaine throughout the book.
For those who fancy themselves lovers of the game the story of Johnny Goodman is one that will keep your attention through and through. I can only wonder why such a story has never been more fully discussed or appreciated. It certainly will now.