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BACK NEXT Chapter 12 The Storm Clouds Gather Page 95

replacing it with his left, or vice versa, but always two to three feet nearer to the hole. Bob had not noticed this at first until, quite early in the round; a five-footer became a two-footer. He was shocked, but said nothing and watched his partner carefully from then on. The performance continued for the duration of the round. I advised him that there was only one course open to him and I headed him in the direction of the Secretary’s office. He said his piece and it was then up to the committee to take action. The player was watched and it was confirmed that he was cheating and, although no report was issued, we learned that he had been carpeted and given an official warning.
The incident was never made public and, to the best of my knowledge, no one but the people involved ever got to know about it. It would have been explosive had the press got wind of it; golfers were expected to be squeaky clean in those days, just as they are now – and the player concerned was one of the top pros of the day. The up-shot was swift action by the PGA, which effectively put a stop to making a mark on the green. At the next tournament every player was issued with an official PGA ball marker and told to use it. Eventually a note to rule 20-1 specified that: “the position of a ball to be lifted should be marked by placing a ball-marker, a small coin or other similar object immediately behind the ball”. I have always wondered if I had a small roll in bringing that about.

I defended the Irish Open at Portmarnock, which at 7200 yards was the longest course we played back then. With narrow fairways and thick rough it was so tough that a syndicate put up £200 for anyone who broke 70. Bobby Locke had a third round 69 and won the £200, which was £50 more than I got for winning the championship. Henry Cotton had looked a certain winner when he went into a three-stroke lead over Locke and the overnight leader, Arthur Lees (Dore and Totley), but Locke finished with three birdies leaving Henry needing an eagle three at the 470-yard 18th to take the title. On the tee he remarked: “It’s a 3 or a 5” – apparently a 4 to tie Locke was not in his thinking. He took three to get down from the edge of the green, watched in silence by a gallery of five thousand. In contrast Locke seemed unable to miss on the greens, provoking Henry to call him “a lucky young fellow”. It did not go down well with Bobby, who said that he had played the finest golf of his life. It was the first of his many victories in Europe.

Locke’s manager had tried to set up a challenge match with Cotton for a lucrative £1000, but Henry refused, saying that Locke would need to win a few big events, like the News of the World or the Open before he would play him head to head. This and Henry’s comments in Ireland created quite an ‘atmosphere’ when they next met a week later in a 36-hole four-ball challenge match at Walton Heath, in which Henry partnered Reg Whitcombe against Locke and Syd Brews. Henry arrived late on the tee and Locke retaliated by taking even longer than usual on the greens. Again he was holing everything and went out in 32 in the final round to give the South Africans a one-hole advantage. It was then that Henry played a shot that has been written about more often than any in his distinguished career. At the 391-yard dogleg 12th he drove across the corner carrying the ball some 300 yards over the heather and bushes to the edge of the green. The resultant birdie squared the match and the British team went on to win 2 and 1. Locke always said that Henry’s shot at the 12th was the greatest drive he had ever seen; any animosity was to be overcome by the mutual respect of the two great champions.
The conclusion was described by the Manchester Guardian: “At the end of another laborious day’s golf, which took so long that one could almost see the growth of the grass on the putting greens, T. H. Cotton and R. A. Whitcombe, the Open Champion, won their £500 challenge match against A. D. Locke and S. F. Brews” It was so slow that “it was possible to drink a bottle of ginger beer at the refreshment hut at the seventh and yet catch up the players before they had struck their second shots at the hole”, said the reporter, adding that Locke seemingly examined each blade of grass on the greens and complaining: “The age-long golf match lasted for something like seven hours”. – A four-ball would take a good deal longer than that to play 35 holes today!

I went to the annual Ringway Pro/Am Foursomes, not so quiet since 1935 when the club had acquired a new neighbour in the shape of the Ringway Aerodrome, which was eventually to grow into the Manchester International Airport. Nobody could have foreseen then that the course would one day have a motorway passing by and huge jets flying overhead carrying millions every year to and from all parts of the world. My partner was now Bill Ball from the Leasowe club on the Wirral, which was near to my own club of West Cheshire. Bill was an inveterate gambler and had once won enough money at poker to buy himself a car. The Manchester Guardian described the final round thus:
“Remarkably low scoring resulted in a day only to be compared with the international political outlook, except that the situation changed not hourly but every few minutes. Finally it was learnt that W. Ball (Leasowe) and B. Gadd (West Cheshire) had won after a tie with J. Beswick and W. Shankland (Haydock Park). They had rounds of 72 – 69 for 141 and the result was decided on the better score in the first round (no play- off this time).

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