L-R Harry Vardon, Francis Ouimet, and Ted Ray |
One hundred years ago, the 1913 US Open changed the sport of
golf, with a game described as ‘the birth of the modern game’. The tournament
culminated in an 18-hole playoff between Harry Vardon and Ted Ray, the top two
professional players of the day, and Francis Ouimet, a twenty-year-old unknown
amateur. As the title of Mark Frost’s book covering the event portrays, these
three men would play a part in ‘The Greatest Game Ever Played’.
The US Open is a major championship in golf, and one of the
most coveted tournaments of those playing the game; from the top touring
professionals, to the aspiring young players hacking around courses all over
the world. Northern Irish sensation, Rory McIlroy cemented his place as the top
golfer in the world when he won the event in 2011 with a record-breaking score.
McIlroy is considered one of the most influential people in the sport, with his
success at a young age inspiring more and more young people to take up golf. But
long before the Holywood ace, Francis Ouimet had polarized interest in the
sport to a level never to be emulated by one single player.
Francis Ouimet was born in May 1893 to an Irish mother and
French father, in Brookline, Massachusetts. He grew up in 246 Clyde Street,
directly across the road from the 17th green of Brookline Country
Club, the course that would host the 1913 US Open. His parents were poor
immigrants, and golf at the time was seen as an elitist sport played ‘by
gentlemen’, and not by the sons of said poor immigrants. Ouimet began caddying
for club members at Brookline as a boy, and on his travels up and down the
fairways of the famous course, he collected stray balls, brought them home, and
playing with old hand-me-down clubs, taught himself the complex game of golf in
his modest backyard. He won his first championship in 1909, and soon became one
of the finest high school golfers in his state. John G. Anderson, a Boston
golfer and writer at the time, witnessed Ouimet during his high school years,
and during the week of the 1913 Open, he wrote: “If there ever was a born
golfer, it is this boy.”
Ouimet initially declined a personal invitation to play in
the Open from the President of the United States Golf Association, Robert
Watson, as he was not in a position to jeopardise his job at Wright &
Ditson sporting goods store in Boston. Soon after, it was arranged with his
employer for him to get time off, and so he was included in the field for the
1913 Open. The championship had been moved from its usual June date to
September in order to facilitate the participation of the seasoned British
pros, Harry Vardon and Ted Ray. Vardon and Ray were considered the two finest
golfers in the world, and famous golf writer, Bernard Darwin, wrote of the
foreseen probability of this British threat: “I cannot in my mind’s eye see any
man in this field, save only McDermott, beating Ray or Vardon over four rounds.”
Johnny McDermott was the reigning champion, the first American to win the US
Open, and was heralded as the home country’s only hope of a challenger.
Brookline Country Club |
On September 18, the much anticipated renewal of the Open
got underway at Brookline, in earshot of Francis Ouimet’s family home on Clyde
Street. Adding to the innocence of this story was the presence of Ouimet’s
caddy, a straight-talking, rambunctious ten-year-old boy named Eddie Lowery. The
newspapers focussed their headlines on Ray and Vardon, and they shot an opening
round of 79 and 75 respectively. Ouimet went unseen with a respectable 77 in
the first round, and an improved 74 in the second round. Despite his solid
play, he still went unnoticed, while Vardon and Ray were both in the top three
after two rounds. However, after the third round of the four-round tournament,
the murmurs on the course were building, carrying the name of Francis Ouimet
into the same breath of the British mainstays.
After these three rounds, there was a three-way tie for the lead: Harry
Vardon, Ted Ray, and Francis Ouimet. This three-way tie would remain after the
final round of regulation play, and that meant there would be an 18-hole
playoff the following day to decide a winner.
Ouimet with his young caddy |
People in higher echelons of the game tried to replace
Ouimet’s unorthodox young caddy for a more experienced bagman in the playoff,
but Francis wanted to stick with Eddie, and so he did. Lowery offered Ouimet
simple words of advice: “you’ve just got to beat those fellows”, he said. The
playoff day was dull and damp like the previous rounds, and Darwin described
the course as a “rolling meadow land, thickly and prettily wooded, with every
now and then a formidable rock that adds a touch of wildness and romance.” That
wildness was emanating throughout the swells of people that provided the event
with the biggest crowd a game of golf had ever attracted, and the three men
teed off together. Ted Ray played poorly, and soon it was evident he would not
be winning the playoff, but Vardon and Ouimet remained close on the card.
Despite some mistakes, Ouimet stepped onto the 17th tee with a one
shot lead from his more experienced rival, and it was at this hole, on the
green adjacent to his home, that Francis Ouimet would all but win the
tournament. He birdied as Vardon bogeyed, giving the young pretender a lead
that he would not relinquish, going on to win by five strokes from his
childhood idol. The New York Tribune wrote of how “a roar went up”, and “Ouimet
was hoisted into the air”, while women “tore bunches of flowers from their
bodices, and hurled them at the youthful winner.” This moment was captured in
headlines across the world, and the defeated Vardon spoke of how “Mr Ouimet
played the most wonderful golf” he had ever witnessed.” He was the first
amateur to win the US Open.
The Fresh Faced Champion |
Francis Ouimet died in 1967, but his memory lives on far
beyond the 17th green at Brookline and 246 Clyde Street. The Francis
Ouimet Scholarship Fund still bears his name, having been set up by a group of
his friends in 1949, and it provides “significant need-based college
scholarships to students who have given service to golf by working at a
Massachusetts golf course.” It has awarded scholarships totalling over $25
million to date, and they are as proud to be associated with Francis Ouimet, as
he was of the fund. Speaking to me recently, Executive Director of the Fund,
Bob Donovan said: “Mr. Ouimet often said that of all his honours, the one that
pleased him the most was the creation of the Francis Ouimet Scholarship Fund. Mr.
Ouimet was always kind to young people, and that started with Eddie Lowery in
1913.”
Eddie Lowery went on to become a self-made
multi-millionaire, and he and Francis Ouimet remained lifelong friends. When
Francis died in 1967, Eddie Lowery was one of the men to carry his coffin. The iconic
photograph of Lowery and Ouimet walking down the fairway together is one of the
most memorable in golf’s history, and was used as the logo for the United
States Golf Association's centennial celebrations.
One of the players Ouimet helped to inspire, Bobby Jones
once said of his friends’ contribution to golf: “There have been many great
golfers since Ouimet, but none who gave more to the game. There have been few
who played it so well; none who played it so gallantly.”
I sum up in the words of legendary English commentator,
Henry Longhurst who once remarked, “Ouimet is a champion for all time.”
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