Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Jerry Palmer, brother of Arnold Palmer, 


dies at 72


By Michael Bamberger

Jerry Palmer, kid brother of the golf legend known as The King, died on Saturday, November 19, at the same hospital in Pittsburgh where Arnold Palmer died less than two months ago. Jerry Palmer, 15 years younger than Arnold, was 72.
Jerry Palmer, pictured, was a lifelong resident of Latrobe, Pennsylvania, and the longtime general manager of the Latrobe Country Club, a course owned by Arnold where their father, Deacon, had been the longtime head professional and superintendent.
"Jerry was very witty and very dedicated to my dad," Peg Palmer, one of Arnold's two daughters, said. "He liked serving my dad, in business and at the club. He always tried to be true to my dad's personality and think about what my dad would want."
Jerry, soft-spoken and deeply loyal to Arnold, was part of a small group of men and women that helped Arnold Palmer's various enterprises run smoothly but also, and significantly, retain a small-town, family-run touch. 
In recent years, with Arnold far less ambulatory than he had been in his prime, it often fell to Jerry to give visitors to Latrobe the grand tour of the club and the warehouse where Arnold stored thousands of clubs, along with hundreds of golf bags, golf shoes, various portraits of Arnold sent in by fans, along with various other items. If you think of this warehouse as a Palmer museum, Jerry was its chief curator and docent.   
Not that Jerry would have ever thought of himself that way. Jerry graduated from Latrobe High in 1962, when Arnold had already won three of his four Masters titles, plus two British Opens and a U.S. Open. His brother was an international sporting icon, comfortable in the presence of corporate chiefs and a former U.S. president. 
Jerry, following the path of a lot of kids from Latrobe, enlisted in the Air Force—Arnold was already an accomplished pilot—and later went to Penn State University, at the height of the Joe Paterno era, where he studied agronomy.
 Jerry was Latrobe Country Club's superintendent, like his father before him, before becoming its general manager. Jerry was an everyday workingman Pennsylvanian, except that his brother was one of the most famous people in the world, and that he wore a shirt with an umbrella on it, or some nod to Arnold, every single day.
Jerry and Arnold—along with Arnold's pilot, Pete Luster, and his longtime assistant, Doc Giffin, and various others—had lunch together regularly when Arnold was in Latrobe, which was often. The brothers had the same blue eyes and they were both good listeners. Arnold's golf was better.
Peg Palmer said that her uncle (Jerry)  had suffered a stroke in recent years and had showed some signs of dementia, though they were sporadic in nature. As her father Arnold's health declined, Peg said, "Jerry really wanted to be there for him."
 The quick decline in his health after Arnold's death was unexpected, Peg Palmer said.
After Arnold Palmer's death on Sept. 25, the Latrobe Bulletin had a front-page news story with the headline `The King' Is Dead. A subhead read, Golf Icon Put Latrobe on the Map.
 Jerry Palmer—Milfred Jerome Palmer, like his father before him—played a quiet an important role in keeping Latrobe, and its country club, on the map, and consistent with the values his brother and father held dear.
Giffin, who logged hundreds of rounds and probably thousands of lunches with Jerry, said that "as a golfer, he was not in Arnold's calibre." In truth, any day he broke 100 was a good one, despite his brother's efforts. 
If it was their shared blood line that brought them together, it was their shared love of golf that kept them together. "Arnold liked to hire people he knew," said Giffin, who was a USA PGA Tour press official when Palmer hired him. 
Arnold knew Jerry's values. Giffin noted that they had different personalities. "Arnold was quite forceful, and Jerry was more easy-going," Giffin said. "But they both loved the outdoors and being on the course."

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Highland Golf Links help Paul Lawrie 

Foundation run Winter Junior Series



Left to right: Fraser Cromarty, Paul Lawrie, Sandy Scott and Michael MacDougall

NEWS RELEASE
Golf stars of the future are competing at some of the North of Scotland’s leading courses in a second winter programme for young players being run by the Paul Lawrie Foundation in the area.
The foundation’s Winter Series, launched in the Highlands last year, is aimed at helping junior players continue to play competitive golf between November and March.
It is supported by Highland Golf Links (HGL), a partner organisation which includes three of Scotland’s leading links courses - Nairn, Royal Dornoch Golf Club and Castle Stuart Golf Links - as well as three major hotels, and is aimed at promoting golf and tourism in the area.
All three HGL courses feature in the 2016-2017 programme which teed off at Nairn last month and continues on Sunday (November 27) at Tain Golf Club and then Moray Golf Club New Course (January 8); Nairn Dunbar (February 26); Castle Stuart Golf Links (March 26); and Royal Dornoch (April 2).

The Winter Series is a stroke play competition for boys and girls who were under 18 on 1 January this year. Up to 30 competitors will take part, with a handicap limit of 18 for boys and 24 for girls.

The Paul Lawrie Foundation was launched in Aberdeen in 2001, two years after Paul won The Open at Carnoustie, and since then has assisted thousands of juniors to start playing golf, improve their skills and compete in tournaments.

Its mission is to get as many young people playing the sport as possible and, ultimately, produce a tour winner or even a Major champion.

In May 2015, the foundation extended its reach into the Highlands with the assistance of Fraser Cromarty, chairman of HGL and chief executive of The Nairn Golf Club, one of the founding sponsors in the area. Fraser is also responsible for organising and running the majority of the Winter Series events throughout the Highlands.
The first tournament arranged in the Highlands under the PLF banner – the Paul Lawrie Foundation Junior Open – was won by Nairn member Sandy Scott, who was part of Scotland’s successful defence of the European Amateur Team title in July and also took part in the Fairstone Men’s Home Internationals in August.
Fraser Cromarty said: “We all recognise the importance of supporting junior golf and we are delighted to help Paul and the foundation develop the second Winter Series in the Highlands.
“Last year’s events were a great success and we are looking forward to again seeing the young golfers testing their skills on some of the finest courses in the Highlands.”
Michael MacDougall, manager of the Paul Lawrie Foundation, added: “We are delighted to again have all the HGL courses among such a strong group of high quality courses hosting our events.”

Entry to the events is via the Foundation website www.paullawriefoundation.co.uk

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Peter Thomson: The man behind the legend


Peter Thomson, now 87. Winner of the Open championship five times: 1954 Royal Birkdale; 1955 St Andrews; 1956 Royal Liverpool; 1958 Royal Lytham (after 36-hole play-off against Dave Thomas); 1965 Royal Birkdale,

By AUSTRALIAN PGA MEDIA

An Australian legend, five times over as winner of the Open championship.
One anecdote sums up Australian PGA Life Member Peter Thomson perhaps more pertinently than five Open Championship victories, membership to the World Golf Hall of Fame and a golf architecture portfolio of 250 course designs around the world.
The story goes that after his first Open Championship victory at Royal Birkdale in 1954, the Australian did not have an appropriate jacket for the Claret Jug presentation. However, Thomson wasn't content with just being a champion, so he raced back to his hotel room to find a coat up to the occasion. 
"People didn't go to prizegivings in their smelly golf shirts," he said. "You need to be respectable at golf to enjoy it [laughs]. You don't have to be a champion."
While the story paints Thomson as a winner, a consummate professional, and a gentleman, it also symbolises the attention to detail 'Thommo' would carry into an esteemed golf course design career. 
In August 2016, just before his 87th birthday on the 23rd of that month, the one time "Melbourne Tiger" called time on his golf architectural enterprise, so we caught up with Thomson to talk about his two decorated chapters in Australian golf.

Another lovely story was when Peter had to borrow a jacket from Max Shaw after his Open win in '56, and some months later, after he'd returned the jacket, they found the winner's cheque. Max Shaw's  wife went through the pockets before she sent it to the dry cleaners and found a cheque for £1,000. It eventually got deposited where it should have been.

Thomson says: "I've often said the wins are like your children – you need to love them equally. I was always thrilled to play in The Open and winning it five times brought marvellous satisfaction. But the most important thing in your life is to bring up your children to be decent people. If you fail in that, even if you're a champion golfer, you stand condemned, I think.

"I think traditions in golf are indestructible. They've gone through all sorts of troubles over the years but the game is 600 years old and it's endured. And I think it will endure in the future. It would be impossible to eradicate golf's culture.

"Golf hooks its victims. There's an intriguing lure because of the fact you get better and better. You get a reward for improving your play – the challenge is exciting. I don't think any other game can give you that.

"After living through the depression and a world war, to have success in golf, I felt guilt. To be paid for doing something that was a great pleasure for me seemed a bit upside down.

"Now, I think deep down, I'm beginning to feel a bit better about it because my prizes in my career [compared to today] were so miserable that it's hardly worth mentioning them. If you win The Open now, it's about $1.5 million or something.

"I dedicated much of my book, A Life In Golf, to memories of Norman von Nida and Bobby Locke. While those events were happening I thought they were the most important things in the world, but I learnt later that they weren't. However, they were the great examples of what a Professional player should be and I learned all that from them.
"Adam Scott is a great example of a beautiful golf swing, but Lee Trevino is proof that you can't change your swing; it's sort of built in. You can't adopt a different swing. You're stuck with it for life. There isn't any such thing as a perfect swing. There are so many different swings – they're like personalities.
"I was sitting in my lounge room watching when Adam won The Masters in 2013. I had tears in my eyes, I confess. I know he's somebody who deserves that success. I also think he needs to win the US Open or British Open once in his life to enhance his reputation. He can't leave this earth without winning one. Has he got it in him to win an Open? Well, he's 36 and you can play well enough into your mid-40s.
"I have a deep love of art. The pieces at home are a bit better than I could do – well, a lot better [laughs]. I appreciate art and respect it. My father was an artist in a way. He was a sign writer and he was working with paint all the time. I wished I could do the same, and that's stayed with me all my life. To me, making golf courses is a form of sculpture, so I've enjoyed that immensely too.
"I don't tend to be critical of other course designers; I just try to be honest. I think everyone is entitled to their opinion about course design. But I do think copying things in golf architecture is a bit weak. "However, all courses in the world are copies of the Old Course at St Andrews. It's why we have 18 holes and not 22 or 15. In the forests of Japan we put in sand bunkers, and why are we putting sand bunkers in the mountains? It's in emulation of the Old Course.
"My passion is a lovely course in northern Scotland called Brora Golf Club. I went there on the recommendation of a delightful caddie that worked for me in America. He went there and he said I'd love it.
"I went to Brora and I came away thinking I'd seen somewhere marvellous. It's a course by James Braid and it was put together by another man and that's the way things happen... It's so near the origins of the game that it's unbelievable, so I love that place. It's the epitome of golf architecture.
"I enjoyed a wonderful association with both (design partners) Ross (Perrett) and Tim (Lobb), as I did in the past with Michael Wolveridge. Together, over 51 years, we have embarked on many exciting projects in more than 30 countries, including Australia, New Zealand, the UK, Asia, the Middle East, and more recently Africa, bringing the game to regions previously without proper golf courses.
"This has given me much satisfaction as I reflect upon our achievements. My affection for all three of my partners is ongoing. I wish them well in the future, and I am sure our friendship will continue always."


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John Black new Murcar Links captain, 

Pat Wilson club's first lady president

MURCAR LINKS NEWS RELEASE
Following our AGM last night I'm delighted to announce that John A. Black is elected as Captain.  John, pictured below, has been a member at Murcar since a boy - 35 years.  He is delighted and honoured to be elected as Captain.
Following the resignation of Mr Pat A. Symon as Honorary President we are delighted to announce that for the first time in Murcar's history we elected a Lady Honorary President - Mrs Pat F. Wilson.  
As I'm sure you're aware Pat's dedication to Murcar Links over the last 46 years, and to Scottish golf, is second to none and to be the first Lady Honorary President at Murcar Links is a great honour for her. 
Pat has represented Scotland against England and once against Ireland; Lady Club Champion seven times, Ladies' Captain 1988-1990 and 2010-2012; Aberdeenshire County Captain 2002-2003.  
In 2004 she joined the board of the Scottish Ladies Golfing Association, chairing the Selection Committee for three years and Handicap Committee for two years.  In 2008 she became Chairman of the SLGA.  Currently the Scottish Vets Captain.

Also elected as one of Murcar Links' Honorary Vice Presidents was Hugh B. Stuart.  Hugh was Captain 2008-2010, which coincided with our centenary year in 2009.  Hugh joined Murcar in 1960 and was made an honorary life member of the club in 1971.  
He played in three Walker Cup matches from 1971 until 1975, represented Scotland in the Home Internationals from 1967 until 1976.  As a 17-year old he set a course record of 66 at Forres and, on his 18th birthday, a record 68 at Moray.  
In 1971, he was in the six-man British team at the Commonwealth Championships in New Zealand.  In 1973, he was a member of Britain's four-man Eisenhower Trophy team in Buenos Aires.  
Played three times for Great Britain against Europe in the St Andrews Trophy and four times for Scotland in the European Team Championships.  A highly respected golfer who is also honoured to be elected as Honorary Vice President.

Carol O'Neill
Secretary
Murcar Links Golf Club

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Knox and Stewart arrive in Melbourne for World Cup of Golf
  NEWS RELEASE
Team Scotland and Team Venezuela have arrived in Melbourne, ready for the World Cup of Golf this week at Kingston Heath Golf Club.
The Scottish duo of Russell Knox (pictured right) and best mate Duncan Stewart are excited to be teaming up to represent their country.
"It's an honour to be here to represent your country, and play with your best friend in a tournament is pretty rare," said Knox, born in Inverness but based in Jacksonville, Florida since he and Duncan Stewart spent four years there as college students.
Grantown on Spey-born Stewart added: "When Russell first mentioned it, I kind of though the was a little bit joking and I've been buzzing ever since to get here.
"Any chance you get to represent your country, it's a great honour, and even more in the team format. 
"When you're teaming up with one of your best friends, we're going out there to have a lot of fun and hopefully we can have a good week."
Team Scotland will feel right at home on the link style layout with Melbourne providing summer weather more reminiscent of Scotland than Australia.
"It's a great golf course.  It's very Scottish‑esque, it's linksy. Obviously yesterday was very hot and very windy," added Stewart (pictured left). 
"I think it's going to be a bit cooler this week, with a little bit of wind, which I think we're both going to like. But it's fantastic, a great layout."
Having had more time to adjust to Australian golf was Team Venezuela made up of Jhonattan and Julio Vegas.
The pair played the Emirates Australian Open last week where Jhonattan finished outright 9th.
"Obviously the big thing coming this week was being able to adjust to the different type of golf courses here.  That's kind of why we made an effort to play in Sydney last week," said Jhonattan.
"Julio didn't have quite the same result that I did, but it was good to really getting it out there, hitting shots, hitting chip shot saround firm surfaces and the firm greens, undulated areas around the greens. 
"So it was kind of good starting to feel what Australian golf looks like and we both felt pretty good about it."
The Vegas brothers will tee off on Thursday at 10.50am playing alongside the team from Portugal; Ricardo Gouveia and Jose-Filipe Lima.
Knox and Stewart will be out on course at 12.50pm playing alongside the Irish team of Shane Lowry and Graeme McDowell.

+Former member of the Oldmeldrum Golf Club greenkeeping staff, Gaz Braid is now employed at Kingston Heath Golf Club, the World Cup of Golf venue. He is pictured below (right) with American Rickie Fowler.


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2017 is just around the corner......

It's been a great year for the MAGT. Membership is up, player numbers are up and the number of events is now pushing through the 30 barrier for 2017.

Thank you. Without your support none of this would be possible.

We have now completed the 2017 schedule and it looks amazing. New venues, new events, and lot's more reasons to play Europes most competitive Amateur Golf Tour.

Venues include Rye, Walton Heath, Formby, Hillside, Woodhall Spa, Sunningdale, Chart Hills, Trevose and many more. Some of these events are over 50% full already so BOOK NOW!!

2017 events are now open for entry with online entry available as well as the standard entry forms if you wish to use this method.

There are still plenty of events on a FIRST COME FIRST SERVED BASIS which means no handicap ballot so if you want to play then simply enter and your place is secure.

Once entered, you can check to see if we have received your entry by checking the on-line list of entrants.

Remember that you do not have to join the tour to enter any events. Joining allows you to qualify for finals day and also receive reduced entrance fees for MAGT run events (depending on membership type chosen)

We have also just released 15 more LIFE memberships and once these have gone we will be freezing this option forever!

If you were a member in 2016 you will need to re-join for 2017 before you can claim any discounted entries.

We look forward to seeing you in 2017.

The MAGT team.
20 November 2017

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