Golf's majors From Hagen and Hogan to a Bear and a Tiger, inside the game's most unforgettable performances

Gary Player

Book - 2024

"From golf legend and nine-time major champion Gary Player, a riveting history of golf's pinnacle events, packed with dramatic moments and insider stories"--

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796.35266/Player
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 796.35266/Player (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Dey St., an imprint of William Morrow [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Gary Player (author)
Other Authors
Randy Williams, 1957- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvi, 455 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780063277847
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • The Masters
  • 1. The Shot Heard 'Round the World, 1935
  • 2. Fort Worth's Finest: Ben vs. Byron, 1942
  • 3. Hogan's First Green Jacket Leads to a New Tradition at Augusta, 1951
  • 4. The Clash Between Two Superstars and a Scene-Stealing Amateur, 1954
  • 5. Honored to Be the First International Winner of the Masters, 1961
  • 6. The Nightmare Loss That Still Lingers, 1962
  • 7. "What a Stupid I Am," 1968
  • 8. Nicklaus-Weiskopf-Miller = Magnificence, 1975
  • 9. Floyd's Mastery of the Forgotten Five-Wood, 1976
  • 10. A Player from Way Back, 1978
  • 11. The Golden Bear's Master Charge, 1986
  • 12. Local Boy Makes Good, 1987
  • 13. Heartbreak for Hoch, a First for Faldo, 1989
  • 14. Win One for the Mentor, 1995
  • 15. The Day the Shark Drowned, 1996
  • 16. The Dawn of a New Era: Tiger Time, 1997
  • 17. For Rory, the Wrong Kind of Fade, 2011
  • 18. Bubba's Hook into History, 2012
  • 19. An Improbable Comeback as Tiger Roars Again, 2019
  • 20. A Major Breakthrough for Golf-Mad Japan, 2021
  • The PGA Championship
  • 21. Golf's Newest Major Debuts with a Dramatic Finish, 1916
  • 22. Hagen vs. Sarazen: The Greatest 38-Hole Match Play Championship of All-Time, 1923
  • 23. The Haig's Unmatched Fourth Straight PGA Triumph, 1927
  • 24. A PGA Title: The Centerpiece of Byron's Historic Streak, 1945
  • 25. Barber Razor Sharp on the Greens, 1961
  • 26. My Third Major: Finally, a Return to Form, 1962
  • 27. Degrees of Difficulty, 1963
  • 28. The Old Accountant Denies the King's Quest for a Career Grand Slam, 1968
  • 29. My Miracle at "the Monster," 1972
  • 30. Tway Has a Blast at Last, 1986
  • 31. A Long Shot Legend That Began at Crooked Stick, 1991
  • 32. The Tiger-Tamer from Korea, 2009
  • 33. Rory Finds Glory on the Edge of Darkness, 2014
  • 34. The Eagle That Landed a Major, 2020
  • 35. Phil Aces Father Time, 2021
  • 36. Mito's Mistake and Justin's Joy, 2022
  • 37. Koepka's Comeback, 2023
  • The Us Open
  • 38. Golf's Greatest Upset, 1913
  • 39. Marathon Men, 1931
  • 40. Snead Snatches Defeat from Victory, 1939
  • 41. A Soldier's Victory, 1946
  • 42. The Star of Stars at Hogan's Alley, 1948
  • 43. A Miracle at Merion, 1950
  • 44. Thanks for the Clubs, 1955
  • 45. The Charge at Cherry Hills, 1960
  • 46. Nicklaus Notches Major Victory #1, 1962
  • 47. Staving Off Venturi's Vultures, 1964
  • 48. My Pinnacle: Achieving the Rare Career Grand Slam, 1965
  • 49. Arnie's Fade and Casper's Comeback, 1966
  • 50. Super Mex Announces His Arrival, 1968
  • 51. Trevino Snakes Nicklaus, 1971
  • 52. Here's Johnny!, 1973
  • 53. All-Hale as Irwin Emerges from the Massacre, 1974
  • 54. A One-Shot Wonder, 1982
  • 55. Strange Back-to-Back, 1989
  • 56. Pebble, Centennial, and Tiger-Masterpiece Theater, 2000
  • 57. "I'm Such an Idiot," 2006
  • 58. Eye of the Tiger Stares Down Rocco as Rocky, 2008
  • 59. A Clash (Then Crash) of Titans at Torrey, 2021
  • The Open Championship
  • 60. All in the Family, 1868
  • 61. Vardon Gets His Grip on the Claret Jug, 1896
  • 62. The First Yankee, 1922
  • 63. On the Road to the "Impregnable Quadrilateral of Golf," 1930
  • 64. The Wee Ice Mon and Golf's Triple Crown, 1953
  • 65. It Was a Locke Between These Rivals, 1957
  • 66. From Gloom to Glory: Winning My First Major, 1959
  • 67. The King's Impact, 1961
  • 68. Thomson's Terrain, 1965
  • 69. A Shot at Glory Slides By, 1970
  • 70. Trevino Earns Back-to-Back Jugs, 1972
  • 71. Same Player as Fifteen Years Prior, 1974
  • 72. "This Is What It's All About …," 1977
  • 73. Seve Takes History from Watson, 1984
  • 74. Sacre Bleu It: The Collapse That Will Live in Infamy, 1999
  • 75. Fifty-Nine-Year-Old Watson: Living Proof You Can Win for Losing, 2009
  • 76. Phil Finally Scores a Jug, 2013
  • 77. Jordan Rules, 2017
  • A Place in the Sun
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Photo Credits
Review by Kirkus Book Review

One of the all-time greats offers an extensive history of golf's most important tournaments. "This book will examine the story behind the story of all the different ways players have won (and lost) the game of their lives," writes Williams in the introduction. "And although winning a major championship does not guarantee greatness, not winning one guarantees that you will never be considered great. Deep in his heart, every golfer knows this." As Player and Williams demonstrate, the four major championships--the Masters, the PGA Championship, the U.S. Open, and the Open Championship--are the pinnacles of competition. (Player won nine.) First up is the youngest, the Masters, with its "coveted" green jacket. The authors take readers through a series of memorable tournaments, from 1935, when Gene Sarazen's double eagle on a par 5 led to a victory in a 36-hole playoff, to 2021, when Hideki Matsuyama became the first-ever Japanese player to win the Masters. The 1923 PGA battle between Walter Hagen and Sarazen was the "greatest 38-hole match play championship of all-time." Many readers will enjoy the authors' accounts of the older tournaments because TV coverage wasn't around then. Player personally witnessed the "greatest clutch putting performance" in Jerry Barber's 1961 win, and he describes in detail his own return to form in 1962 with his PGA win at Aronimink. The U.S. Open is the "toughest tournament there is," and Player's win in 1965 earned him the Grand Slam, the "best achievement of my career." The Open Championship, played in the U.K., is all about "imagination." Player won three Opens; in 1959, he became the "youngest man to win the Open over seventy-two holes." The book's almanac-like approach encourages dipping in here and there rather than reading straight through. Despite fairly dry prose, this compendious book is a breezy, fact-filled read golfers will devour. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.