Please note all images are under copyright and can only be used with the agreement of the owner Bill Knowles
Doug Ford
Born August 6, 1922, in West Haven, Connecticut – Died on May 14, 2018
Doug Ford turned professional in 1949 and won 19 PGA Tour events including two majors, the Masters in 1957 and the PGA in 1955.
He also played in four Ryder cup teams in 1955, 1957, 1959, and 1961.
As a youngster, Doug Ford was an excellent baseball player and was given a contract offer to join the New York Yankees.
Ford had an excellent swing, although some might say a little short on the backswing.
Ford was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2011.
Billy Casper
William Earl Casper Jr. (June 24, 1931 – February 7, 2015)
Casper built his game as working as a caddie and earning money to buy his golf balls and equipment.
He emerged from the junior golf scene of San Diego, California having been started by his father at the age of five.
Casper turned professional in 1954 and went on to record 51 PGA Tour wins, with his first coming in 1956.
Although not short off the tee, Casper was never able to achieve the length that fellow competitors of the sixties Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer had at their disposal. Instead, he was known as one of the best putters and chippers of his era.
The swing of Casper had one or two mannerisms, which some teachers may see as a fault. It started with a very strong left-hand position with the thumb set very much on the right of the grip. He also held the clubface square to the ball for a longer period than most in his start away from the ball. Nevertheless, he started forward in the right sequence and released the clubhead naturally through the ball.
Casper was a member of the United States team in the Ryder Cup eight times, and a non-playing captain in 1979. His fierce competitive spirit helped him to score more points than any other American player in the biennial event's history. His reward and recognition for such a fine career were finally given to him in 1978 when he was inaugurated into the World Golf Hall of Fame.
Lanny Wadkins
Jerry Lanston "Lanny" Wadkins Jr. (born December 5, 1949)
Lanny won one major (The P.G.A) and 32 other Tournaments.
The film shows Lanny in the same year he joined the PGA Tour.
Lanny makes a good tall address position. His stance is not overly wide, which applied to all of his clubs(see film).
He starts back and creates a wide path with his arms. A slight rightward tilt of the head allows more space for the shoulders to turn.
The body turn is deep and substantial. Lanny`s right knee is also involved in clearing the way.
At the top of the backswing we can see the right knee still holds sufficiently flexed. He is clearly poised and seems to be staring at the back of the ball.
Driving forward there is no holding back. Lanny had a rapid tempo, which tends to fit with a quick thinker. Also, at only 5ft 9 inches, he had to use all he had to keep up with the big boys.
At contact we see a solid contact with firmly "planted" feet. Although this photo is of a shorter swing we will find the same elements in his full swing.
There is no sign of deceleration as he drives on to his finish. His arms have created a beautiful path and have moved back to the inside in accordance with his natural plane.
The very high hands and curved spine hide a totally conforming swing that would hold-up with his modern colleagues. This type of finish was more in accordance with the smaller and heavier equipment used before 1990.
Steve Melnyk
Born February 26, 1947
Two things come to mind when thinking of Steve Melnyk. One is the Amateur champion who devastated the field hitting the ball a mile with his huge body frame. The other is the popular on-course reporter who worked for CBS and ABC television in the seventies and eighties.
The Steve Melnyk that I want to discuss is the one who was never able to emulate the same playing standards as an amateur after he joined the professional ranks.
Rather than sharing my limited thoughts on the man from Brunswick,Georgia, I am going to use a wonderful article Irv Schloss published 40 years ago.
Irv Schloss:
Take a step back in the past with this wonderful article When Steve Melnyk won the United States Amateur Championship in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania last August, it was neither a fluke nor unexpected. Melnyk had been gaining stature, almost minute by minute, as he led the golf team of the University of Florida to victory, time after time, during his last two college years.
The set of pictures that accompany my words testify to the soundness of his swing. It is difficult to fault it in any way. As a matter of fact, according to my standards, it has superstar quality.
Oakmont has the reputation of being one of the best tests of golf in the United States. Melnyk is one of only a few players, professional or amateur, ever to par it for four rounds in a national competition. According to Steve, he was at his very best in winning the United States Amateur. I was there and can testify. He just looked great.
While the accompanying photographs tell a very accurate story I must add that Steve`s tempo, during the week of the championship, was superb. Tempo cannot be documented by still photographs, but it could be seen if you were able to look at the strip of cine film from these photographs that were printed( supplied in this article).
Confidence and good tempo go hand in hand. When a player has confidence he swings leisurely. A leisurely swing CANNOT be practiced by slowing down.
There is a difference, I would state it this way. I once watched Ben Hogan practicing. In thirty minutes he hits three balls. When he did get to hitting one, he approached it with all the confidence in the world, as if to say,
"Little ball; you're going for a long ride when I get good and ready to swing." That is quite different from the player lacking in confidence who, when he strikes the ball not too well-with his normal swing, then tries to slow his swing down to pick up a leisurely tempo. The result is not the same at all. Slowing down is NOT the same thing as a leisurely tempo. Now to the photographs:
More coming soon
Curtis Person Sr. The greatest winner in American Amateur golf history
Person with Bob Hope
Curtis Person Senior was one of the most formidable Amateurs in the history of American Golf from 1930 to 1970, winning Tournament after Tournament with a terrifying natural ease. In that forty year period, Persson won an unequaled 129 Tournaments.
Coming soon
Jerry Barber
Born April 25, 1916 – September 23, 1994
The young Jerry Barber was one of nine children. As a small child who only reached 5 ft 5 inches tall.
The combination of a very large family and small stature meant he grew up with a fierce fighting spirit, which was needed to hold his own with brothers and sisters.
Barber turned professional in 1942, and won 14 times on the PGA tour, playing in two Ryder cups.
At only 5ft 5 inches, you would have expected Jerry Barber to use every sinew in his body to gain leverage and create more length. He should have been following a young competitor only a little taller than himself, by the name of Gary Player as an example.
Instead, Barber used a narrow arc born out of a very early wrist hinge when starting back. Although Barber made a sound movement through the ball his swing was unable to generate much clubhead speed. Consequently, Jerry Barber was one of the shortest, if not the shortest, hitters on the tour.
Bill Collins
Born -September 23, 1928, in Meyersdale Pennsylvania, and died in 2006
Bill Collins playing in the 1961 Ryder Cup
Bill Collins joined the PGA Tour in 1958 and won four events between 1959 and 1962. He had seven PGA Tour wins and played in the 1961 Ryder Cup. He had to end his tour career early after needing back surgery in 1963 and took a club job in New York until 1981 when he retired to join the senior PGA Tour, where he managed one further win.
Although a powerful driver off the tee the film shows how Bill reduced his swing for accuracy. His action with the irons was more a "punch" rather than a swing. His driver swing was full but inhibited by a very narrow stance that is not suited to a man of his size (6ft 4 inches and 205 lbs).
Bill, the more I research the more I realize who Irv Schloss was. I knew him as my teacher and friend. He attended the Masters I played and the Walker Cup and let me bunk with him in the 1968 Florida Open which he was helping to run. He really never expounded on all his credentials and innovations and fingers in pies. I learn more weekly. I had conversation with Jim McLean just a week ago and he virtually knew hardly anything about Irv. I sent him our materials thru 1966 and he was astounded. So much so we are going to nominate him for the World Golf Teachers Hall after the MAPGA one this Spring. Golf pros and people in the game today have really lost history! And I love your posts because it reminds me every time what the genesis of this has been.