You won’t find his name in any golf record book, but Fred Corcoran was one of golf’s pioneers. In the years following World War II, Corcoran helped found the Ladies Professional Golf Association, the World Cup and Golf Writers Association of America. His ideas helped spawn the World Golf Hall of Fame, and he was one of the sport’s first agents, managing the careers of Babe Zaharias, Tony Lema and Sam Snead. But perhaps the biggest imprint Corcoran left on the game was that, for a decade, he guided tournament golf in this country into its Golden Age.
Part idea man, part hustler, part mover-and-shaker, part publicist, all-around good guy, Corcoran was as much a fixture in golf during his heyday than any of the players. He had a sharp mind, a great sense of timing and all the connections. If golf writers wanted an anecdote, a quote or a stat, they went to Corcoran. If tournaments wanted a player, they went to Corcoran. If players wanted representation, they went to Corcoran. For a while, it seemed like he was the center of golf’s universe.