Herbert Warren Wind
Most simply put, Herbert Warren Wind is golf’s poet laureate. He not only described our game – its wondrous people and remarkable venues – with
Most simply put, Herbert Warren Wind is golf’s poet laureate. He not only described our game – its wondrous people and remarkable venues – with
He has been called “The Man Who Was Pinehurst.” He served as President of the United States Golf Association, Walker Cup captain and was such
Karsten Solheim revolutionized golf club design and manufacturing, thereby making the game easier and more enjoyable for hundreds of thousands of amateur golfers. Elected into
As a pre-teen Marilynn Smith served as a pitcher, coach and manager of a boy’s baseball team. Golf, she thought, was a sissy sport, and
Charlie Sifford broke barriers all his life as the first African-American to play on the PGA Tour and then later when he earned induction into
Dinah Shore didn’t take up the game until the ripe age of 52, and by her own admission she was not a quick study. “Whenever I
American golf has been blessed by several extraordinary amateur champions who have played the game at the very highest level – Bob Jones (the winner
Mention the name Donald Ross to an educated golfer and it will surely bring good thoughts to mind. That is because Ross, in the words
The words used to describe Clifford Roberts were autocratic, mysterious, intimidating and often enigmatic. He seemed to rule the Masters tournament and Augusta National Golf
Harvey Penick spent his life teaching golf. He taught countless golfers how to “take dead aim,” claimed to have seen more golf shots than anyone