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American triumvirate

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In this celebration of three legendary champions on the centennial of their births in 1912, one of the most accomplished and successful writers about the game explains the circumstances that made each of them so singularly brilliant and how they, in turn, saved not only the professional tour but modern golf itself, thus making possible the subsequent popularity of players from Arnold Palmer to Tiger Woods.

During the Depressionafter the exploits of Walter Hagen and Gene Sarazen and Bobby Jones (winning the Grand Slam as an amateur in 1930) had faded in the public's imaginationgolf's popularity fell year after year, and as a spectator sport it was on the verge of extinction.

This was the unhappy prospect facing two dirt-poor boys from Texas and another from Virginia who had dedicated themselves to the game yet could look forward only to eking out a subsistence living along with millions of other Americans.

But then lightning struck, and from the late thirties into the fifties these three men were so thoroughly dominanteach setting a host of recordsthat they transformed both how the game was played and how society regarded it.

Sports fans in general are well aware of Hogan and Nelson and Snead, but even the most devoted golfers will learn a great many new things about them here.

Their hundredth birthdays will be commemorated throughout 2012Nelson born in February, Snead in May, and Hogan in Augustbut as this comprehensive and compelling account vividly demonstrates, they were, and will always remain, a triumvirate for the ages.

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Product Details
Alfred. A. Knopf
030795739X / 9780307957399
eBook (EPUB)
13/03/2012
English
400 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
"This is a Borzoi book." Derived record based on unviewed print version record.
WSJG Golf