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Simons Almost Said U.S. Open Title
Amateur Came Within 3 Strokes Of 1971
Championship At Merion

March
14, 2005
By David Shefter, USGA
Far Hills, N.J. - The name Jim Simons is not one to likely resonate
with many of today's young golfers. Many either simply don't have
a sense of history or only recognize the names of pre-moderns
Hogan, Snead, Jones and post-moderns Tiger, Phil, Ernie and Vijay.
In fact, mention Simons and they might think you are talking
about the television personality of the hit television show "American
Idol."(His name is Simon).
But 34 years ago, you can bet the golf world had heard of Jim
Simons. Or at least his performance at the U.S. Open at Merion
Golf Club in the Philadelphia suburb of Ardmore, Pa., sent most
everyone scurrying to his page in the Players' Guide for more
information.
That week, people wondered about this unknown and where did he come from?
In that June of 1971, the unheralded 21-year-old rising senior
at Wake Forest University
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Amateur Jim Simons held the 54-hole lead
at the 1971 U.S. Open, but wound up tied for fifth. (USGA
Archives) |
certainly invoked the spirits of Francis Ouimet, Bob Jones, Chick
Evans and Johnny Goodman, all amateurs who had won the U.S. Open
in days of yore, the latter the last to accomplish the feat in
1933. Simons' performance that week was arguably one of the finest
by an amateur in the post-World War II era. He owned a two-stroke
lead heading into the final round, only to shoot a 6-over 76 and
tie for fifth, three shots behind Jack Nicklaus and Lee Trevino,
both of whom going the distance in an 18-hole playoff on Monday
to decide the championship (Trevino won).
Last year, Simons name returned to the pages of newsprint and
sound bites on television and radio when University of New Mexico
standout Spencer Levin of California tied for 13th at Shinnecock
Hills, the best showing by an amateur at the U.S. Open since 1971.
Simons' name also circulated through the media room in 1998 at
The Olympic Club when Matt Kuchar tied for 14th after flirting
with a top-five finish (he was in fourth position after 36 holes).
Since World War II, only Nicklaus has had a better U.S. Open
finish as an amateur. In 1960 at Cherry Hills Country Club, he
was in a three-way battle with Arnold Palmer and Ben Hogan, but
shot a back-nine 39 and finished second behind Palmer. A year
later, Nicklaus finished fourth at Oakland Hills Country Club
before turning pro and winning the title in 1962, defeating Palmer
in a playoff at Oakmont Country Club.
But Simons' showing was a bit unexpected. The two-time All-American
wasn't even the best player on his college team. That distinction
went to 1970 U.S. Amateur champion Lanny Wadkins, and it was Wadkins
who was considered the top amateur contender at the 1971 Open.
The other top amateur, 1969 U.S. Amateur champion Steve Melnyk,
decided not to go through sectional qualifying after he defeated
Simons, 3 and 2, in the 36-hole final of the British Amateur at
Carnoustie the first week of June, claiming fatigue.
Near-Miss At Sectionals
Simons, meanwhile, almost didn't qualify for the Open. Like Melnyk
and Wadkins, he had just returned from a whirlwind two-week excursion
in Scotland where the USA Walker Cup team lost to Great Britain
and Ireland at St. Andrews, the first loss for the Americans in
33 years. The adjustment from the cold, windy and rainy conditions,
along with playing with the smaller golf ball (at that time the
R & A permitted the use of a 1.62 diameter ball vs. the 1.68
ball that is now used universally) and mental fatigue had taken
its toll on Simons.
His swing was bit out of kilter and it showed during the first
nine holes of his 36-hole sectional qualifier at the Pittsburgh
Field Club.
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| Paired with eventual winner Lee Trevino
in the third round, Jim Simons shot an impressive 5-under-par
65 to take a two-stroke lead into the final 18 holes at the
1971 U.S. Open. (USGA Archives) |
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"I was seven over after nine holes and I thought about quitting,"
said Simons, who is from the Pittsburgh suburb of Butler, but
now resides in Jacksonville, Fla. "But it's not in my nature
to [quit]. I told myself I would go a little while longer until
it's no longer possible for me to qualify."
Yet Simons rediscovered his game at the turn and wound up earning
one of the seven qualifying spots. The 1971 Open would be his
third, following 1967 at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfield, N.J.,
and 1968 at Oak Hill Rochester, N.Y., where he missed the 36-hole
cut both times, the former as a 17-year-old.
Nevertheless, Simons arrived at Merion feeling a little bit winded.
He had played the two-day Walker Cup (0-2 record) and endured
eight match-play rounds at the British Amateur (he beat future
U.S. Open champion and Walker Cup roommate Tom Kite in the semifinals,
1 up) before hopping a plane back to Pittsburgh for the Open qualifier.
"I got to Philadelphia and my muscles felt like marshmallows,"
said Simons.
Confidence Takes Over Once Open Commences
However, all the golf had hardened Simons' intestinal fortitude
to the point where he felt supremely confident. Going from the
winter-like conditions of Scotland to the warmth of the eastern
Pennsylvania summer felt like paradise.
"It was 80 degrees, the wind wasn't blowing and the sun
was out," said Simons. "I was going, 'Man, this is so
easy.' "
Paired with Tom Weiskopf, who would win the British Open two
years later, Simons posted rounds of 71-71 to easily make the
cut along with four other amateurs: Wadkins, Ben Crenshaw, Pennsylvania
native James Masserio (1965 U.S. Junior champion) and Danny Yates.
The five amateurs to play that weekend during an Open continues
to be unmatched.
It was on Saturday that Simons raised the eyebrows of the golf
establishment. Playing alongside Trevino, he fashioned a brilliant
5-under 65, with seven birdies and two bogeys, to grab a two-stroke
lead over Nicklaus.
"That kid can play a little bit," Trevino told the
media. "He's got a lot of good shots. He showed me something,
he's solid. And he didn't play any lucky round. I'll tell you
one thing he made me think a little more. He made me play golf
to shoot 69. I didn't want any amateur making me look bad."
Weiskopf gushed, "Simons is better than Melnyk or Wadkins
or any amateur in the game today."
And when the pundits were all but ready to hand Nicklaus the
trophy on Saturday night, thus giving the youngster no chance,
the Golden Bear retorted: "Don't come around with this, 'All
you've got to beat is an amateur' stuff. Anything can happen.
And don't think an amateur can't win, especially an amateur who
can shoot 65 on this golf course."
Hanging In Despite Enormous Pressure
Nonetheless, the media expected Simons to tumble hard on Sunday,
especially since he would be paired with Nicklaus. Two years earlier,
amateur Marty Fleckman carried a lead into the final round at
Baltusrol only to shoot an 80. In 1954, Billy Joe Patton shared
the 54-hole lead, also at Baltusrol, but shot a 73 and wound up
in a tie for sixth. Even the great Nicklaus, twice a U.S. Amateur
champion, had faltered down the stretch of two Opens.
"I don't know if I've had the experience enough to win the
Open," said Simons, "not with Jack Nicklaus breathing
down my neck tomorrow."
Simons, however, found an inner calm that week, even with the
enormous pressure towering over him. The international experience
of the Walker Cup, playing in the tough Scottish conditions and
college battles against the likes of Wadkins had steadied his
nerves.
"I think that was the most composed I've ever been at any
time in my career," said Simons, who went on to win three
times on the PGA Tour, including the 1978 Memorial when he was
paired with Nicklaus in the final round. "Maybe it was me
being a little bit naïve."
As one might expect, Simons tossed and turned most of the night.
The next day, the nerves showed immediately when he put his crew-neck
on backward. It quickly caught the eye of his roommate Wadkins.
"Lanny told me, 'Hey Jim, are you really nervous?' "
said Simons. "At the time, I'm not thinking about how I am
putting my clothes on. Sure enough, it was on wrong. But I am
glad he warned me before I left the room."
It would be a harbinger of things to come. Since Simons was making
the five-hour drive back to Pittsburgh following the round, he
checked out of the hotel on Sunday morning. With his golf clubs,
suitcase and other stuff in hand, he suddenly couldn't find his
car in the parking lot. For 20 minutes, he wandered around with
this added weight trying to locate his vehicle. His first instinct
was that the car had been stolen. But through all the excitement
of shooting a 65 and doing the press conferences, he simply had
forgotten where he parked it.
"I guess it was because I was so caught up the night before
because of the position I was in," said Simons. "What
I should have done is brought the stuff back into the lobby before
looking. My muscles were quivering for awhile. That was the first
time that I had any doubt that I might not be as confident as
I was leading up to the Open. I had that feeling most of the day,
even though I maintained the lead."
To the shock of everyone Simons didn't wilt under the enormous
pressure. With nine holes left he still had a one-stroke lead
until a bogey at the 10th hole put him back into a tie with Nicklaus
and Trevino. He fell out of the lead when he bogeyed 14, but he
had birdie putts at 15, 16 and 17. He just missed on all three.
Were the nerves kicking in?
"I remember putting well, even the last day," said
Simons. "After the round, Nicklaus put his arm around me
and said, 'Jimmy, you didn't make a nervous stroke all day.'
"I felt I could win the Open all the way through. The thing
that happened to me the last day that didn't happen the first
three days was I was a fraction off on my tee shots and I caught,
not the deep rough, but the [intermediate] rough, which in a U.S.
Open with hard greens, you don't get the ball close to the hole
because you can't control the spin. That was the story of the
day. I just was a little bit off."
Case in point, the 72nd hole. Simons knew he slightly pulled
his tee shot on the difficult par 4, perhaps 5 feet from where
he wanted to hit the ball. Because it's a blind tee shot, Simons
never saw where the ball landed on the right-to-left sloping fairway.
The ball took a horrendous kick to the left and found the thick
rough.
"The marshal told me, 'I'm very sorry, that's the worst
kick I've seen on a drive all week,' " said Simons, who needed
a birdie to tie Trevino who was in the clubhouse. Nicklaus was
also tied for the lead at the time.
Knowing he needed a 3, Simons gambled by trying to lash a 3-wood
from the thick rough, only to pop it up into the fairway, leaving
him a 9-iron approach for his third shot. The approach bounced
over the green into more rough where he proceeded to make a heartbreaking
double-bogey 6.
"The only thing that went through my mind was to go for
it," said Simons. "I was playing to win. I wasn't thinking
money because I was an amateur."
Simons Earns Low-Amateur Honors
Simons settled for a tie for fifth to earn low-amateur honors,
a distinction he would repeat the following year at Pebble Beach
Golf Links when he posted one of two par or better rounds on Sunday
(he shot 72) to move from 55th position to a tie for 15th. Only
Nicklaus has posted better back-to-back performances by an amateur
in the Open over the past 45 years.
He turned pro later that year and went on to three PGA Tour victories
until physical ailments - he was bothered by nagging shoulder
problems - forced him away from the game and into business as
a stock broker.
Even though an amateur hasn't won the U.S. Open since Goodman
in '33, Simons doesn't see why it couldn't happen again. Of course,
it would take a special player with the right blend of talent,
nerves and confidence. Woods couldn't pull it off and he completed
one of the greatest amateur careers in the post World War II era.
Maybe reigning U.S. Amateur champion Ryan Moore will challenge
this summer at Pinehurst. Or, perhaps, Levin, will have a repeat
effort of 2004.
After all, in one magical week in 1971, Simons almost did it.
David Shefter is a USGA staff writer. E-mail him with questions
or comments at dshefter@usga.org. |