The Grand Slam: Two Fondly Remember
Seeing Jones Play

September 27, 2005
Editor's note: More than 75 years ago Bob Jones
"stormed the impregnable quadrilateral of golf," as the
New York Sun's George Trevor put it. In other words, he won
golf's Grand Slam, the term attributed to the Atlanta
Journal's O.B. Keeler. The USGA recognizes the monumental
feat by reprinting a story that ran Aug. 21 prior to the U.S.
Amateur at Merion Golf Club.
By , USGA
- With all due apologies, and are about as rare as a
two-dollar bill.
That's not an attempt to sound trite or impolite toward
two old-timers of golf. But these days it's not often that
someone can state he saw or even played with . Barrows, 86, can
confidently say he saw him play. The 90-year-old Riegel, who won
the 1947 U.S. Amateur, sort of saw him compete and guesses
he's one of the last two people to play a full round with the
legend.
 |
| On Sept. 27, 1930, Bob Jones completed
the Grand Slam at the Merion Cricket Club, which is now
Merion Golf Club. (USGA Photo Archives) |
Let's begin with Barrows, a Merion Golf Club member since
1946. With an infectious smile and limber gait, he defies his
age. At first glance there's no way anyone would believe that
he, as an 11-year-old adolescent, could possibly be on the same
Merion Cricket Club East Course 75 years ago when Jones
astonished the sports world by winning what sportswriter O.B.
Keeler coined the "Grand Slam." Jones won the and
British Opens, and and British Amateurs to complete the feat,
something no golfer has accomplished.
However, listening to Barrows, his words paint a vivid picture
that placed him among the throngs of people watching Jones dust ,
8 and 7, in the 36-hole U.S. Amateur final. But before we indulge
Barrows' story, the scene must be established.
Entering the final match, the feeling among the majority was
that Jones' impending victory was academic. After all, Jones
parlayed the trip earlier that year - with the USGA paying all
team player expenses - into British Amateur and British Open
victories. He then won the U.S. Open at Interlachen Country Club
in July. It set the stage for the 34
th
U.S. Amateur, contested among 168 players from Sept. 22-27. No
one got close to beating Jones that week; none of his matches
went beyond the 14th hole.
"To win match play events, that's not easy to
do," said Tiger Woods, a three-time Amateur champion.
"It just takes one day that you're not quite there and
some guy is sharp and you're gone."
Homans, meanwhile, eliminated , father of baseball Hall of
Famer Tom Seaver, in the semifinals. But the consensus was that
Homans would be Jones' sacrificial lamb.
"Poor Homans. He knows he's going to go down in
history as the man who beat to win the Grand Slam," said
Merion historian John Capers.
That's how ' father, , saw it too. Barrows remembered
that his dad attended the match with guests. By lunch, with Jones
holding a commanding 7-up lead after the morning 18, his father
left and headed home. Barrows was taken by surprise when his dad
asked if he wanted to go watch the end.
Gleefully accepting the white ticket that had a string looped
through it, Barrows bolted for the door. He hopped on a trolley
that took him near the course.
"When I got on the scene, they were playing the ninth
hole," said Barrows. "There was a crowd around them, so
I went to the 10th tee."
Barrows waited for the two competitors to make their way up,
firmly entrenched in his spot as people jockeyed for position. He
got so close that his right foot nearly touched the right tee
marker.
"I was seven feet away from where he drove the
ball," said Barrows. "It was the only ball I saw him
hit."
Yet that swing made an impression.
"He took the club back very smoothly, with no effort. It
went one way and the swing came back the same way," said
Barrows. "It was like cutting butter with a heated
knife."
At the time, it hadn't dawned on Barrows that he was
immersed in what The Associated Press later labeled in 1950 as
the greatest athletic achievement of the 20
th
century. He was too busy trying to angle peeks through
spectators' legs, although he disputes the notion that 18,000
people actually attended, as some accounts have indicated.
"I severely question that," said Barrows, placing
the number closer to 14,000. "You couldn't get 18,000
people to attend an Eagles game in those days."
As the match wrapped up, with Homans missing a 25-foot birdie
attempt on No. 11 and then conceding, Barrows said he recalled
seeing "six or seven" U.S. Marines jump on the green
and surround players and caddies, escorting them to the
clubhouse.
Fifty-two days later, Jones, then just 28, announced his
retirement from competitive golf. There was nothing left to
accomplish.
Oblivious to all this was Riegel. Just 15 at the time, Riegel
was at Merion that day as well, but for different reasons.
Uninterested in golf, he wouldn't have recognized Jones from
. He had snuck on the course with a friend to watch the crowds,
and to look for balls and snakes in streams.
"I thought guys who played golf were strange," said
the mustachioed Riegel.
Seven years later Riegel took up the sport, crossing paths
with Jones numerous times. The first meeting occurred in 1948, a
year after winning the 1947 Amateur at . Riegel was invited to
play in an exhibition match with Jones, and Dick Garlington at
Clearwater Country Club and the Duneadon Course at National in .
Riegel had a grand time, showing up Jones and the others by
carding three eagles and outscoring everyone. He admitted now
that he's a little ashamed of his actions with what lie
ahead.
Unbeknownst to Riegel, it had been about the time that Jones
began suffering the onset of syringomyelia, the rare and
degenerative disease of the central nervous system.
While playing at Duneadon, Jones asked Riegel, "Why am I
hooking the ball?" Riegel, shocked that someone of
Jones' stature would even ask him such a question, didn't
know how to respond. He referred Jones to the star's archived
footage, some of which resides in the today.
"He was always asking me questions and I was
embarrassed," said Riegel. "But he had a marvelous
sense of humor. I never saw him get mad."
Years later, after Jones' death, Riegel wondered whether
he was the last person to play a round of golf with him. He was
told that had hooked up with Jones during the illness. So Riegel
figures he's the second-to-last person to play with
Jones.
Sadly, it's not the memory of playing with Jones that
grips Riegel. Rather, it's the heartrending moment in the
1950s when Merion celebrated Jones' 1930 victory by placing a
plaque on a rock near the 11th tee. Jones and Riegel were both in
attendance. By this time Jones had been confined to a
wheelchair.
"To see Bobby sitting there in his wheelchair - he had
tears in his eyes," said Riegel. "I said to myself,
'Bobby probably would give everything, his wins, to not be in
that condition.' To see him in that condition was one of the
saddest days of my life."
Others choose to remember Jones differently. There's
little dispute that his Grand Slam victory shone the spotlight on
Merion. It's the course where Jones played his first national
competition as a 14-year-old at the 1916 Amateur. Club members
wear the feat as a badge of honor because it represented amateur
golf in its purest form.
"It doesn't bother us at all" that Merion is
most identified with Jones despite the fact other great players
have made their mark on the 109-year-old course, said Amateur
general chairman .
"That [the 1930 Amateur]," added Iredale,
"created a sound foundation for amateur golf."
is the USGA's Web Editor. E-mail him with questions or
comments at kklavon@usga.org.