Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Lots of news about Jock Hutchison!

I've completed and published, Grooves, How Jock Hutchison changed golf history and club design.

The World Golf Hall of Fame has announced that Jock will be inducted to the World Golf Hall of Fame along with Ernie Els, former president George H W Bush and Doug Ford.

I will be providing book copies and any other assistance requested by WGHF. I also hope to attend the induction ceremony in May 2010.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Golf Club Grooves are in the news

USGA bans "square" grooves, again. Grooves, the book, is beginning the final approach to becoming a published document. A local publishing company is reviewing and editing the manuscript. The target date for publication, both printed and electronic editions, is now May 2010.

It has been great researching this project and hard to know when to stop gathering new information no matter how trivial, about Jock Hutchison.

I continue to be amazed at the impact Jock had on the game of golf and the design of golf clubs and yet he remains a mystery to the vast majority of those who play the game.


Sunday, September 20, 2009

The book Grooves is coming together

I have crossed the final hurdle listed in my earlier entry. I have now verified that Jock became a naturalized citizen on April 1, 1920, and that's no April fools joke!

Currently, I am finishing my first re-write and I will be turning the manuscript over to an editor shortly. I am aiming for a publishing date around or shortly after the first of the year, depending on how brutal the editor is.

Stay tuned.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Grooves: A Beginning to the Jock Hutchison Story

Jock Hutchison, a naturalized American citizen, won the 1921 British Open, the first American citizen to ever capture that prize. This blog is dedicated to his accomplishment.

I am writing a book about that event entitled "Grooves." Jock used self built clubs which were designed with large striations, or grooves, cut into the face of his mashie-niblick, mashie and  niblick irons. With these clubs he was able to stop his shots quickly on the small, fast greens of the Old Course at St. Andrews, Scotland where the 1921 Open was contested.

Controversies over golf club grooves have been major issues with professional golfers on three occasions since the turn of the century in 1900. Hutchison's clubs had large grooves, quite unusual at the time for any club to be so designed, and caused such controversy that the addition of grooves was forbidden by the rules of golf promulgated by the Royal and Ancient Club of St. Andrews, the rules arbiters for Europe and most of the rest of the world, and the U.S. Golf Association, the rule making authority for the United States. Those prohibitions were effective after the 1921 British Open.

There was another grooves controversy over Ping Eye golf clubs in the late 1980's and today the design of golf club grooves for clubs used in 2010 and beyond are bound to affect the world of professional golfing. That controversy rages even as you read this.

With the assistance of his grandson, Dryke, and many others, such as Roberta Nichols, Archivist for the Glen View Club in Golf, Illinois, and the patience of my wife, I have assembled a great wealth of information about Jock. The writing doesn't come easy, but I am making great progress and would like to finalize my efforts in time for the 2010 British Open which will be played at the Old Course in St. Andrews, just 89 years after Jock's historic victory.

I am still on the lookout for additional items that I can use and I am searching for hard validation of his naturalization. (Many newspaper articles of the era report him to be a naturalized citizen, but you can't always trust newspapers sports reporters.)

I am new at blogging and will be adding items to this site from time to time. Any suggestions, leads, or artifacts that relate to Jock are of interest to me.

Thanx for visiting my blog.