The Lytham Trophy – 2015 Preview & Results

UPDATE – Marcus Kinhult (Sweden) won the 2015 Lytham Trophy on 3rd May by 8-shots after rounds of 68, 69, 71 and 72 (E).

Marcus Kinhult LT

Marcus Kinhult – winner of the 2015 Lytham Trophy

Highlights of the 2015 Lytham Trophy (© Golfing World)

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30th April 2015

144 elite amateur golfers from 17 different countries will tee off tomorrow in the 51st Lytham Trophy, one of the most prestigious competitions in the men’s amateur golfing calendar.

Nowadays players compete in events across the globe, often starting their seasons in December and January.  Despite this there still remains the feeling that the Lytham Trophy – at least in Great Britain and Ireland (GB&I) – is the real curtain raiser to the Men’s season.  The event where things start to get serious.

The course certainly presents a stern test.  Playing off the blue championship tees competitors have to meet a 7,118 yard par 70 challenge; the front nine being 3,437 yards, a par 34, and the back nine being 3,681 yards, a par 36.

This year the event takes on added importance – not only is it a Walker Cup year but September’s match against the USA is also being contested at the home of the Lytham Trophy, Royal Lytham & St. Annes, the famous Lancashire links in England.  The Lytham Trophy has always been an important factor in determining the GB&I team but this year the results will surely carry even more weight with Captain Nigel Edwards and the Selection Committee.

Lytham Trophies

The Lytham Trophy

Some information on this famous competition and it’s past winners is provided in an Appendix below.

The Lytham Trophy – 1st to 3rd May 2015

Entry, which costs £80, was open to golfers whose handicap does not exceed scratch (0.4) albeit the ballot again fell in negative territory.  144 players will contest the Trophy.

To see who they all are check out the 2015 start sheet for Rounds 1 and 2 by clicking – Lytham Trophy Start Sheet.

The first two rounds will be played on Friday 1st and Saturday 2nd May.  A Top 40 and Ties cut will then see a reduced field playing the final 36 on Sunday 3rd May.

In the event of a tie after 72 holes a 3-hole play-off, contested on holes 1, 2 and 18, will be played. Should the remaining players still be tied a sudden death play-off will take place over the same holes.

The Leading Players in 2015 (Nationality / Current SPWAR)

As always the field is packed with great players.  Here’s a summary of the leading ones: –

Gary Hurley (IRE / 13) – finalist at the Spanish Amateur and 2015 Palmer Cup team member.
Bradley Neil (SCO / 16) – 2014 Amateur Champion.
Romain Langasque (FRA / 23) – recent winner of the Mouchy Cup and Southern Cross Invitational.
Ashley Chesters (ENG / 29) – 2013 and 2014 European Amateur champion.
Nick Marsh (ENG / 31) – strong 2014 and 2015 record with a 2nd in the West of England last week.
Marcus Kinhult  (SWE / 36) – winner of the Sage Valley Junior Invitational last week.
Jack Hume (IRE / 42) – strong 2014 and 2015 record; 2nd place at Lytham in 2013.
Daniel Young (SCO / 53) – has already won the South African Amateur and Battle Trophy in 2015.
Gavin Moynihan (IRE / 54) – 2013 Walker Cup player but perhaps lacking form in 2015.
Craig Ross (SCO / 59) – winner on the 2014 EuroPro Tour and has performed well for some time.
Ewen Ferguson (SCO / 72) – outstanding start to 2015 with two wins in Scotland already.
Dermot McElroy (IRE / 102) – recent West of Ireland win and strong Lytham record bodes well.
Mattias Eggenberger (SUI / 104) – Good form and experience in GB&I with Stirling University.

It will also be interesting to see how some of the Juniors get on.  Marco Penge (256), recent winner of the McEvoy Trophy, and Bradley Moore (370), perhaps the two best GB&I youngsters, have both chosen to compete at Lytham rather than play in the nearby Fairhaven Trophies.  Penge of course won the Fairhaven Boys Trophy in both 2013 and 2014.

You may also find it interesting to look through the betting odds for the Lytham Trophy which can be found on Paddy Power’s website.

Weather Forecast (@Thurs 30th, 7.00pm)

Fri 1st May – Partly Cloudy. Wind 9 mph. Max. 12°C / Min 2°C.
Sat 2nd May – Cloudy / Light Rain. Wind 18 mph. Max. 12°C / Min 7°C.
Sun 3rd May – Partly Cloudy. Wind 13 mph. Temp. Max. 16°C / Min 7°C.

Appendix – History and Past Winners

The competition was first played in 1965 after the Club identified a need for another top class amateur competition and one that was in the North of England.

A date on the first weekend in May was established and a 72 hole stroke play format adopted.

Member’s subscribed to purchase a unique trophy (which does not leave the Club) with a smaller replica issued annually to that year’s winner.

As one would expect the list of past winner’s is a who’s who of GB&I and more recently world amateur golf.

Thriston Lawrence LT

Thriston Lawrence (RSA) – Winner of the 2014 Lytham Trophy

Of the older winners the most notable are: –
M.F. Bonallack  – 1965(s), 1972
R. Foster           – 1967, 1968
G.C. Marks       – 1970(s)
C.W. Green       – 1970(s), 1974
M.G. King         – 1973
P. McEvoy         – 1978
I.C. Hutcheon   – 1980
R.M. Chapman – 1981
J. Hawksworth  – 1984
P. Broadhurst    – 1988
G. Evans           – 1990, 1991
G. Rankin          – 1997

In 2004 21 year old James Heath won with a record score of 266 (-18), recording rounds of 67, 68, 66, and 65.  No one else has ever come close to this mark before or after.  The next best scores being Daan Huizing’s 273 in 2013 and Richard McEvoy’s 276 in 2001.   Garth McGimpsey, the then Walker Cup captain, described Heath’s performance as ‘the best amateur golf I’ve ever seen’.

In 1999 the Lytham Trophy was won by Tino Schuster, the first time a non-GB&I player had been successful.  The last five winners show just how international the amateur game has become as well as the increasing attraction of the Lytham Trophy beyond these shores: –
P. Cutler             – 2010 (Irish)
J. Senior            – 2011 (English)
D. Huizing         – 2012 (Dutch)
A. Eckhardt       – 2013 (Finnish)
T. Lawrence       – 2014 (South African)

All of the Past winners and their scores can be found here on the Royal Lytham website.

Copyright © 2015, Mark Eley. All rights reserved.

The Peter McEvoy Trophy – 2015 Preview & Results

UPDATE – Marco Penge (Golf at Goodwood) won the 2015 McEvoy Trophy on 16th April with a record equalling 272 -12 total score.

Marco Penge PM 2015

Marco Penge receives the McEvoy Trophy from Peter McEvoy (Photo: GolfBible)

The 2015 Peter McEvoy Trophy Highlights (© Golfing World)

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14th April 2015

The Peter McEvoy Trophy is a 72-hole stroke play competition for boys played annually at Copt Heath Golf Club in Solihull, England.

CHGC ClubhouseCopt Heath Golf Club

Background

Peter McEvoy OBE has been a member of Copt Heath for nearly 50 years and is a famous British amateur golfer.  My profile of his career can be read by clicking this link – Peter McEvoy.

PM Amateur Champion

Peter McEvoy – 1977 Amateur Champion at Ganton GC

Following Peter’s Amateur Championship victories in 1977 and 1978 Copt Heath invited him to suggest a way in which the Club could commemorate his achievements. He suggested a 72 hole competition for Under 18 junior boy golfers, to be held annually at Copt Heath.

Starting in 1981, The Peter McEvoy Trophy was originally held during the August summer holidays. In 1985, at the request of the English Golf Union (now England Golf), it was moved to April, where it has stayed ever since. This request was prompted by a need for an early season national competition to assist them with the selection of their team ahead of various Home Nation matches and European Championships held later in the year. PM Trophy

The Peter McEvoy Trophy (Photo: GolfBible)

As Peter McEvoy’s playing achievements and influence grew, culminating with him becoming a Great Britain and Ireland (GB&I) selector and Walker Cup captain, so has the prestige of the competition. The McEvoy is now the curtain raiser to the boy’s golf season and is unquestionably one of the “must enter” major competitions in the junior golf calendar. The best junior players from across GB&I, and occasionally elsewhere in Europe, are now guaranteed to be seen at Copt Heath every year.

Competition Format

Entries are welcomed from all boys aged under 18 at 00.00 hours on 1st January of the year the competition is being played.  The Entry Fee was set at £40.00 in 2015.

The McEvoy Trophy is contested over 72 holes of scratch stroke play golf played over two consecutive days.

The competition is recognised as a World Amateur Golf Ranking event.  In recent years it has been given a strength indicator of ‘E’.  The winner receives around 10 Points Average to their total where other finishers in the Top 25 receiving a declining number of points too.

The format, limited daylight and frequently poor weather in April means the field is sensibly restricted to 72 players. A ballot based on handicap is applied to the entrants in what is always an oversubscribed event.  The cut-off handicap continues to reduce annually, being +1.7 in 2001 but 0.0 in 2015. This of course illustrates the improvement in the players now coming through in GB&I, many of whom have handicaps of between -2 and -4.

The competition has always been played at Copt Heath Golf Club.  Copt Heath, despite its name, is essentially a parkland course.  The current course was designed and built in 1913 by Harry Colt, the famous course architect, and is predominantly flat but well protected with around 95 bunkers.  A number of bunkers have been upgraded in recent years under the advice of Dutch architect, Frank Pont.

CHGC 13th hole

Copt Heath Golf Club – par 3 13th hole

The course measures 6,541 yards and has a par of 71, made up of 2 par 5’s, 13 par 4’s and 3 par 3’s.  The front nine is shorter at 3,216 yards (par 35) but is tighter.  The more expansive back nine is played over 3,325 yards (par 36).

All competitors play the first 36 holes on Day 1, playing in group’s of three.  The leading 40 players (and ties) then return for the final 36-holes on the following day, which is played in two-balls.  A two tee start is used on both days.

In the event of a tie the result is now decided by a sudden death play-off, utilising holes 18, 1 and 9.

The 35th Peter McEvoy Trophy, 15-16th April 2015 

Over 120 entries were received for the 2015 McEvoy Trophy.  As stated above the 72 successful competitors all have handicaps of 0.0 or better.

The draw for Day 1 and the first 36-holes of the competition can be viewed by clicking this link – 15th April 2015 Start Sheet.

The McEvoy Trophy is a very well run competition.  A welcome addition being Live Scoring – updated after each nine on Day 1 and more frequently for the leaders on Day 2 – which has successfully been introduced in recent years.

Internationals Ben Chamberlain (Padeswood & Buckley, -1.4), Calum Fyfe (Cawder, -3.6), Harry Hall (West Cornwall, -3.1), Tim Harry (Vale of Glamorgan, -2.6), Matty Lamb (Hexham, -2.5), Jamie Li (Bath, -2.4), Kevin Le Blanc (The Island, -1.7), Bradley Moore (Kedleston Park, -2.8), Murray Naismith (Dalmahoy, -1.9), Marco Penge (Golf at Goodwood, -3.4) and Will Porter (Carnoustie, -0.4 who won the Scottish Boys Championship last Saturday) are all expected to challenge for the coveted title this year.

Past Winners

The Peter McEvoy Trophy has an enviable list of former winners, reflecting both the quality of the entry but also the fair challenge presented by the course.  Two Winner Boards adorn the entrance hall to the club.

 PM Trophy Board 1PM Trophy Board 2

The Peter McEvoy Trophy Winner Boards at Copt Heath Golf Club (Photo: GolfBible)

The Winner receives a small replica salver and a voucher for £250.  A total prize fund of around £1,000 is shared out amongst those players finishing in the Top 8 places (and ties).

A number of those listed below have gone on to play in Walker Cup teams and many more have enjoyed successful professional careers.

1981  RJ Sallis (Wollaton Park)
1982  JGS Robinson (Woodhall Spa)
1983  PA Baker (Lilleshall)
1984  W Henry (Redbourn)
1985  A Morley (Belton Park)
1986  CA Mitchell (Copt Heath)
1987  W Henry (Porters Park)
1988  P Sefton (Camberley Heath)
1989  DA Bathgate (Sandiway)
1990  PA Sherman (Ashford)
1991  LJ Westwood (Worksop)

PM Lee Westwood

Lee Westwood receives the McEvoy Trophy in 1991 (Photo: Copt Heath GC)

1992  B Davis (East Herts)
1993  S Webster (Atherstone)
1994  J Harris (Nevill)
1995  C Duke (Porters Park)
1996  MJ Pilkington (Nefyn & District)
1997  PJ Rowe (West Cornwall)
1998  J Rose (North Hants)

PM Justin Rose

Justin Rose receives the McEvoy Trophy in 1998 (Photo: Copt Heath GC)

[In 2013 Justin Rose became the first McEvoy Trophy winner to win a Major Championship, when he won the U.S. Open at Merion GC.]

1999  DJ Porter (Stoneham)
2000  Z Scotland (Woodcote Park)
2001  B Harvey (Dudsbury)
2002  M Richardson (Pinner Hill)
2003  T Hunter (Ilford)
2004  JA Parry (Harrogate)
2005  T Sherreard (The Ridge)
2006  L Goddard (Hendon)
2007  M Haines (Rochester & Cobham Park)
2008  E Hodgson (Sunningdale)
2009  M Smith (Newbury Racecourse)
2010  R Pugh (Vale of Glamorgan)
2011  N Kimsey (Woodhall Spa)
2012  G Moynihan (The Island)
2013  B Moore (Kedleston Park)
2014  H McCullen (Delamere Forest)

PM McEvoy Trophy

Haydn McCullen with Peter McEvoy in 2014 (Photo: GolfBible)

McEvoy Trophy Records

Most Wins
2 – Wayne Henry (1984 Redbourn / 1987 Porters Bar)

Wayne Henry PM

Wayne Henry pictured with Seve Ballesteros at the 1984 Open at St. Andrews

Youngest Winner
Bradley Moore – 15 years, 7 months and 15 days (2013).

Lowest 72-hole winning score
272 – John Parry 2004 (68, 68, 68, 68)
272 – Nathan Kimsey 2011 (69, 67, 69, 67)
272 – Marco Penge 2015 (65, 71, 70, 66) UPDATE

Highest 72-hole winning score
300 – J Harris 1994 (73, 75, 75, 77)

Lowest 18 hole score
61 – Dermot McElroy 2011 (Course Record)

Best Record
Bradley Moore (Keddleston Park) – 4th (283 -1, 2012), 1st (287 +3, 2013), 2nd (281 -3, 2014), 2nd (280 -4, 2015).

Notable Former Competitors

In addition to the winners listed above many other notable golfers have competed over the years.  these include: – Stuart Cage, Paul Casey, Ashley Chesters (A), Lee Corfield, Nick Dougherty, Luke Donald, Bradley Dredge, Scott Drummond, Paul Dunne (A), Simon Dyson, Greg Eason, Jamie Elson, Oliver Farr, Kenneth Ferrie, Oliver Fisher, Tommy Fleetwood, Mark Foster, Ewen Ferguson (A), Tyrrell Hatton, David Horsey, David Howell, Jack Hume (A), Simon Khan, Tom Lewis, David Lynn, Nick Marsh (A), Ross McGowan, Bradley Neil (A), Max Orrin, John Parry, Eddie Pepperell, Garrick Porteous, Robert Rock, Lee Slattery, Graeme Storm, Sam Walker, Anthony Wall, Oliver Wilson, Tom Whitehouse and Chris Wood.

ME.

Copyright © 2015, Mark Eley. All rights reserved.

The Georgia Cup – 2015 Preview & Results

UPDATE – Gunn Yang today beat Bradley Neil 3&2 in the 2015 Georgia Cup. Well done Gunn !

Gunn Yang GC3

Gunn Yang – Winner of The 2015 Georgia Cup

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31st March 2015

The Georgia Cup is a charity challenge match played the week before The Masters between the reigning United States (US) Amateur Champion and British Amateur Champion.

Garrick Porteus GC1

Garrick Porteous – 2013 Amateur Champion & Winner of The 2014 Georgia Cup

It was established by The Golf Club of Georgia in 1998 and is played on either their Lakeside (L) or Creekside (C) Courses in Alpharetta, GA.

The 2015 and 18th match will tee-off today at 1.00pm local time on the Lakeside Course and will be played between South Korea’s Gunn Yang and Scotland’s Bradley Neil, respectively the 2014 US and British Amateur Champions.

Gunn Yang GC2

Gunn Yang – 2014 US Amateur Champion

Both contestants always move on to nearby Augusta to prepare for and take up their Masters invitations after the match.

The Amateur Championship 2014 - Day Seven

Bradley Neil – 2014 Amateur Champion

The British Amateur Champions lead their US counterparts 9 – 8 in the series, helped in no small part by victories in the last three matches.

The previous results are shown below (with the Amateur titles won shown in brackets)

1998 (L) – Matt Kuchar (US) def. Craig Watson (British) – 3 & 1
1999 (L) – Sergio Garcia (British) def. Hank Kuehne (US) – 5 & 4
2000 (L) – David Gossett (US) def. Graeme Storm (British) – 3 & 2
2001 (C) – Mikko Ilonen (British) def. Jeff Quinney (US) – 6 & 4
2002 (C) – Michael Hoey (British) def. Bubba Dickerson (US) – 4 & 2
2003 (L) – Ricky Barnes (US) def. Alejandro Larrazabal (British) – 4 & 2
2004 (C) – Gary Wolstenholme (British) def. Nick Flanagan (US) – 4 & 2
2005 (C) – Ryan Moore (US) def. Stuart Wilson (British) – 2 & 1
2006 (L) – Brian McElhinney (British) def. Edoardo Molinari (US) – 3 & 2
2007 (L) – Richie Ramsay (US) def. Julien Guerrier (British) – 2 & 1
2008 (L) – Colt Knost (US) def. Drew Weaver (British) – 2 & 1
2009 (L) – Danny Lee (US) def. Reinier Saxton (British) – 2&1
2010 (L) – Matteo Manassero (British) def. Byeong-hun An (US) – 5&4
2011 (L) – Peter Uihlein (US) def. Jin Jeong (British) – 4&2
2012 (L) – Brydon Macpherson (British) def. Kelly Kraft (US) – 2&1
2013 (L) – Alan Dunbar (British) def. Steven Fox (US) – 1Up
2014 (L) – Garrick Porteus (British) def. Matthew Fitzpatrick (US) – 3&2

ME.

Copyright © 2015, Mark Eley. All rights reserved.

Peter McEvoy OBE

22nd March 2015 (Last Updated 7th April 2025)

Great Britain and Ireland (GB&I) has produced a number of distinguished amateur golfers in the post World War II period. Amongst a group that must include Sir Michael Bonallack, Joe Carr and Gary Wolstenholme comfortably sits Peter McEvoy OBE.

One of the most determined and competitive golfers to ever play the game Peter’s success was founded on long straight driving, well controlled approach shots (often played low) and impeccable putting. A technically sound golfer with an unflappable temperament will give most people a game – and McEvoy was certainly capable of that.

PM Walker Cup 2

Peter McEvoy holds The Walker Cup in 2001

Peter Aloysius McEvoy was born in London on 22nd March 1953. He died aged 72 on 6th April 2025 in Alloway, Ayrshire after battling cancer over recent years.

He was brought up in Renfrewshire, Scotland and swung a club for the first time here with his father, Daniel, a doctor, and a member of the local club, Gourock, near Greenock.

His family moved to the West Midlands when he was 10 and, aged 13, he joined Copt Heath G.C. near Solihull. He ultimately became an honorary member and despite moving from Tewkesbury to Ayrshire in 2018 was still seen regularly at the Club.

Peter quickly became proficient in the game and won the 1969 Warwickshire Boys Championship. He also won the British Universities Stroke Play in 1973 – he studied Law and qualified as a solicitor –  and was selected for England Youths in 1974.

Locally he also went on to win the Warwickshire Amateur Championship in 1974-76-77-80-84, the Warwickshire Matchplay Championship in 1973-75-81-83 and the Warwickshire Open Championship in 1973-74. Warwickshire were also County Champions in 1976 (held locally at Coventry GC) and 1977. Of course it was not in the Midlands that his legendary reputation was developed.

McEvoy gained national prominence when he won The Amateur Championship in both 1977 (Ganton) and 1978 (Royal Troon). Playing off a +2 handicap at the time he is the last player to successfully defend the title. Horace Hutchinson (1886-87), Harold Hilton (1900-01) Lawson Little (1934-35) and Sir Michael Bonallack (1968-69-70) are the only other players to achieve this feat. He reached the final again in 1987 at Prestwick – driven on by his non-selection for that year’s Walker Cup at Sunningdale when the team was announced in November 1986 and the matched played in late May – but lost to Welshman Paul Mayo.  In total he competed in 18 Amateur Championships playing 70 matches.  He won 54 and lost 16 of these giving him an impressive win rate of 77%.

He was a member of the Great Britain & Ireland (GB&I) Walker Cup team on five occasions – in 1977-79-81-85-89.  With business commitments impacting on the amount of golf he was able to play he missed out on the 1983 match.  McEvoy understood this decision but not his, and for that matter Garth McGimpsey’s, omission in 1987, just after they had both represented GB&I in the 4-man 1986 Eisenhower Trophy team. He would be the first to admit in later years that he was not unhappy to see the team lose 16.5 – 7.5. His first four Walker Cup matches were lost but the last one, at Peachtree, Atlanta, was won; the first time GB&I had won this historically one-sided contest on US soil. McEvoy contributed 2.5 points in that final game but his overall record was perhaps a little disappointing. He played 18 games in total, winning 5, losing 11 and halving 2. To date only Sir Michael Bonallack (25), Joe Carr (20) and Gary Wolstenholme (19) have played more Walker Cup games for GB&I.

He played in the St. Andrews Trophy for GB&I against the Continent of Europe in 1978-80-86-88. GB&I won on each occasion in what was then an event as one-sided as The Walker Cup.

Peter also played on five Eisenhower Trophy teams – in 1978-80-84-86-88. In 1988, aged 35, and a year after he hadn’t been selected for The Walker Cup he won the World Amateur Individual event and GB&I won the team event for the third time at Ullva, Sweden.

PM Eisenhower Trophy

The successful GB&I 1988 Eisenhower Trophy Team

His Amateur wins inevitably led to Major Championship invitations.  His strong play also enabled him to qualify for some Opens too.  After something of an apprenticeship in 1976 (Royal Birkdale) and 1977 (Turnberry, where he was paired with Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player) he achieved low amateur status at The Open Championship in both 1978 (St. Andrews, 39th) and 1979 (Royal Lytham St. Annes, T17th with Lee Trevino).  He also qualified for the 1984 Open at St. Andrews, making the cut for the third time but having to withdrawal due to ill health at the start of round 3.

McEvoy also played in three Masters. In 1978, paired with Tom Watson to start with, he became just the second GB&I amateur to make the cut at The Masters (after Joe Carr in 1967). He finished 53rd after rounds of 73, 75, 77 and 77, last of those that made the cut.  He perhaps surprisingly remains the last GB&I amateur to make the cut at The Masters. With the Augusta course becoming longer and tougher in recent years this GB&I record may well remain intact for a few more years to come. In his other two appearances he missed the cut; in 1979 paired with Jack Nicklaus he shot 79, 79 missing out by 13-shots and in 1980 paired with Sam Snead he scored 79, 76 missing out by 9-shots.

Despite not winning the English Amateur – he lost in the 1980 final to Peter Deeble – his name unsurprisingly adorns many of the other major amateur trophies. He won the: –

Duncan Putter – 1978 (winning by 13-strokes)-80-85-87
Scrutton Jug – 1978-80
Lytham Trophy – 1979
Selborne Salver 1979-80
Brabazon Trophy (English Open SP) – 1980 (tied with Ronan Rafferty),
Lagonda Trophy – 1980
West of England Open Amateur Strokeplay Championship – 1977-80-83-85
English County Champions’ Tournament – 1984 (tied with N Briggs)
Berkshire Trophy – 1985
Berkhamsted Trophy – 1986
Logan Trophy (English Open Mid-Amateur) – 1988
Hampshire Hog – 1989

Of course prior to the 1990s amateur golf was in a completely different place to where it is now. Golfers received no individual financial support from either their National Unions or the R&A.  Having to personally fund ones living and golfing expenses whilst maintaining a competitive game was clearly no mean achievement.

A Profile of Peter McEvoy (© Golfing World)

Peter McEvoy is England’s second most capped amateur golfer, competing in 153 matches between 1976 and 1992. Gary Wolstenholme achieved an astonishing 218 caps whilst Sir Michael Bonallack made 131 appearances for their shared country. He played in the Home Internationals of 1976-77-78-(79 not held)-80-81-83-84-85-86-87-88-89-91. England won in 1977-78-80-84-85-88-89. He went on to captain the team between 1994 and 1997, winning on each occasion. He holds the record for the highest win ratio (67.3%) of any British amateur golfer, playing 153 matches and winning 103 of them – he halved 16 and lost just 34 of the remaining ones. He amazingly lost just once in his first 30 singles matches.

He met his first wife Dorothy “Dee” Saunders at the 1978 Masters in Augusta and they married in the following December.  They divorced in 1993 having had two boys, Cameron and Richard. His waning powers, the fact many of his original peers had moved on and the inevitable stress of the break-up led to Peter stepping back from top-level amateur competition in 1992.  He met Helen Wilkinson, a recent divorcee herself with a daughter, Mary, shortly afterwards and they eventually re-married in 1995. They had a son Douglas.

Following his Amateur Championship victories his club, Copt Heath, invited Peter to suggest a way in which they could commemorate his achievements. He suggested a 72 hole competition – to be played over two days –  for Under 18 junior boy golfers, to be held annually at Copt Heath. Starting in 1981, The Peter McEvoy Trophy, has become the traditional curtain raiser to the boy’s golf season and is now viewed as one of the “must enter” junior major competitions. Past winners include Peter Baker (1983), Lee Westwood (1991), Brian Davis (1992), Steve Webster (1993) and Justin Rose (1998). The 44th Peter McEvoy Trophy will take place on 24th – 25th April 2025 with all of this year’s contestants having a scratch or better handicap.

PM McEvoy Trophy

Haydn McCullen, 2014 Champion, receives The Peter McEvoy Trophy

Peter subsequently enjoyed huge success as a Team Captain, leading GB&I to famous Walker Cup wins at Nairn (1999) and Sea Island, Georgia (2001). Both victories came by a score of 15-9 and were the first time GB&I had recorded consecutive wins in the event. He famously engaged Saatchi & Saatchi to produce a video ahead of the 1999 match to motivate his team and in 2001 handed out each player’s sweater in the team room, re-enforcing each member’s playing record in front of them all. He also captained GB&I to victory in the 1998 Eisenhower Trophy in Santiago, Chile. He is the only person to win the individual event as a player, the team event as a player, and the team event as a captain. He also captained again in 2000, and GB&I finished in second place. In 2002, when the home nations started to compete individually he captained the first England team.

In 2002, McEvoy was named Chairman of the R&A Selection Committee, responsible for the selection of the GB&I teams competing in various international events. Between 2008 and 2015 he was responsible for the GB&I Boys Team and manager of the Jacques Léglise Trophy team. He enjoyed this role, in many respects viewing junior golf as the only true amateur game that remained.

He was appointed Captain of the Europe Team for the 2020 Bonallack Trophy men’s match against Asia-Pacific.

Whilst a message few young players wanted to here he rightly continued to caution against juniors committing all of their energies to golf too soon, saying in an interview in Golf International magazine – for which he wrote a column for many years – in 2010: “the majority of the young golfers who (turn Pro) have no chance of making any money. They get to their mid-20s only to discover they are just not good enough at golf, they have no education and they get lost to the game. It’s a vicious circle: they become disenchanted with it all, so their golf suffers, and they suffer as individuals as well”. His view, based on years of experience, is that few really appreciate the huge gulf that exists between the elite amateur game and the professional ranks. He added more recently: “There’s not much room in the pro game for youngsters coming through. You’ve got to be exceptional”. The fact anyone can turn Pro rather than being selected or passing some qualification level appeared to frustrate him as did the historically draconian rules applying to amateur status which he felt only encouraged players to make the move too early.

Peter McEvoy was also been involved with golf course design and re-modelling for over 30 years, with his own company, Sporting Concepts (originally a management agency), and in collaboration with others (such as Craig Cooke, Ricky Willison and Bruce Weller). Amongst a number of projects, many in Ireland, he originally designed Fota Island, which has hosted the Irish Open, and notably built a short hickory course, Kingarrock G.C., near St. Andrews, where appropriate clubs and balls are provided to players. He was recently involved with the acclaimed renovation of Druids Glen.

He was honoured by the The Association of Golf Writers on two occasions. In 1978 he won The Golf Writers’ Trophy, “awarded each year to the individual, born or resident in Europe, or the European team, who have made the most outstanding contribution to golf in the preceding 12 months”. In 2001 the same award was given to the victorious 2001 Walker Cup team which he captained. More recently in 2009 he received the prestigious Association of Golf Writers’ Award for his outstanding services to the game.

The English Golf Union (now England Golf) named Peter McEvoy the winner of their 1999 Gerald Micklem Award.  This honour is given to those who have “made an outstanding contribution to further the interests of amateur golf in England”.

Peter McEvoy was also named an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2003 Queen’s New Year’s Honours List, for “services to golf”.

In 2006 Peter McEvoy published his excellent and somewhat self deprecating autobiography ‘For Love or Money’ (HarperSport). The book was written with the assistance of Sunday Telegraph journalist Mark Reason and is well worth a read.  It was rumoured that the R&A questioned his amateur status following its publication but in the end nothing appeared to come of this.

PM For Love Or Money

‘For Love Or Money’ – Peter McEvoy

In February 2008, McEvoy helped devise and launch PowerPlay Golf alongside David Piggins, a shortened version of golf in a bid to create golf’s version of Twenty20 cricket. The format was simple: nine holes with two flags on each green, one hard (Black) and one easy (White) with a modified stableford scoring system. Each player had to take on three Black hole locations in their first 8-holes with an extra one available on the final hole. Despite appearing to tick all of the boxes in terms of fun and speed of play – matters which have taken on greater importance in recent years as golf participation in the UK has fallen – the format failed to take off and is now rarely heard of or seen.

In February 2024 McEvoy was included amongst a group of 12 golfers inducted into the new England Golf Hall of Fame.

Peter McEvoy clearly loved the game of golf and the amateur game in GB&I was fortunate to have him as a leading figure for many years. Golf was at the centre of his life for over 50 years and his contribution as an elite player, captain (perhaps the best golf captain, pro or amateur, ever), administrator, coach, course designer and journalist / writer is almost without parallel.

ME.

Copyright © 2014-2025, Mark Eley. All rights reserved.

Joe Carr

18th February 2015

On the anniversary of his birth I thought I should record the career of Ireland’s best ever amateur golfer, Joe Carr.

Here are 20 facts you should know about the great man: –

1) Joseph Benedict Carr was born on 18th February 1922 in Inchicore, near Dublin.

2) He was the fifth of seven children born to George and Margaret Waters.  When he was just 10 days old he was adopted by his maternal Aunt Kathleen and her husband James Carr.  The Carr’s had recently been appointed steward and stewardess of Portmarnock GC so Joe was brought up with practice facilities literally on his doorstep.

3) It was not possible for him to join Portmarnock given his parent’s positions so he joined nearby Sutton Golf Club.  Sutton was his golfing home for his entire career and he spent much of his life living in Suncroft House, overlooking the course’s 2nd green.  He was an aggressive, big hitter and quickly developed into a fearless competitor.  The Joe Carr Room at Sutton Golf Club today houses much of his memorabilia.

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Joe Carr Portrait at Sutton GC (Photo: John Hanna)

4) He won three British Amateur Championships in 1953, ’58 and ’60.  He was also runner-up to Michael Bonallack in 1968.  He competed in 26 Amateurs in total playing 119 matches.  He won 96 and lost 23 of these giving him a superb 81% win rate.  He was determined to win at St. Andrews in 1958 – “With all the practice shots I hit by way of preparation for St Andrews, I almost wore through the blades of my eight and nine irons,” he recalled.  He later estimated that he had hit 47,000 shots in preparation for that championship.

5) He was prolific in Irish amateur golf despite strong competition at the time, winning six Irish Amateur Close Championships (1954, ’57, ’63, ’64, ’65 and ’67), four Irish Amateur Open Championships (1946, ’50, ’54 and ’56), 12 West of Ireland Championships (1946, ’47, ’48, ’51, ’53, ’54, ’56, ’58, ’60, ’61, ’62 and ’66), 12 East of Ireland Championships (1941, ’43, ’45, ’46, ’48, ’56, ’57, ’58, ’60, ’61, ’64, and ’69) and three South of Ireland Championships (1948, ’66 and ’69).

6) He also won the Gleneagles Saxone (1955), Golf Illustrated Golf Vase (1951), Berkshire Trophy (1959), Formby Hare (1962) and Antlers Royal Mid Surrey (1970) in Great Britain.

7) He played in a record (for both sides) 10 Walker Cup teams (1947, ’49, ’51, ’53, ’55, ’57, ’59, ’61, ’63 and ’67).  He was a non-playing captain in 1965 and the playing captain in 1967.  He played 20 matches but surprisingly has a relatively poor record; W5 L14 H1, perhaps worn down by the heavy responsibility he personally carried throughout this era.  GB&I lost every match in which he competed but halved the 1965 contest in Baltimore.

8) The Eisenhower Trophy started in 1958 and Joe played in the first two at St. Andrews (’58) and Merion (’60).  He was non-playing captain of the GB&I team in 1964 (Rome) and ’66 (Mexico City).

9) He also played for GB&I in the first St Andrews Trophy match against Europe in 1956, ’64 (playing captain) and 1968. He was non-playing captain of the team in 1966.  All of these matches were won by GB&I.

10) He played international golf for Ireland for an astonishing 22 years, from 1947 to 1969 inclusive, earning 157 caps. He played 138 games, accumulated 166 points and had a 56.5% win percentage (W 78, H 10 and L 50). The European Team Championships started in 1959 and Joe represented Ireland in this competition in 1965, ’67 and ’69, the team winning the first two of these.  As captain in later years he brought an organisation to the international team that had previously not been seen and that perhaps only he could deliver.

11) He was the leading amateur at the Open Championship, winning the Silver Medal, in both 1956 (73 77 79 77 / T36) and 1958 (70 74 77 77 / 37th). Surprisingly he only played in four Opens, often because the dates clashed with Irish amateur events he wished to enter. His first Open was at Royal Portrush in 1951 (75 76 73 76 / T24) and the last at St. Andrews in 1960 (72 73 67 73 / 8th), his best finish, albeit one beaten by Guy Wolstenholme (6th).

12) He was also the leading amateur at the Irish Open in 1946, ’48, ’50 and ’53.

13) Joe played in many professional events during his career.  His best finish coming in the 1959 Dunlop Masters, played at Pormarnock, where he was second to Christy O’Connor Snr.

14) Joe was the first Irishman to play in the US Masters Tournament, competing in 1967, ’68 and ’69.  In 1967 he was paired with the defending champion Jack Nicklaus.  Carr made the cut but Jack missed it.  In 1968 he played with Arnold Palmer; again he made the cut, finishing 52nd, whilst Arnie missed it.  In 1969 he played with Sam Snead but this time both players failed to make the final two rounds.

15) Joe was made Captain of The Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews in 1991-92, the first Irishman to be afforded this honour.

16) He won numerous awards during his lifetime, including the Association of Golf Writers’ Award (1953), the Bobby Jones Award (1961), for distinguished sportsmanship in golf, and the Walter Hagen Award (1967) for his contribution to Anglo-American goodwill.

17) He was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame posthumously in 2007.  Jack Nicklaus gave the induction speech for his old friend.  He was again the first Irishman to have this golfing honour bestowed upon them.

18) He ran a successful clothing business for many years.  Joe was also a keen gambler and certainly enjoyed a wager on the course and elsewhere.  This approach to life was also reflected in his approach to the game, where he often took on brave recovery shots.  In 2002 Irish golf writer Dermot Gilleece wrote a biography on Joe Carr, ‘Breaking 80: The Life and Times of Joe Carr’.

Joe Carr ProfileJoe Carr

19) His first wife Dorothy (‘Dor’), died in 1976.  They had six children, Jody, Roddy, Sibeal, John, Gerry and Marty.  He married for a second time to Mary.

20) Joe died on 3rd June 2004 near Portmarnock, aged 82.  His golfing achievements and gentlemanly charm made him one of the most famous and popular Irishmen of the 21st Century.

ME.

Copyright © 2014-2025, Mark Eley. All rights reserved.

Claire Dowling

18th February 2015 (and updated since)

Claire Dowling (née Hourihane) was born on 18th February 1958 near Dublin in Ireland. She shares her birthday with the great Irish amateur Joe Carr, who was born in 1922.

Her father, Bill, was a keen golfer and member of Woodbrook GC in Bray, County Wexford, on the coast just south of Dublin. Claire joined Woodbrook and represented the Club throughout her career.

By no means long she developed a game based on a rhythmical swing that consistently delivered sound ball striking and accuracy. “When I was playing reasonably well, I would regularly hit 16 or 17 greens in regulation. And I really loved my 4-wood. I had great confidence in hitting it 170-175 yards off the fairway.” she recently told Irish golf writer, Dermot Gilleece.  In her book ‘The Women Golfer’ Belle Robertson described Claire as ‘a wonderfully tidy little golfer who should never be underestimated’.

Her biggest individual win came in the 1986 British Ladies’ Open Stroke Play Championship at Blairgowrie, where famous Scottish golfer, Jessie Valentine, aged 71, provided lodgings and caddied for her. She also won the 1987 Spanish Ladies’ Amateur Championship.

She twice lost in the semi-finals of the British Ladies’ Open Amateur Championships.

Claire won the Irish Women’s Close Amateur Championship five times – in 1983, ’84, ’85, ’87 and ’91.

She was only the second Irish golfer to win in the USA, following Christy O’Connor Snr at the 1977 World Seniors, when she won the 1983 Women’s South Atlantic Amateur tournament (‘The Sally’).

In terms of the other leading English Women’s amateur events Claire also won the Hampshire Rose (1986), the Critchley Salver (1990) and the Bridget Jackson Bowl (1998).

Unsurprisingly she earned a great deal of international recognition: –

Claire was selected for the GB&I Curtis Cup side 4-times: –
1984 Muifield – GB&I 8.5 – USA 9.5
1986 Prairie Dunes, KS – USA 5 – GB&I 13
1988 Royal St. George’s – GB&I 11 – USA 7
1992 Hoylake – GB&I 10 – USA 8

The 1986 victory was particularly memorable because it represented the first time a British or European golf team, male or female, had won in the United States.

Claire Dowling Curtis Cup 1986 Team

The 1986 GB&I Curtis Cup Team (Photo: Women Golfers Museum)

Disappointingly Claire was omitted from all four series of games by Captain Diane Bailey in 1988.

In total she played in 8 Curtis Cup games finishing with a creditable individual record of W3 H2 L3. From Ireland only Mary McKenna (P30 W10 H4 L16), Leona Maguire (P14 W6 H2 L6) and Philomena Garvey  (P11 W2 H1 L8) have played more Curtis Cup games.

Claire Dowling Curtis Cup 1988 Team

The 1988 GB&I Curtis Cup Team (Photo: Ladies Golf Union)

She also played for GB&I in the Women’s World Amateur Team Championships for the Espirito Santo Trophy (1986 and ’90) and the Vagliano Trophy match against Europe (1981-83-85-87-89-91).

Claire also represented Ireland in the Women’s European Team Championships (1981, ’83, ’85, ’87, ’89 and ’91) and in the Women’s Home International Matches (1979, ’80, ’81, ’82, ’83, ’84, ’85, ’86, ’87, ’88, ’89, ’91 and ’92). 1983 remains the last time Ireland won the Women’s European Team Championship.

Partnering Phil Wickham Claire won the Irish Bi-Centennial Foursomes in 1981-82-84 and ’85.

Claire captained Ireland in the Women’s European Team Championships in Finland in 1997 and at the Women’s Home International Matches in 1996 and 1997.

She was due to captain the GB&I team at the World Amateur Golf Team Championship in Chile in November 1998. However, the Ladies Golf Union withdrew the travelling party due to safety concerns following the arrest in London a few weeks earlier of the former Chilean dictator General Augusto Pinochet. The Eisenhower Trophy event was played the following week in Chile with the Men’s GB&I team travelling and ultimately winning the competition.

Claire subsequently captained GB&I against Europe in the Vagliano Trophy in July 1999. Europe won 13 – 11.

Last but far from least Claire was non-playing captain of the 2000 Curtis Cup team. GB&I lost the match at Ganton GC 10 – 8.

In June 2006 Claire retired from competitive golf – which at the time was County Golf with Warwickshire.

However, she was persuaded to come out of retirement by her friend Tracy Atkin in 2012 to play in the Brenda King Foursomes, an England Golf run national competition for senior ladies.  Tracy and Claire won the competition (Frilford Heath) and successfully defended it in both 2013 (Gog Magog) and 2014 (Minchinhampton). They decided to go out at the top and didn’t defend at Coxmoor in 2015.

Claire Dowling Brenda King 2014

Tracy Atkin and Claire Dowling (Photo: England Golf / Leaderboard Photography)

Claire moved to England in the late 1980s obtaining an administrative job at the famous Wentworth Club in Surrey. While there she met and married her husband Peter. They subsequently moved to Solihull in the West Midlands in 1996 and Claire joined Copt Heath. Interestingly her appointment as 2000 Curtis Cup captain coincided with Peter McEvoy’s captaincy of the Walker Cup Team in 1999 and 2001, thus making Copt Heath, probably the first and last club to provide the GB&I captain to both female and male amateur teams simultaneously.

Claire was afforded honorary membership of Copt Heath in 2014. She was already an honorary member of Cork GC and Woodbrook GC and in 2022 also added Portmarnock GC to her roster, becoming one of the first women members of this prestigious Dublin club.

Following Peter’s retirement the couple moved to Budleigh Salterton in 2014 and Claire now plays at the local club, East Devon.  In one of her first competitions at her new club she won the Ladies’ Club Championship by 8-shots.  She still plays off a low single figure handicap.

In 2012 Claire was appointed Chair of the Handicap and Course Rating Committee for England Golf. She also sat on England Golf’s Club Services Committee.  The former role means she also sat on the The Council of National Golf Unions (CONGU) Board and Technical Committee up until 2016, with representatives from The R&A and the other Home Unions.

In February 2015 Claire became one of the first women members of The Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews (The R&A). Within this first wave of 14 ladies there were just five women from Great Britain and Ireland (GB&I). These were HRH The Princess Royal, Dame Laura Davies, Lady Angela Bonallack, Belle Robertson MBE and Claire Dowling. For more information on the R&A’s Women Members click here: Women Members – The R&A and Augusta National GC.

This was not her first involvement with the R&A though. As a representative of the Ladies Golf Union she became the first women to sit on the R&A’s Amateur Status Committee between 1997-2001.

Claire qualified as a Level 3 Tournament Referee in 2011 and in September 2015 was invited to join the R&A’s Rules of Golf Committee. In September 2017 she was made Deputy Chair(wo)man of this Committee, also becoming a member of the Joint Rules Committee (with the USGA). As a result she played an important role in developing the new January 2019 rules.

In recent years Claire has refereed at many events including The Open Championship, The Ricoh Women’s British Open, The Amateur Championship, The Walker Cup, and The Arnold Palmer Cup.

On 21st January 2016 she received the ‘Distinguished Services To Golf’ Award from the Irish Golf Writers’ Association (IGWA).  Claire had previously been awarded the IWGA’s ‘Women’s Amateur Player Of The Year’ award in 1981, 1983, 1984, 1986 and 1987.

On 28th January 2017 Claire was elected an Honorary Life Member of the Irish Ladies’ Golf Union Limited at their Annual General Meeting.

In September 2019 Claire was invited to join the General Committee of The R&A.

ME.

Copyright © 2015-2025 Mark Eley. All rights reserved.

Barclay Howard

27th January 2015

D. Barclay Howard, the Scottish amateur golfer, was born in Glasgow on 27th January 1953.  Whilst by no means an amateur great his roller coaster life on and off the course made him something of a legendary figure in Scottish and, to a degree, British golf.

Barclay Howard Open 1997

Barclay Howard at the 1997 Open Championship at Royal Troon

He was raised in Johnstone, a town 12 miles west of Glasgow in Renfrewshire.  He went to school with Sky Sports golf presenter David Livingstone.  Both played golf at their local club, Cochrane Castle Golf Club to which Barclay was associated all his life.  He joined his father, David, there starting as a Junior in 1960.  Indeed the family home was just a pitching wedge away from the course.  He was made an honorary life member of Cochrane Castle in 1980.

Howard tragically died from pneumonia on 19th May 2008, aged just 55.  His health had not been good for many years due to chain smoking, his well publicised alcoholism and the legacy of contracting leukaemia when he was 44.  The latter illness afflicted him just six weeks after probably his finest golfing moment, winning the Silver Medal at the 1997 Open.  He started to feel unwell at that year’s Walker Cup and later in 1997 underwent both a stem-cell operation and a course of chemotherapy to aid his recovery.  His weight dropped from 14st to 9st 6lb.  It took around 3 years for him to fully recover and return to the golf course; it was another two before he had the strength to enjoy his golf again.  He first contracted pneumonia in 2006 and already weakened by the cancer never really recovered from it.

His first competitive golf tournament for this ‘natural’ came as a 13-year-old when he played in the 1966 Scottish Boys Championship at North Berwick.  In his younger days he also lost the final of the 1969 West of Scotland Boys Championship 3 & 2 to Sam Torrance.  Torrance later recalled the two things that first struck him about Howard: “his unmistakeable golfing talent and his engaging personality.  He was good fun to be around”.  His game continued to develop and was sufficiently good for him to be selected for the Great Britain & Ireland (GB&I) Youths Team that played Europe in 1971.

Howard joined Clydesdale Bank straight from school in 1971.  While there he met and married Sandra in 1972.  He was just 19 and the marriage, triggered by the impending birth of a daughter, Linda (b. 1972), almost certainly came too soon for both of them.  The family struggled to make ends meet and Barclay ended up moving to Rolls Royce in 1973, where he worked at their Hillington factory.  He also started to drive an ice cream van in the weekday evenings to bring in more money.  A second daughter, Lorraine (b. 1976) followed which only added to the personal and financial pressures.  The couple inevitably split up in 1978 and sadly Barclay lost touch with all three of them.  With these work and family responsibilities any thought of turning Pro at an early age seems to have simply past him by.

Following his divorce, and now with a little more time on his hands, Howard started to drink more and it became clear to his friends that he was becoming an alcoholic.  With the benefit of hindsight Barclay later timed his drinking demise to 1980.  Despite this he remarried another local girl, Alison, in 1981.  With Barclay’s addiction now reaching something of a peak she showed huge patience in staying with him until 1985.  As he said himself: “I was a truly awful husband.  From the age of 18 to 38 my life was a mess.  I was a lost cause for a while”.

In 1979 he was called up for Scotland’s Mens team for the first time, playing against England.  Despite his drinking he still managed to perform on the course and continued to be selected for his country and GB&I in the early 1980s.  However, his alcoholism and all too frequent drunken and abusive behaviour – frequently whilst on team duty –  led to him being excluded from international competition in 1984.  At the time he tended to pack lager and vodka in his bag before his balls and tees, needing a regular drink during a round to steady his on-course nerves.

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Barclay Howard (Photo: SNS)

Having lost most of his friends he was eventually persuaded in the summer of 1991 to join Alcoholics Anonymous (AA).  A decision almost certainly triggered by him receiving a 12 month ban from Cochrane Castle in June of that year and a handicap suspension (thus preventing him from playing in any competitions).  He had not helped himself by turning up to his disciplinary meeting with the Club’s Committee drunk.  He thankfully worked things out and eventually overcame the ‘disease’.  He hardly drunk at all in the following years and completely stopped in 1997.

A reformed character he started up a new relationship with Letitia, the daughter, of one of his AA sponsors, Davie Muir.  This also gave him more conviction in the new path he was treading and he soon married Tish in April 1992, who was already pregnant with their daughter Laura-Jane (b. August 1992).  It weighed heavily on the reformed Barclay that Laura-Jane turned five and started school while he was in the States playing in the 1997 Walker Cup and US Amateur.

He amazingly managed to keep his job at Rolls Royce throughout his personal turmoils – mainly by restricting his big drinking sessions to the weekend.  During the winter of 1991/92, the final months of his enforced exile, he used the company gym to get himself fit, losing two and half stone in the process.  Cochrane Castle got wind of his progress and eventually allowed him to return in April 1992, two months early.  He shot a gross 68 in the April Medal and was off and running.  He re-dedicated himself to the game and when he was made redundant in 1993, along with hundreds over other workers at his plant, he chose to commit himself fully to golf.  Tish was happy as long as he didn’t start drinking again.  Things went well and Barclay was re-selected for Scotland in 1993 and then for the GB&I St. Andrews Trophy team in 1994.  During his subsequent years as a full time amateur he did some work in customer relations for club-maker John Letters.

Over his career he won over 100 amateur competitions, many of which came after he had beaten the dreaded drink.  Whilst he fell short of winning any of the amateur majors he did record a number of notable victories: –

  • 1975, 1984 & 1995 Cameron Corbett Vase
  • 1993 West of Scotland Open
  • 1994 Leven Gold Medal
  • 1994 & 1996 St. Andrews Links Trophy
  • 1997 Scottish Open Amateur Stroke Play (at Monifieth and Panmure)

His status in the game in the 1990s and new found sobriety meant he was regularly picked for national team competitions again between 1993 and 1997.  He played on the GB&I team in the Eisenhower Trophy in 1996 and in the St. Andrews Trophy twice, 1994 and 1996.  Indeed in 1996 he was named Scottish Amateur Golfer Of The Year by the Scottish Golf Union.

However, it was his Walker cup appearances that obviously meant the most to him, particularly as they came when he was 42 and 44, an exceptional age for the GB&I Team in the modern era. Howard played in the Walker Cup twice, winning in 1995 at Royal Porthcawl (P3 W0 H2 L1) and losing in 1997 at Quaker Ridge, New York (P3 W0 H0 L3).  As can be seen in the photo below the 1995 GB&I team contained Padraig Harrington, David Howell and Stephen Gallacher and famously overcame a strong US team containing Tiger Woods.

The Great Britain And Ireland Team Wins The Walker Cup

Barclay Howard (front left) with the successful 1995 Walker Cup Team.

Without question Barclay’s most famous golfing achievement came at the 1997 Open at Royal Troon when he secured the low amateur Silver Medal.  In the end he finished 60th on 293, tied with the great Jack Nicklaus.  This was the first time a Scot had achieved the honour since Charlie Green in 1962.  In round one Howard birdied four of his first six holes to take a share of the lead.  He had a four foot birdie putt on the ‘Postage Stamp’ 8th to take the lead on his own but mistakenly looked at a leaderboard as he walked onto the green.  Despite falling back into the pack he carried this early momentum throughout the Championship to secure the famous prize.

His performance in The Open, and let’s remember he was 44, caught the public’s imagination and won him plaudits from around the world.  Indeed he was invited to play in a number of professional tournaments on the back of his impressive Open showing.  It even saw the Republic of Tadjikistan in Central Asia produce a commemorative stamp featuring him !

Barclay Howard Stamp

Barclay Howard’s Tadjikistan Commemorative 1997 Open Stamp

Howard made the news again shortly afterwards.  After playing in the Walker Cup match he stayed in the States to play in the US Amateur at Cog Hill.  Well rested he qualified for the match play stage after rounds of 70 and 71 – the only member of the Walker Cup team to do so.  However, he was later disqualified for signing a wrong scorecard – due to a matter that he brought to the attention of the USGA.  He had inadvertently been given a different make of ball by his caddie to play the 18th hole of his second round thus contravening the ‘one ball’ rule that existed in the US at the time.  Having bogeyed his last hole he put the ball in his pocket and whilst finishing his lunch came across it and realized the error that had been made.  Having not added the two penalty shots to his score for 18, with the benefit of hindsight he knew he should have, he quickly disqualified himself from the Championship.  To his eternal credit Howard said of his decision at the time: “I would know.  Say I was walking up to win this on the weekend, how could I live with myself. Yes, I’ve had my share of problems, but after 44 years, you’re going to start cheating? No! I could never do that”.  He was hailed a hero by the US golfing press in the days that followed.

Having returned to Scotland Barclay set about preparing for his supposed swan song – the 1997 Home Internationals – having announced his retirement from international play whilst at the Walker Cup the previous month.  Unfortunately he never got to play.  Illness beset him and he was soon diagnosed with the cancer he would fight for the rest of his life.

Looking back on his career and serious illness Barclay said: “The biggest regret I have is not turning professional.  Once I had got myself sorted out with the drinking I started to work much harder on my game.  I felt that even in 1997 I hadn’t reached my full potential.  I was 44 then and I was thinking about the Seniors Tour a few years down the line but then that was all taken away from me.”

In his 2001 autobiography, ‘Out Of The Rough: Booze, Birdies and a Driving Ambition’, written with the help of Jonathan Russell, he candidly discusses his career and battle with alcohol. It was typical of his generosity that he donated the royalties from the book to the leukaemia unit at Glasgow Royal Infirmary.

Barclay Howard Open 1997

Barclay Howard’s ‘Out Of The Rough’ Autobiography

In 2006, despite being frail, Howard was appointed Captain of the Scottish Youths team by the Scottish Golf Union, a role he relished.  Far from an act of compassion he earned the role having captained Renfrewshire to the Scottish Area Team Championship in 2005.

Upon his death Sir Michael Bonallack said “Barclay played golf the way he lived life.  He was a great fighter, someone who wouldn’t give up. He will be sorely missed”.

With the 2016 Open Championship again staged at Royal Troon the opportunity arose for a number of tributes to be paid to Barclay. Jimmy Roberts did a great job for NBC Channel.

Jimmy Roberts looks into the life of Barclay Howard for NBC and the Golf Channel. 

In a life and golfing career of real extremes Barclay Howard is a golfer and man we should all remember and can no doubt learn from when we face our own adversities.  What a comeback story.  Yes he made some poor decisions and missed some opportunities but who hasn’t.  His tenacity served him well on the course and in dealing with his numerous health issues, whilst his honesty and generosity were a credit to himself and the game he loved.

ME.

Copyright © 2014-2025, Mark Eley. All rights reserved.