From
"Hibernian Chronicle" a weekly
history
column in the Irish Echo by
Edward
T. O'Donnell
51 Years Ago:
Ben Hogan Makes a Comeback
Edward T. O'Donnell * The Irish Echo * January 10, 2001
Fifty-one years ago this week, on January 10, 1950, Ben Hogan did the
unimaginable. Nearly killed and severely injured in an auto accident
eleven months earlier, he’d finished in a tie for first place in his first
post-accident tournament in the California Open. Although he eventually
lost that day in the playoff to Sam Snead, his performance captured the
hearts of golfers and non-golfers alike. The greatest golfer of the era
had just commenced one of the most extraordinary comebacks in professional
sports history. His victory five months later in the U.S. Open made
clear that it was no fluke.
William Benjamin Hogan was born in 1912 in Dublin, TX, the son of a
struggling blacksmith. As a poor kid made poorer by his father’s suicide
when he was nine, Hogan came into the world of country clubs and golf through
the service entrance. He began caddying at age 12, earning 65 cents a round.
He learned to play and turned pro at 17. After two unsuccessful campaigns
on the pro tour in 1931 and 1934, he returned for good in 1937. By 1940
he was the tour’s top money winner. Service in World War II from
1943-45 took him out of the game, but he quickly stormed back to reclaim
his crown as the game's top player, winning 37 tournaments between August
1945 and February 1949.
Then disaster struck. While driving with his wife on a small highway
in West Texas, Hogan’s car was hit head on by a Greyhound bus that had
entered his lane attempting to pass another vehicle. In the split second
before impact, Hogan hurled himself in front of his wife in a heroic attempt
to protect her.
Hogan’s valor saved two lives that night – his wife’s and his own.
Had he remained in his seat, he would have been impaled by the steering
column which shot through to the back seat on impact. Still, the accident
left Hogan in grave condition, with his pelvis fractured in two places,
plus a broken rib, ankle and collarbone. Worse, he required several operations
to keep blood clots in his legs from causing a heart attack.
Many wondered if he’d live. No one thought he would ever play golf
again.
By the summer of 1949 it was clear that Hogan would live, but his career
certainly seemed over. He could barely walk and only for short distances.
Weight loss (he dropped from 150 to 95 lbs.) and inactivity left him too
weak even to swing a golf club.
Six months later when a gaunt and slow moving Ben Hogan showed up to
play in the California Open, people were stunned. Could he possibly go
72 holes on those legs? Perhaps, thought many, it was a symbolic gesture,
part of his long-term rehabilitation.
How wrong they were. As anyone who knew Hogan could attest, he was
no ordinary professional. He possessed an inner drive, work ethic, and
sense of purpose that few could match. It was what made him a champion
in the first place and it’s what enabled him to come back from the brink
of death to dominate his sport once again. “He’s the standard of excellence,”
said a 5-time British Open winner, “ against which we all measured ourselves.”
Hogan topped his incredible resurrection performance in the California
Open with a victory at the U.S. Open five months later. He did it in dramatic
style, nailing a 1 – iron approach shot on the 18th and final hole to set
up a putt that tied him with two other players. The next day he won the
18-hole playoff by four strokes.
Although his legs were in constant pain, Hogan kept playing – and winning
– for several more years. By the end of his career he’d posted 63 PGA tournament
victories including nine majors (six coming after the accident). He was
one of only four players to win all four majors. The 1951 film Follow The
Sun starring Glen Ford chronicled his incredible career and comeback.
An intensely private man, Hogan enjoyed a quiet retirement in Texas.
He kept busy playing golf and working as an advisor to the Ben Hogan Golf
Company he started in the 1950s and later sold. When he died in July
1997 at the age of 84, nearly every obituary and tribute said the same
thing: never before nor since had there been a player who so embodied grit
and competitive intensity like Ben Hogan. “I don’t like the glamour,”
he once said, “I just like the game.”
HIBERNIAN HISTORY WEEK
Jan 10, 1922: Arthur Griffin is elected President of the Irish Free
State
Jan 11, 1970: The IRA splits, forming the Provisional IRA and Official
IRA
Jan 12, 1971: Former priest Philip Berrigan is indicted along with five
others for anti-war actions.
Jan 14, 1882: Boxer John L. Sullivan KOs Paddy Ryan in Mississippi to
gain the heavyweight crown.
Jan 15, 1896: famed Civil War photographer Mathew Brady dies in poverty
in New York City
HIBERNIANS BORN THIS WEEK:
Jan 12, 1729: Statesman and philosopher, Edmund Burke, in Dublin
Jan 14, 1919: TV commentator and writer, Andy Rooney, in Albany, NY.
Jan 15, 1921: Archbishop of New York, John Cardinal O’Connor, in Philadelphia
Jan 16, 1822: co-founder of Fenian Brotherhood, Thomas Clarke Luby,
in Dublin1
(c) Edward T. O'Donnell, 2001
|