THE GREATEST GAME EVER PLAYED by Mark Frost is the best golf book I have ever read. It is about the 1913 US OPEN in Brookline, Massachusetts. That book focused on the principal players and the action.
This book, about the 2002 US OPEN from Bethpage on Long Island, is far different. It’s about a dream come true, the dream of David Fay of the United States Golf Association (USGA) to hold the Open on a public golf course instead of on a private country club.
In August 1983 I had five days off from work and decided to drive from Pottstown, Pennsylvania to Morgan Center, Vermont to visit my grandfather. I made a game of it, striving to make the trip, solo, in nine hours. The planning was invigorating, the execution stimulating and exhausting at the same time. Nearly forty years later, I still cherish every moment.
Such will be the experience of those hundreds of men and women who planned and executed every detail of Fay’s dream, a five plus year labor of love, love of Bethpage, love of golf.
John Feinstein chronicles it beautifully. The persons featured are not household names; most of the players are just blips on the screen. But those persons behind the scenes made the 2002 US OPEN not only memorable but very profitable.
Don’t expect a lot of golf action in this book. Indeed, there are very few words devoted to the play of that June weekend. But as I read it, one thought kept rising in my head: I cannot wait to get back on the links.
Four stars waxing