The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Stonehaven honours Ryder Cup founder.

Golf club pays homage to one-time apprentice who became a big mover in sport

- Graeme sTrachan gstrachan@thecourier.co.uk

He was the Open champion who also played a key role in the birth of golf’s Ryder Cup.

Now George Duncan’s legacy as the most famous golfer to be associated with Stonehaven is being celebrated at the golf club where he worked as a novice profession­al at the turn of the 20th Century.

He came to Stonehaven Golf Club in 1901, where he stayed for a year before heading south to pursue his career at various clubs in Wales, Cheshire and then London.

Duncan won the first Open after the First World War in 1920 and also the Irish, French and Belgian Opens, among others, during a distinguis­hed career.

He was also influentia­l in the birth of the Ryder Cup and played in the first official match in 1927 before captaining a victorious Great Britain side in 1929.

Duncan also became a golf course designer. However, it is his associatio­n with Stonehaven Golf Club that is being talked about again after being marked with a pictorial board display in the clubhouse.

Angela Howe, heritage director at The Royal and Ancient, said: “George Duncan was not only the Champion

He was a pioneering influence on the developmen­t of the Open and of the sport in Britain

Golfer of the Year in 1920 but he was a pioneering influence on the developmen­t of the Open and of the sport in Britain.

“He enjoyed a long and successful career and competed with some of golf’s greatest players.

“It is fitting to see his career being recognised in this way by Stonehaven Golf Club and I am sure it will be an appropriat­e reminder of his achievemen­ts.”

Born in 1883, Duncan was an apprentice carpenter who rejected a chance to become a profession­al footballer at Aberdeen.

Well known for his fast pace of play, he would simply walk to his ball, immediatel­y drop his limbs into his stance and hit the ball.

Duncan won the Open at Royal Cinque Ports in Kent in 1920 in one of the greatest comebacks.

After shooting 80 in his first two rounds, Duncan was still 13 shots behind the leader during the final round but made up the deficit to win and remains the last player to win a golf major with a score of 80 for a round.

Along with fellow pros Walter Hagen, Abe Mitchell and Emmett French, Duncan suggested to Samuel Ryder that some informal golf matches between Great Britain and the USA should be developed into something more official.

Ryder, an English entreprene­ur and golf promoter, agreed and put up some cash for team travel expenses and commission­ed a golden chalice as a prize.

Duncan played for Great Britain in the Ryder Cup in 1927, 1929 and 1931 and was playing captain in 1929 when GB won.

 ?? Picture: Paul Smith. ?? Brenda Gowans of Stonehaven Golf Club in front of the new tribute board to George Duncan, who started there as an apprentice and went on to win the Open.
Picture: Paul Smith. Brenda Gowans of Stonehaven Golf Club in front of the new tribute board to George Duncan, who started there as an apprentice and went on to win the Open.
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