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4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
1,984 global ratings
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The Match: The Day the Game of Golf Changed Forever

The Match: The Day the Game of Golf Changed Forever

byMark Frost
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Jason Carter
5.0 out of 5 starsAn era ends...
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 28, 2022
The year is 1956. The scene is Monterey, California, where the nation's elite have gathered for the annual Crosby Clambake pro-am tournament invites a week of festive merrymaking and hungover golfing.

Before the festivities, patron saint of the caddy profession, Eddie Lowery (who figures prominently as a 10 year old caddy in Frost's earlier book about the 1913 US Open) makes a five (six?) figure bet that his two amateurs can beat any two pros in a best ball round.

The next day, legends Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson tee off at Cypress Point against Lowery's Harvie Ward and Ken Venturi, the top amateurs of the era.

The match serves as a metaphor for the end of said era, when amateur golf would recede before the inevitable onslaught of moneyed professional golf.

Superbly well written and entertaining, I highly recommend this book to any fan of the game.
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Gary K. McCormick
VINE VOICE
3.0 out of 5 starsA Magazine Article Padded to Book Length
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 11, 2008
If I had read "The Match..." before I read Mark Frost's other golf-related books ("The Greatest Game Ever Played" and "The Grand Slam: Bobby Jones, America, and the Story of Golf") I would have missed out on a couple of really good reads - because I would never have picked up another of his books.

The main substance of this book - the story of a unique, one-time golf match between two aging masters of the professional game (Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson) and two up-and-coming young amateurs (Ken Venturi and Harvie Ward) at one of the most beautiful, and exclusive, golf courses in the country, Cypress Point, on California's Monterey Peninsula - would have made a good magazine article. In order to tease it out to book length, however, Frost mixes in biographical chapters on the lives of the four participants, as well as the two instigators of the match, Eddie Lowery, a successful Bay Area businessman and supporter of amateur golf (who, as a pint-sized 10-year-old, caddied for Francis Ouimet in his improbable 1913 US Open victory over Englishmen Harry Vardon and Ted Ray) and George Coleman, a wealthy California business figure. It's mostly blatant, and superfluous, padding - the material on Hogan has been chronicled better elsewhere, with a lighter touch, by more skilled writers (Curt Sampson comes to mind...) and the dirt-digging on Eddie Lowery's business dealings and troubles with the amateur golf establishment borders on the sordid.

Frost's florid writing style in this book is off-putting and sensationalistic; he leaves no superlative unturned, and must have worn out his thesaurus in the search for more and better adjectives the further he got along in the story. His chapters on Hogan are fawning and overly-sentimental, reminiscent of James Dodson's saccharine 2004 biography of the man (no surprise that Frost singles out Dodson for mention in his Oscar show-length thank you's).

One thing that Frost never pays off on is the title's tagline: "The Day The Game of Golf Changed Forever". How can an event which was witnessed by a relative handful of people, a private golf match with no title or championship significance, be said to have changed the game of golf forever? The match did occur at a cusp in the sport, as golf was changing from a pastime of the wealthy, in which amateur sportsmen were held in higher esteem than the professional practitioners of the sport, to the Arnold Palmer-inspired pastime of suburban professionals and blue-collar workers, when TV and its attendant influx of money made it a national sensation that provided a viable, even lucrative, living for the touring professionals in the game - but none of those changes hinged on, or were precipitated by "The Match".

Razor out the biographical padding, leaving only the chapters on the match itself and the afterword on the history of the course and you'll have an enjoyable lunchtime read (my enjoyment of the historical afterword may be attributable to local interest, as I was born and raised just inland of the Monterey Peninsula, in the Salinas Valley); and if you're ready to immerse yourself in more of the early history of the game, pick up "The Greatest Game Ever Played" and "The Grand Slam: Bobby Jones, America, and the Story of Golf" - they are much better books.
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From the United States

Jason Carter
5.0 out of 5 stars An era ends...
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 28, 2022
Verified Purchase
The year is 1956. The scene is Monterey, California, where the nation's elite have gathered for the annual Crosby Clambake pro-am tournament invites a week of festive merrymaking and hungover golfing.

Before the festivities, patron saint of the caddy profession, Eddie Lowery (who figures prominently as a 10 year old caddy in Frost's earlier book about the 1913 US Open) makes a five (six?) figure bet that his two amateurs can beat any two pros in a best ball round.

The next day, legends Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson tee off at Cypress Point against Lowery's Harvie Ward and Ken Venturi, the top amateurs of the era.

The match serves as a metaphor for the end of said era, when amateur golf would recede before the inevitable onslaught of moneyed professional golf.

Superbly well written and entertaining, I highly recommend this book to any fan of the game.
One person found this helpful
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Jack O'Connor
5.0 out of 5 stars Thoroughly enjoyable book
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 18, 2022
Verified Purchase
A great story about the heyday of golf. A wonderful read. I can’t recommend this book enough to those that want to learn about some of golf’s greats.
One person found this helpful
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Karen Kay
5.0 out of 5 stars Christmas golf book
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 30, 2022
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I think this will be a great gift for my golfing son
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r
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read even for non golfers
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 14, 2022
Verified Purchase
Very well written docu-story about a magical place in northern CA and a point in time that wonderfully changed the game of golf forever.
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DannyG
5.0 out of 5 stars Must read for golf lovers
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 7, 2022
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Mark Frost has a true talent for the written word. His detail puts you on the course with the greatest golfers that ever lived.
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F.C.
5.0 out of 5 stars A gentlemanly and suspenseful look at a fantastic point in history
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 18, 2022
Verified Purchase
My only concern about this book is that I have a list of reading material ahead of me that I fear will not hold up.

You don’t have to like or even play golf, but it helps! The Match is very well written in a descriptive manner all the way up to the climax. If you are a fan of sports, nostalgia, suspense, or golf of course, THE MATCH Will initially capture your attention and draw you into the storyline with plenty of interesting history about each player to keep you involved. But it slowly builds to the climax of the match itself that will make you shout for joy at the moment you hear the outcome. While reading, that very moment is described in a visual manner where you feel like you’re there seeing the event, smelling the salt air, and witnessing the tension of the crowd.

If you have the slightest interest in a well done nostalgic story, you can easily get lost in this book and feel rewarded as it concludes. Read on and enjoy!
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Stephen G. Judd
4.0 out of 5 stars A page-turner
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 13, 2008
Verified Purchase
While I enjoy an occasional round of golf and watching PGA tournaments on TV, I m not much of a golf history buff. When I heard an interview with Mark Frost on a podcast, discussing The Match, I knew I had to read it.

The Match is the story of a friendly round of golf instigated by Eddie Lowery, the boy caddie of Francis Ouimet, whose story was chronicled by Frost in his earlier book The Greatest Game Ever Played Grade: A+ . What made The Match unique, was the foursome that played: Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan, Ken Venturi, and Harvie Ward. Nelson and Hogan were legendary professional golfers, though somewhat past their prime. Venturi and Ward were a couple of young amateurs who worked for Lowery at his car dealership an arrangement that proved detrimental to Ward .

The book casts this battle as one between golf professionals and amateurs for the future of golf. Contrary to the current climate, the PGA tour was hardly a jetsetting high-paying profession. It was a grind that saw pros driving from tournament to tournament, staying in cheap motels, and hoping to earn enough money to buy their meals and repay their backers.

The Match took place at Cypress Point Golf Club, an apparently extraordinary course that is no longer host to PGA events. It was played prior to the 1956 Crosby Clambake, which has since become the Pebble Beach Pro-Am. The backstory about Cypress Point and the Clambake is fascinating enough in its own right. But what makes the book a page turner is the tension of The Match itself. The four golfers played an almost unbelievable round of match play, in which neither side ever led by more than one hole I won t spoil the story by telling you which team won. Interspersed are the life stories of the four protagonists. While I knew of Nelson, Hogan, and Venturi, I didn t know the story of their lives and how they intertwined. I hadn t heard of Ward, which is a shame, because he was an incredible amateur golfer who was seen as the successor to Bobby Jones.

My one complaint with the book was the prose Frost occasionally used in describing the golfers lives. For example:

"You didn't need a crystal ball to see that worldly success waited just down the road for Harvie; he wore the can t miss sign in neon lights a mile high and exuded the rare intangible confidence of a man supremely comfortable in his own skin. That future appeared all mapped out; Harvie just had to fill in the details on the requisition; sign on the dotted line; and start living the life of Reilly."

I'm not sure what exactly bothers me about the language, perhaps the use of cliches or hyperbole. However, this is outweighed by the way Frost paints the picture of Cypress Point and The Match.

If you have even a passing interest in golf, or appreciate the competition of elite athletes, you owe it to yourself to read The Match.
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Ben L
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent stoty
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 21, 2022
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Highly re
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John R. Linnell
5.0 out of 5 stars Take a Trip Back in Time...
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 11, 2008
Verified Purchase
It is difficult to remember or appreciate what the game of tournament golf was like some fifty or so years ago. Before Tiger Woods, before Jack Nicklaus, before Arnold Palmer, before network television and the Golf Channel.

This book will open a window on those times and does it in a very entertaining way.

It is the time of the Crosby Clambake, an event started by Bing Crosby which brought together touring pros and wealthy and well known amateurs and has now evolved into what we know as the AT+T National Pro-Am, played on golf courses on the Monterey Peninsula.

In 1956, the premiere kick off party for the week long event was a party held at George Coleman's. Coleman, is a millionaire many times over and an avid and accomplished golfer in his own right. Attending the party that night was Eddie Lowery, another golfing millionaire and a person known to have engaged Coleman in several sporting wagers over the years.

Lowery owned the most succesful Lincoln-Mercury dealership in the country and was also a ardent supporter of amateur golf. In order to support some of the most promising ones, he gave them jobs as car saleman which meant they were to sell his cars in the morning and be available to play golf in the afternoon.

On this particular evening he is singing the praises of two of "his boys" who he has arranged to have play in the golf tournament, Ken Venturi and Harvie Ward.

At dinner he proclaims to all who will listen that there are not two players in the world that can beat them when they play as a team. Coleman's ears prick up and he inquires, "Including pros?" "Any players breathing," comes the reply. "Well, I've got a couple of fellas in mind," "Fine. Bring 'em on. Name your price."

The amount of the wager differs according to those with memories of the evening, but it was substancial for 1956 and perhaps as much as twenty thousand dollars.

"So who are your players?" Eddie asks after the bet is arranged. "I'll tell you in a minute," Coleman replies as he leaves the room and places a call to Ben Hogan. He agrees. Byron Nelson is already at Coleman's house and after a quick conversation the match is agreed to.

Those at the dinner are sworn to secrecy, but are told the match will be at Pebble Beach where Hogan has a tee time arranged for 11 AM.

The players gathered the next morning at Cypress Point to commence one of the most amazing golf matches ever played. As the match progresses, the author uses it to also describe aspects of the careers of the participants, give interesting insights into the times and describe the wonders of one the the world's finest golf courses.

For golfers, it is a trip back in time not to be missed.
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Jon Leland
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome, Delightful and Required Reading
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 23, 2007
Verified Purchase
I just finished Mark Frost's new book, The Match: The Day the Game of Golf Changed Forever, and while I was excited to read the latest from the author of the amazing and invaluable true golf tale, The Greatest Game Ever Played, this new book exceeded my expectations. I was moved to tears several times and another, perhaps even more important, slice of golf history was illuminated.

I also looked forward to this read because I had heard that "The Match" takes place at Cypress Point and I've always dreamed of playing that course, so it was a treat to walk and play it with some of the greatest golfers of all time. In case you haven't heard, the center piece of this story is a casual best ball match play round between Ben Hogan and Bryron Nelson (representing the pros) and Ken Venturi and Harvie Ward (representing the amateurs). The time is 1956 and Venturi and Ward are the last of the gentleman amateurs playing at the highest levels of the game. The event is precipitated by a bet instigated by none other than Eddie Lowery, the pint-sized ten-year old caddie from "Greatest Game" who has (believe it or not) become a millionaire California car dealer. This connection to the earlier book is more than a coincidence and Lowery becomes more important to the story than one might expect.

I'm going to go so far as to say that this book is required reading for any serious golfer. On one level learning more about the life story and personality of these great players as well as that of Cypress Point and the Crosby Clambake are quintessential elements of the glory of golf in America. As before, Mark Frost does an amazing job illuminating this background (including the best recounting of the famous Hogan comeback after his accident that I've ever read.) But there's much more beyond all this.

I can't summarize that essence better than the last paragraph of the book:

"No four men will ever play such a match again. No four men like like these. The genuine way they lived their lives makes most of today's fast and frenzied sports and entertainment culture seem like so much packaged goods, a self-conscious, inauthentic hustle. In their best and worst hours alike each of these four stood his ground, put all he had on the line, and for better or worse lived with the consequences of his actions and moved on. Some green, untested souls might be tempted to wonder why one should still care, but none of us are here forever, we're not even here for long; and if it's true that our collective past exists inside all of us, unless we take time to bear witness to the best of those who strived before us, our chance to learn from their lives will be lost forever, and we will be the poorer for it."

That's why I call it "required reading"... not to mention that it's totally fun and a complete delight! Thanks so much, Mr. Frost.
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