"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"
online golf column
by
Chris Dortch
July 18, 2007
When Harris English
made the turn in the final round of the Georgia Amateur at Ansley
Golf Club-Settindown Creek in Roswell last week, he had no idea he
was about to become a part of the state’s proud golfing history.
Trailing tournament leader Mark Strickland by
five shots with eight holes to play, English, the former
Chattanooga Baylor star headed to the University of Georgia next
month, wasn’t even sure he could win. His goal was to finish as
strong as he could and acquit himself well in his first-ever
Georgia Amateur.
English did much, much more than that.
Playing the final nine holes in 1-under-par while Strickland and
others fell by the wayside, English won the tournament, a feat
that would be significant for a player of any age. For the
17-year-old English, this victory was one for the ages. Not since
1916, the first Georgia Amateur played, had a player so young
bested the field of the state’s top players.
Anyone remotely aware of golf history in
general or in the South in particular probably knows it was Bobby
Jones who, at a mere 14, won back in 1916. In the 91 years since,
none of the great young players Georgia produced was able to come
close to matching that remarkable accomplishment.
Young Mr. English, it turns out, has the
proper appreciation for what he’s accomplished. So many young
athletes today aren’t aware of the great players who came before
them. Few have a sense of history.
“Harris isn’t a historian,” said English’s
father Ben. “But he’s watched all the Bobby Jones movies. He’s
played East Lake and he’s played Augusta National. And of course,
playing for King Oehmig at Baylor, he’s heard all the stories
about King’s father Lew Oehmig, and the relationship he had with
Mr. Jones. This has all flowed together into a great story. It’s
almost as if it was meant to be.”
“I have a huge appreciation for Bobby Jones,”
Harris English said. “He was the father of amateur golf; he did
everything an amateur could do in the game. To have my name
engraved on the same trophy that has Bobby Jones’ name on it, it’s
a great honor.”
You get the feeling this won’t be English’s
last Georgia Amateur championship, and that there’s a lot more in
store for him. He seems to have all the requisite tools to
excel—height and strength, length off the tee, a solid short
game—plus one other attribute that separates champions from
mere contenders.
“Harris is as unflappable as a Zen master on
the course,” said King Oehmig. “He’s always the
same—focused—whether he’s winning or losing.”
Evidence of that came in the final round of
the Georgia Amateur, after English made a triple bogey on the
par-3 fifth hole. Ben English, no doubt feeling more of the pain
from that misstep than his son, asked Harris if he was OK as he
walked off the fifth green.
“Sure, I’m fine,” was the reply.
English played the rest of the round in
2-under-par, making birdies on three of his next five holes.
The victory couldn’t be considered the
culmination of a life spent preparing for golfing
greatness—English has far too much tournament golf ahead to call
it such—but it justified the faith Ben English had in his son.
When it became apparent Harris had a gift for
the game, his father made sure he had every opportunity to explore
his potential. One of his first instructors was Jack Lumpkin,
perennially among the list of America’s 100 top teachers. Harris
eventually began working with former Georgia Tech star Chan
Reeves, a protégé of the late Jimmy Hodges and Davis Love II, two
more of the most respected teachers in the game’s history.
Lumpkin and Reeves can take partial credit
for English’s technical skills, but the rest of the package that
has made him a great player comes from family. The young man is
unfailingly polite—on and off the course—respectful of his fellow
competitors and a good teammate. His calm demeanor serves him
well, as does his intense work ethic—no sooner did he return from
his Georgia Amateur victory, he was on the practice tee, working
on his wedge game.
“I’m proud of his golf, but I’m more proud of
his work ethic and his character and all the things that go along
with being a champion,” Ben English said of his son.
The younger English, a Georgia native through
and through, won’t have to leave his beloved home state to play
his college golf, as he did during his prep career at Baylor.
He’ll report to Georgia Aug. 10, and who can count him out from
earning a spot on the Bulldogs’ traveling squad?
“He will do exceptionally well at UGA—not
only because he is an incredible player, but also because he is
the consummate team player,” Oehmig said. “There is not a hint of
prima donna in him. UGA is very fortunate to have him.”
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