Patrick
O'Hare (or O'Hara)
By 1914 Patrick O'Hare
was considered a formidable golfer and was considered Michael
Moran's greatest rival for title of best professional golfer in
Ireland. The IPGA held a competition in Dollymount in 1914 and
as anticipated Patrick took first prize.
'What
I can to today I can do tomorrow'
Paddy won the Irish
Professional Championship in 1919 while attached to Dundalk. After
the victory he went to America and became a professional at Shackamaxon
and then Richmond County and Country Club. By June 1920 Peter
and Pat O'llara, professionals at Shackamaxon, repeated on Sunclay
their previous victory over George Fotheringbam of Richmond County
Country Club and Tom Mulgrew of Hackensack in a thirtv-six holes
Lmatch at Shackamaxon. After a see saw battle in the first ruund,
the O'Haras won the seventeenth and eighteenth to finish the eighteen
holes two up. Futheringham and Mulgrew evened up on the sixth
green in the afternoon round, but the home team ran away with
the second nine in this round, winning 6 and 5.
1920 was the last year
that saw Vardon team up with Ted Ray for one last tour of America
and they lost to the two O'Hara brothers 6 and 5 at Shackamaxon
CC. Ted Ray went on to win the US Open at Inverness that year
by two shots from Jack Burke Snr. At the same venue the two brothers
lost by one up to Abe Mitchell and George Duncan during their
1921 American tour.
While at Shackamaxon
he entered the Shawnee Open where he took third place behing Jim
Barnes and Ted Ray. His 69 in the final round was two strokes
better than anyone else had managed during the tournament. The
Americans called him Paddy O' Hara and in 1922 he won the famous
North and South Open at Pinehurst which was recalled in Professional
Golfer of America Vol 2. for April 1922 also New York Times on
Sunday January 7th 1923?
After the victory he
returned home for a two week holiday but stayed for the remainder
of his life. Happy not to do anything further but give a few lessons
was reluctantly persuaded to play again for the Irish Professional
Championship in 1927 (although he was also runner-up the previous
year at Malone GC) which he did win and returned to his leisurely
lifestyle until his death in the late forties.
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None other than
the legendary Grantland Rice, writer and editor of The American
Golfer, would recall O'Hare's victory in the North and South
Championship in 8 April 1922 edition.
Loses
a 69, Yet Wins Championship
Pat O'Hara Accomplishes One of the Rarest Feats Ever Known
in North and South Title Hunt
This feat consisted
of winning a big championship twice from a field that included
Hagen, Barnes, Hutchison and some of the finest professional
stars in the game. It is hard enough to beat a field of this
calibre once. But to triumph twice in two days is something
else again. In the morning round of the North and South Championship,
Jock Hutchison, with a h©ne 70 over the number three
course, led O'Hara }>y three strokes. In the afternoon
a young hurricane blew up, followed by a deluge. While the
hurricane was in progress O'Hara startled the bi^1golf colony
with a sensational 69, remarkable golf under fine conditions,
but super golf with the tornado whistling over the course.
Hutchison, catching the last four holes through the rain storm,
moved up to 81. So here was O'Hara, 9 strokes in front of
the field. But as the rain continued to beat down upon the
course it soon became unplayable so the afternoon round was
called off. Cracks Precedent
You can see the difference this made to O'Hara. In place of
leading the field by nine strokes, with the second round called
off he found himself trailing Hutchison by three strokes and
both McLeod and Harmon by two strokes. Briefly the merry deluge
made a difference of just twelve strokes to the Irish champion
of 1913 (sic). He now had but thirty-six holes to play with
good golfers in the way and his brilliant 69 of necessity
thrown out the window. This ordinarily would have crushed
even a fairly stout heart. But in place of bewailing his misfortune
O'Hara, who had suffered most, said nothing but went to work
next day with every shot he had to offer. After catching Hutchison
in the forenoon round at 148, Patrick then ran away from the
field with a fine 72 through a wind-blown journey. By hitting
every shot with a confident Crispin ss and ramming his putts
for the hole he evaded the treachery of the wind and led the
field by four strokes. He had lost a 69, the finest round
of the championship, and still had won with a good 4 strokes
to spare above Clarence Hackney who finished in second place
with 224. It might also be mentioned here that in completing
the four rounds in 289 strokes, O'Hara also broke the old
four-round championship record of 291 made by Jock Hutchison
a year ago. The new champion played by far and away the best
golf shown in the field. He has a clean, firm style of hitting
with a swing that is compact and yet in no sense stiff or
bound.....
In
America on deck. O'Hara's victory over this select class
with
the break in fortune against him was no small triumph. Near
the finish of his final round when the pressure becames
hardest, in place of weakening he put on added speed, going
boldly for the sand on his second shots with no attempt
to play safe. Few tournaments have been featured by a greater
number of sensational strokes. Two of these fell to Walter
Hagen and Joe Kirkwood. Finding themselves deep in the woods
with the ball hi each case up against big pines, both made
remarkable recoveries by taking a left-handed stance with
a right-handed club, the toe of the blade being turned in.
Each had to carry one hundred and forty yards over tall
trees to reach the open from these unique positions, yet
both carried up to the edge of the sand for their par 4©s
where they might have easily taken anything from a 6 to
an 8, if the left-handed wallop hadn't come off perfectly.
Grantland
Rice
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Golf
Illustrated: May 1922
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As professional at Greenore
from 1908-1909 (replacing Peter) he earned 9/- per week. Jimmy
O'Hare replaced him albeit at 14/- per week.
In an
Irish Port
Grew a stripling younster
To six feet tall or a little more
He gazed on the greens
and strolled the fairways
In the lovely village of grand Greenore
As the
years went by
He learned the game
Putting and driving for evermore
'Til the golfing world
Admired the prowess
Of Paddy O'Hare from grand Greenore
He matched
the elite
Of Ireland's best
Then to America he sailed o'er
To play in their open
On the Pinehurst course
Went the gallant golfer from grand greenore
In brilliant
form
He drove the fairways
To lead the field with the finest score
When a mighty storm
Cancelled the contest
For the unlucky golfer from grand Greenore
Around
the Clubhouse
All felt sorry
For the frustration that he bore
What I did today
I can do tomorrow
Said the unruffled golfer from grand Greenore
Years
have passed
But the memory lingers
Those words are now historic lore
What I can to today
I can do tomorrow
God rest you Paddy from fond Greenore
What
I can do today
I can do tomorrow
Is a motto for your own heart's core
The greatest lesson
To win life's game
From the legendary golfer
from the grand Greenore.
By Paddy O'Hare (not
the golfer who's the subject of the poem)
Reading
Sources:
The American Golfer
April 1922
The American Golfer
29 December 1923
Sean Breen: The Greenore
Centenary 1896-1996