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"The Bobby Jones Story: The Authorized Biography" by O.B. Keeler is the most unprecedented publication about golf's first international icon. This classic edition is back with a fresh look 50 years after its original printing to celebrate the centennial birthday of golf's greatest legend. No other writer had the access and inside knowledge of Jones' life and game as Jones grew up down the road from Keeler, who was already entrenched as a reporter in Atlanta. Once he saw what Jones could do for the sport in his first shocking appearance in the U.S. Amateur tournament in 1916, Keeler knew this was a golfer destined to leave his mark on the sport. Over the next two decades, Keeler traveled more than 120,000 miles to cover Jones in 27 Majors. The two became more than working associates, they were close friends. When Jones went through an early dry spell of losing 10 straight major championships and questioned if he would ever win a Major, Keeler was there to assure the legend that nobody could beat him if he would only realize it. Keeler proved to be prophetic. At one point Jones won 13 of 21 Major championships including the famous 1930 season when he captured the "Impregnable Quadrilateral," better known today as "The Grand Slam." One month later, at the age of 28, Jones announced his retirement. Jones continued to steer the future of the sport as a golf course designer, golf club designer, teacher, and writer. But he will never be forgotten as the first world star in golf.
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· 2003
The Bobby Jones Story: The Authorized Biography by O.B. Keeler is the most unprecedented publication about golf’s first international icon. This classic edition is back with a fresh look 50 years after its original printing to celebrate the centennial birthday of golf's greatest legend. No other writer had the access and inside knowledge of Jones’ life and game as Jones grew up down the road from Keeler, who was already entrenched as a reporter in Atlanta. Once he saw what Jones could do for the sport in his first shocking appearance in the U.S. Amateur tournament in 1916, Keeler knew this was a golfer destined to leave his mark on the sport. Over the next two decades, Keeler traveled more than 120,000 miles to cover Jones in 27 Majors. The two became more than working associates, they were close friends. When Jones went through an early dry spell of losing 10 straight major championships and questioned if he would ever win a Major, Keeler was there to assure the legend that nobody could beat him if he would only realize it. Keeler proved to be prophetic. At one point Jones won 13 of 21 Major championships including the famous 1930 season when he captured the “Impregnable Quadrilateral,” better known today as “The Grand Slam.” One month later, at the age of 28, Jones announced his retirement. Jones continued to steer the future of the sport as a golf course designer, golf club designer, teacher, and writer. But he will never be forgotten as the first world star in golf.
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· 2002
We Proudly present America's most comprehensive collection of Bobby Jones golf literature. Bobby Jones' legacy remains in golf's history, as he was a proficient champion, co-designer of Augusta National Golf Course, and blessed with the ability to translate the mechanics of golf through his effective golf tips. Jones' constant companion during much of his illustrious career in the 1920s, O.B. Pop Keeler, wrote The Boys' Life of Bobby Jones after Bobby retired in 1930. Previous to this, the newspaperman had assisted Jones with his biography, Down the Fairway, published in 1927. Chronologically, however, that story slopped in 1926 after Jones had captured victories in both the U.S. Open and British Open. - For The Boys' Life of Bobby Jones, Keeler started from the beginning again and then took it up to Jones' retirement at the age of 28 after he had won the famous Grand Slam.