Maurice Flitcroft | |
Birth Name: | Maurice Gerald Flitcroft |
Birth Date: | 23 November 1929 |
Birth Place: | Manchester, England |
Maurice Gerald Flitcroft (23 November 1929 – 24 March 2007) was a British golfer.
Flitcroft received widespread attention after shooting a score of 121 in the qualifying competition for the 1976 Open Championshipthe worst score recorded at the Open Championship by a self-professed "professional golfer", having been an inexperienced golfer.[1] [2] Subsequently, he gained significant media coverage, being referred to as "the world's worst golfer".
Flitcroft was born in Manchester on 23 November 1929.[3] As a child during the war, he was evacuated to Kendal in the Lake District, where he lodged with a Mrs Langhorn and was a pupil at Kendal Grammar School.[4] In his early adulthood, Flitcroft joined the Merchant Navy. Following his marriage to Jean, he and his wife settled in Barrow-in-Furness, where he worked as a crane operator at the Vickers-Armstrongs shipyard. At other times he worked as a shoe polish salesman, a high diver and an ice cream seller.[5]
According to his unpublished memoirs, Flitcroft took up the game after watching the 1974 Piccadilly World Match Play Championship.[6] Flitcroft had golfing ambitions well above his ability and came to notoriety in 1976 when, posing as a professional golfer, he managed to obtain a place to play in the qualifying round of The Open Championship — despite his previous experience amounting only to some casual play on fields near his home. Flitcroft recalled, "I was looking to find fame and fortune but only achieved one of the two." He was inspired to enter the tournament by Walter Danecki, a postal worker from Milwaukee, Wisconsin,[7] who entered the 1965 Open Championship after telling the R&A that he was a pro and set a two-round score of 221 during qualifying.
When he discovered, to his shock, that any amateurs entering competitions had to have an official handicap — something he lacked — he simply declared himself to be a professional. Flitcroft prepared for the tournament by studying a golf instruction manual by Peter Alliss which he had borrowed from his local library. He also studied instructional articles by Al Geiberger and honed his skills on a nearby beach. His gear comprised only a red imitation-leather bag and half a set of clubs purchased by mail-order.
His deception was uncovered when he managed to score a 49-over-par 121 — the worst score in the tournament's history.[8] Some of the other professionals playing with him were so angry that they successfully demanded a refund of their entry fees.[9] Australian golfer Mike Cahill, who was playing directly behind Flitcroft, stated, "I just snapped at the 12th [hole] and accosted him," he later said. "I yelled at him that this wasn't a circus and told him to get off the course."[10] The R&A gave him a lifetime ban from all their competitions, and he became known as "The Royal & Ancient Rabbit."
Following the 1976 Open, the rules were changed to prevent Flitcroft from attempting to enter again. Undeterred, he regularly attempted to enter the Open and other golf competitions, either under his own name or under pseudonyms, such as Gene Paycheki[11] (as in pay cheque), Gerrard Hoppy, and James Beau Jolley. Other more ludicrous names included Arnold Palmtree and Count Manfred von Hoffmanstel, together with physical disguises such as a false moustache and dark glasses.
Flitcroft's celebrity led to a number of golf trophies (usually those celebrating poor play or egregious mishaps) being named after him. He also had the distinction of being celebrated with the "Maurice Gerald Flitcroft Member-Guest Tournament" which was first held in 1978 by the Blythefield Country Club in Grand Rapids, Michigan.[12] Buddy Whitten, Blythefield's head pro stated that, "It started as a lark, but most people can't break 90 so they relate more to Maurice than they would to a touring pro." Flitcroft and his wife were invited to play the tournament in 1988, with business-class tickets for the flights provided by British Airways.[12] By the time of the 22nd tournament in May 2000, the club featured a green with two holes so that even the most errant of approaches were potentially rewarded; another green had a 12inches cup.
Flitcroft's career was highlighted in Stephen Pile's 1979 bestseller, The Book of Heroic Failures, bringing him greater popular recognition.
Flitcroft is the subject of a biography, The Phantom of the Open, by Scott Murray and Simon Farnaby, published by Yellow Jersey Press in July 2010. This was later turned into a film script by Farnaby. The Phantom of the Open, directed by Craig Roberts, starring Mark Rylance and Sally Hawkins, opened at the London Film Festival in October 2021 before a wider release in March 2022.[13] [14]
Flitcroft was married to Jean, who died in 2002. They had two sons, one of whom caddied for him.
In its obituary of Flitcroft, The Daily Telegraph commented: