
Few
people anywhere in the game have, or have had, the wealth of knowledge Sir
Michael Bonallack brought to one of the most important roles in world golf
as Secretary of the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews. In recognition
of his role as one of the ultimate ambassadors of the game, Bonallack has
been elected to the World Golf Hall of Fame for his Lifetime Achievement to
golf.
Bonallack
had a distinguished playing career as a true amateur, one who worked full-time
in sales of his family business during his years of competitive success. He
never gave serious consideration to turning professional because purses were
small in Europe before a formal tour was created. Instead, he played golf
because he loved playing the game and played it at the highest level representing
his country as a member of nine Walker Cup teams.
The
highlight for Bonallack was undoubtedly contributing to the victorious Great
Britain and Ireland side of the 1971 Walker Cup. “I was playing captain that
year when we won over the Old Course, St Andrews, and it does not get, cannot
get, any better than that” he said.
During the 1960’s and early 1970’s, he defined amateur golf in Britain. He won five British Amateurs between 1961 and 1970, won the English Stroke Play four times as well as being the leading amateur in the 1968 and 1971 Open Championship. Bonallack did not hit the longest ball or have the most conventional stance over his putts, but he had a knack for finding the bottom of the cup. “Michael Bonallack was a remarkable player. He had a wonderful short game which was of his own making. Big wide stance, nose sniffing the ball, short jabby swing, but all the putts went in the hole,” said former colleague Peter Allis. “He had the most wonderful temperament. He appeared calm and yet he had that steely something that all great champions have.”
Soon
after retiring from competitive play, he joined a golf course design company
and served on a multitude of golf committees. Before taking up his post with
the R & A in 1983, Bonallack was chairman of the European Professional
Golfers’ Association and Golf Foundation and president of the English Golf
Union.
As
Secretary of the R & A, Bonallack successfully stewarded the game into
the 21st Century. “It’s one continual satisfaction to see the way in which
golf is developing. Obviously, the expansion of the Open, and the fact that
we can generate this money to put back into the development of the game is
very satisfying”, he said.
“He
has bridged the gap between the history and heritage and tradition of the
Open Championship and golf in general as it moved into the commercial age
globally and internationally and he”s done it with great taste and tact and
really stands almost alone as someone who has handled that crossing”, said
Mark McCormack, Chairman of International Management Group.
At
the conclusion of his sixteen-year reign, he was named Captain of the R &
A, the game’s highest honorary position. Bonallack has won a host of awards
in golf for his service to the game, but the knighthood from Queen Elizabeth
II was the ultimate accolade.