When semi-retired Daily
Times sports writer Harry Chaykun asked me if I wanted to attend the
Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame Delco Chapter’s fall student-athlete awards
luncheon, he knew I would be intrigued by the scheduled speaker, one Jay Sigel,
a fixture at Aronimink Golf Club for many years while becoming one of the great
American amateur players of the last half of the 20th century before
embarking on a successful second career on the Champions Tour.
It is also didn’t hurt that one of the honorees would be
Springfield senior Brian Todaro, who showed a ton of grit in earning a share of
third place with Central League rival Sam Soeth of Marple Newtown in a
memorable edition of the District One Tournament last fall.
We had to wait a week because the luncheon was postponed by
the second of three winter storms that buffeted the county last week, but Sigel
was worth the wait.
He talked about mentoring and it struck home after each of
the eight honorees had, without exception, given credit to their parents, to
their coaches, to the administrators of their schools and school districts for
any success they had achieved both on and off the field of play.
Sigel has taken a leadership role in The First Tee of
Greater Philadelphia, which at its very heart is a mentoring program. It is, as
Sigel pointed out, not a program designed to develop golfers, but rather to
develop responsible youngsters who happen to play golf.
I thought back to a long-ago summer Monday when Sigel showed
up at Merion Golf Club’s East Course for a practice round for the next day’s U.S.
Amateur qualifier at Merion and Llanerch Country Club. It was probably 1972 or
1973 and Sigel was still a few years away from winning the British Amateur and
then two U.S. Amateurs after that and putting together as good a Walker Cup
record as any American player ever has.
He was winning the Pennsylvania Amateur championship, which
has traditionally been a stroke-play event, pretty regularly back in those
days. I seem to recall hearing a few golf experts sniff that his game would
never translate to match play. Boy, did that little theory get disproven.
I got a chance to carry his bag that day and I didn’t pass up
the opportunity to get a close-up look at a player who had a reputation for
precision on the golf course.
We were joined that day be a college player – perhaps recently graduated, but in my
memory he still had a year left – toting his University of Maryland bag. It’s
always been quite a personal golf highlight for me to recall that day, Jay
Sigel, Buddy Marucci and me walking the East Course at Merion, great golf talk
and great golf flowing easily.
Sigel mentioned at the Hall of Fame luncheon that, as an
adult, you can mentor without even knowing you’re doing it, by the way you
carry yourself, the way you act. I suspect Marucci, who capped his own stellar
amateur career by captaining the U.S. side to a Walker Cup win at Merion in
2009, was seeking some mentoring that day and he most surely found it.
As a journalist, my path crossed Sigel’s in 1998 at
Hartefeld National, where the local PGA Senior Tour (as the Champions Tour was
known back then) had moved after starting out at Chester Valley Golf Club.
Sigel started Saturday’s second round quietly enough with a par. He eagled the
par-5 second and then ripped off seven straight birdies for a front-nine 27, a
record for nine holes on the Champions Tour that still stands.
Even at 9-under through nine holes, he was the same Jay
Sigel, calm and focused. He flirted with golf’s magic number, 59, that day
before settling for a 62. It was a bit of an adventure, but he won the Bell
Atlantic Classic the next day in a playoff.
I was a high school kid the day I caddied for Sigel in that
practice round at Merion. At some point in the round, he asked if I wanted to
get carry his bag in the qualifying round the next day.
“You can do better,” I replied, knowing that there were
plenty of Merion loopers who knew the course as well, and in many cases, better
than I did.
“No, you’ll be fine,” he said.
So I did caddy for him in the qualifying round and it was a
great experience. It occurred to me as Sigel spoke to the eight
student-athletes who were honored at Tuesday’s luncheon at Barnaby’s on MacDade
Boulevard, that I had received a little mentoring from one of the game’s truly
great players as a youngster myself.
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