Virginia Water, Surrey - Ken Bousfield, who has died aged 80, was the first
winner of the PGA Championship and his successes as a pioneering full-time
tournament golf professional had an inspiring influence on the creation of
the European Tour. An obituary was released today by the PGA European Tour.
The toughness of his character as a war-time Royal Marine Commando was in
strict contrast to the quiet, gentlemanly, soft-spoken nature he showed on
the golf course, but the same inner courage and calmness under pressure
helped make him a highly respected champion with victories spread over 25
years. He turned professional in 1938, being elected that year to the
Professional Golfers' Association, and in 1994 he was made an Honorary
Member of the PGA.
Ken Bousfield, was born in Marston Moor, Yorkshire, on October 2, 1919. He
launched his tournament golf career as the winner of the 1947 Assistants
Championship at Coombe Hill, Surrey, the club to which he became attached for
the whole of his career. Dick Burton, the Coombe Hill Club professional,
encouraged him to devote his life to tournaments rather than follow the then
more fashionable route of running a shop.
Short off the tee with a long, slow, fluid swing, remorselessly steady and
accurate, and with a tremendous short game, Ken Bousfield's deceptive
toughness guided his career to a peak in 1955 when he won the inaugural PGA
Championship, at Pannal, the German Open, and the PGA Match Play
Championship at Walton Heath where he beat the renowned head-to-head
challenger Eric Brown in the final. He remains the only player to have won
the PGA Championship and the PGA Match Play Championship in the same year.
He won no fewer than 19 titles, including the Belgian (1958), German (1955,
1959), Portuguese (1960, 1961) and Swiss (1958) Opens, and his enduring
skill was seen again when winning the 1972 British Seniors PGA Championship.
Ken Bousfield's considerable feats included victory in the 90-hole Dunlop
Tournament at Southport and Ainsdale in 1957. It was a gruelling test that
called on all his Commando fitness. He scored 70,70,70,71,72 and never took
more than five at any hole.
Ken Bousfield was selected for six Ryder Cup matches. He made a winning
debut in 1949 when partnering Fred Daly to victory in the foursomes at
Ganton, Scarborough, and in all he won five of his ten matches which was a
remarkable record during a time when the United States dominated the Ryder
Cup. He went out on a winning note by beating Jerry Barber at Royal Lytham &
St Annes in 1961.
One of the "old school" quite prepared to put his own money on the line, he
partnered John Jacobs in 1956 to beat Harry Weetman and Arthur Lees in a
highly publicised challenge match at the RAC, Epsom. The stakes amounted to
£400 a head, then considered an enormous sum to risk.
In recent years his love for golf was kept alive through regular friendly
matches with his close friend Max Faulkner, the 1951 Open Champion.
Neil Coles, Chairman of the PGA European Tour Board of Directors, said: "Ken
was a lovely man with whom I played for many years at Coombe Hill and
especially in Cancer Relief Exhibition matches. We have lost a player whose
outstanding achievements will remain as testimony to his superb playing
skills."
Ken Schofield, Executive Director of the European Tour, said: "In Ken
Bousfield's passing we lose a great player who bridged the generation now
connected by the European Tour and indeed through the Volvo PGA Championship
for which Ken set the standard of champions. He was a wonderful Ryder Cup
player, a wonderful exponent of match-play which was epitomised by his
record notably with his great friend Dai Rees. He was a quiet man with great
dignity and his golf gave support to the statement that 'if you are straight
enough you are long enough'."
Ken Bousfield is survived by Dawn North, his partner of more than 30 years.