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2025

Dinner Commonwealth GC Monday 30 June

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                        Commonwealth Golf Club – Guest speaker is member Andrew Thomson 

                                           ‘Professional Golf – Old, New, and From The Inside.’
                     A perspective from Peter’s son who is a student of professional golf’s history

Andrew Thomson, a GSA member and avid hickory player, had the unique experience of growing up as the son of Peter Thomson, Australia’s five-time Open champion. From early childhood Andrew observed the world of professional golf and took in many behind-the-scenes aspects of the life of a tournament player and that of his family and close friends, including the friendships and rivalries, the battles both on and off the course. Peter Thomson’s career brought him into contact with names such as Hogan, Snead, Nicklaus, Palmer, Player, and many other legendary champions. With an interest in antique clubs, Andrew has also studied the history of professional golf and has some fascinating opinions on how the profession has evolved and the influences that continue to shape it.

                                      Commonwealth GC dinner report by John Trevorrow 

The Society’s second dinner for the year was a roaring success, with the large audience enthralled by an evening of anecdotes and tales from Andrew Thomson.

Andrew is a long-term GSA member, an international lawyer, author, and a former MHR who was federal Minister for Sport and Tourism and whose six years in Canberra included the 2000 Sydney Olympics. And, of course, his father is the late Peter Thomson, five-time Open champion and president of the PGA of Australia for 32 years.

Andrew’s GSA dinner talk was hosted at Commonwealth Golf Club on June 30th. He titled it “The Life of a Tournament Player: Family, friends, rivals and foes … and the future”. The audience was spellbound, and comments afterwards described his talk as warm, personal and engaging.

Fittingly, the audience included Graham Marsh and Mike Clayton, two golf professionals who achieved great success in Australia and abroad and then turned to golf course architecture — just as Peter Thomson did.

Andrew told how his famous father always regarded club golf as “the plasma of the game”. A group of members from his beloved Victoria GC chipped in to help 21-year-old Peter travel to England in 1951 as a new professional, where he finished 5th in his first tilt at the Open Championship. In 1954, he went on to win his first, in a magnificent year for Australian golf. Fellow Victoria GC member Doug Bachli won the ’54 British Amateur championship, and Tasmania’s Peter Toogood won the silver medal as leading amateur in The Open. But 1954 also marked a shift in how professional golfers were regarded at some clubs. Victoria GC hosted a party for these champion golfers, and some stuffy members said Bachli and Toogood were welcome in the clubhouse, but not Peter as a professional and therefore a tradesman. “I’m coming in,” declared Thomson, and he did.

Andrew said his father as a young pro watched intently some of the champions of his era, including Bobby Locke, Sam Snead, Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson. He amalgamated some of their movements in his game, and learned where to place his ball to maximise his next shot.

He also spoke of the friendships and rivalries on the Tour — sometimes at the same time. In 1958, Thomson tied for the Open Championship with Welshman Dave Thomas, at Royal Lytham and St Annes. They had to contest a 36-hole play-off the following day. After the morning’s 18 holes, the two players and Peter’s then girlfriend (later wife) Mary and Thomas’s wife Robbie all had lunch of curried sausages together at their hotel before Peter went out to win the Claret Jug.

Another notable golfing friendship was with Ian Fleming, famous as the author of the James Bond spy novels. Fleming — who was elected Captain of Royal St George’s Golf Club, but sadly died before taking up that office — once told Thomson that his Bond novels were “awful” and made him promise never to read one! Peter faithfully kept his promise.

A final anecdote about the remarkable connections that golf gave to Peter Thomson included his friendship with American singer Willie Nelson, who recommended his tax lawyer to Thomson after he had won a considerable amount of money in a season on the US Senior Tour in the 1980s. Eli Callaway had earlier given Peter some shares in his fledgling golf company in return for using an early model Callaway driver, and the tax agent advised Peter to sell the shares when the price later soared. The windfall bought the Thomsons a house in Hope St, St Andrews.

Andrew Thomson closed his talk by urging every golf club in Australia to try to produce an Open Champion, man or woman.

It was Victoria GC members who had done that in 1951, he said, by helping to send Peter to New Zealand to win the 1951 NZ Open before going on to England and eventual golfing glory.

Andrew’s presentation as engaging and entertaining ensuring a thoroughly enjoyable evening.

The Golf Society thanks the Commonwealth Golf for their wonderful hospitality.

John Trevorrow

 

 

Membership database -available online

By 2025, Home News, Uncategorized

Dear Members,

Over the past 12 months the Society has been developing an online database with member access.

It is pleasing to let you know that this is now complete.

Members will be able to log into the website and update their contact details when required.

I have attached two documents which will guide through the process.

The documents should be used in the following order:

  1. Instructions_Login_Golf Society
  2. Instructions Member details Golf Society

Having an up-to-date database will improve our administrative and communication efficiencies, so we kindly encourage you to login and add your details

If it is your first time to our website, please take the time to browse through pages.

Please note this member database is for your personal use and cannot be viewed by another member or publicly

Should you have any difficulty please do not hesitate to make contact.

https://golfsocietyaust.com/wp-content/uploads/Instructions_Log-in_Golf-Society-Website.docx.pdf

https://golfsocietyaust.com/wp-content/uploads/Instructions_Member-details_Golf-Society-Website.pdf

Stella Cugley
Secretary
Golf Society of Australia
E: info@golfsocietyaust.com
M: +61 408 364 864

Upcoming Hickory Events-Victorian & Australian Hickory Shaft Championships

By 2025, Home News, Events

To all our Hickory players please find details for

Victorian Hickory Shaft Championships – 21-23 July – Yarrawonga Mulwala Golf Resort 

Registrations are now open

2025-Victorian-Hickory-Shaft-Championships-21-23-July

 

Australian Hickory Shaft Championships – 12-14th October – South Australia

Registration for the 2025 Australian Hickory Shaft Championships is now open via the following website: Click on link

https://fleurieuhickorygolfers.org/AHSC_Home.html

Places are limited, and many expressions of interest in playing have been received. Therefore, we suggest you register soon.

Andrew Baker | Fleurieu Hickory Golfers | PO Box 63, Yankalilla SA 5203 Australia | +61 (0) 412 990 356 | fleurieuhickorygolfers.org

 

 

Golf Historians Forum – Kingston Heath GC – Monday 5th May

By 2025, Home News
More Info here

Dear Members

Please find attached an invitation to the first Historians Forum for 2025.

https://golfsocietyaust.com/wp-content/uploads/INVIT_Forum_Kingston-Heath-25_05_05.pdf

The forum will be held at Kingston Heath Golf Club and will highlight the recently launched ‘The Test of Time’ book which celebrates the 100-year anniversary of the Club.

There will also be an opportunity to play the Furrows – the 9-hole short course at Kingston Heath.

Below is a selection of panels that were on display

More Info here

Don Lawrence Trophy -Woodlands GC – Event report

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Don Lawrence Trophy report

The 30th running of the Society’s Don Lawrence Trophy was held in delightful afternoon weather at Woodlands GC on 22nd April. A field of 32 players competed in 4BBB Stableford for the trophy, inaugurated in 1996 to honour Don Lawrence, an esteemed golf journalist, foundation member and past President of the Golf Society.
Players included GSA members and guests. After 18 holes of golf, players gathered in Woodlands’ member’s bar. Guest Judy Bull from Commonwealth GC spoke of her memories of Don and his great contribution to golf journalism in the daily newspapers in Melbourne over several decades. Don specialised in covering golf and tennis, first for The Age and later for The Herald.
Judy recalled the Marrum Cup meeting at Barwon Heads in 1973 where Don and his fellow “Gang of 3” journalists – Peg McMahon of The Age and Di Gatehouse of The Sun – reported on the golf and joined in the social events surrounding this historic team’s event for amateur women golfers. Judy said Don was among the first to join an after-golf trip on Bettine Burgess’s boat to go fishing for flathead.
The Woodlands event was organised by GSA committee member Marty Maguire, who thanked competitors and Woodlands GC for the club’s hospitality.
Trophy winners: John Mann & Simon Hibbins (41 pts c/b)
Runners-up: Mango Maguire & Marty Maguire (41 pts)
Best member and guest: Andrew Thomson & Richard Briggs (44 pts)
Best front 9: Thomson & Briggs (22pts c/b)
Best back 9: Rod Hiscox & Bruce Sutherland (22 pts c/b)
NTPs:  John Kelly, Sam Forsyth
Long drives: Stella Cugley, Paul Ansell

 

This event honours the great Don Lawrence an Inaugural committee member and Past President of the Golf Society

For more about Don’s significant career click the link below

https://golfsocietyaust.com/wp-content/uploads/about-Don-Lawrence.pdf

 

2024 Winners:  Sam Forsyth and Ben Jarvis

 

Don Lawrence Trophy winners John Mann and Simon Hibbins with Marty Maguire

Runners Up Mango and Marty Maguire

Dinner report – Wednesday 26th February – Metropolitan GC

By 2025, Home News

2025 is here and we opened the Society’s calendar with a dinner at Metropolitan Golf Club

Our guest speaker was world No 1 Senior Women’s Amateur Champion & Victorian Nadene Gole

Lyn Swinburne Past President of Royal Melbourne Golf Club kindly agreed to conduct Q& A interview with Nadene.

Thanks to John Trevorrow for this report –

The first GSA dinner event for 2025 was a fascinating conversation with a Melbourne woman who went back to top-level competitive golf after a 20-year break and is now the World Number 1 ranked senior women’s amateur in the world.

Nadene Gole held the audience spellbound as she told how she won the world’s two most prized senior women’s amateur events within the space of nine dramatic weeks in 2024.

The format for the dinner at Metropolitan Golf Club was a Q&A conversation between Nadene and Lyn Swinburne, former president of Royal Melbourne GC, in front of a dinner audience of more than 70 GSA members and guests.

Nadene is now 56 and recounted growing up in Traralgon in the Latrobe Valley and taking up golf while in high school. Golf tuition as a schoolgirl was just 50 cents a lesson. By her 20s, she was good enough to turn pro and she competed for several years on the Japanese and European tours, winning the Danish Women’s Open in 1996.

She took a 20-year break from top-level golf when children came along. (They are now aged 26 and 23). Nadene played little golf until deciding to join Victoria Golf Club in 2014, and regained her amateur status in 2019. She then began playing pennant golf, and in 2022 her competitive nature re-surfaced and she threw herself into a serious crack at senior (over-50) women’s amateur golf.

In 2023, Nadene swept the field in Australia, winning all six women’s senior amateur state titles and the Australian national senior title. In 2024, international invitations arrived, and she became the first Australian woman to win the R&A Senior Women’s and the USGA Senior Women’s amateur titles.

Her R&A Senior Women’s Amateur Championship victory came at Saunton GC in Devon, England, last July where she prevailed on the second hole of a playoff after 72 holes of stroke play. Her caddie was her husband Sam, who she also described as her “mental coach”.

Nadene stunned the audience by recounting how Sam suddenly became seriously ill about a week after arriving home in Melbourne from the UK. He went to hospital where sepsis was diagnosed, and he was within 12 to 18 hours of dying. Fortunately, Sam has almost fully recovered from his near-death experience.

In September, just nine weeks after her R&A victory, Nadene travelled to the US to compete in the US Senior Women’s Amateur at Broadmoor Golf Club in Seattle. It is a gruelling event involving 10 rounds of golf in 8 days to make the final. She won 3&2 on the 16th green in the final against Canadian Shelly Stouffer.

Nadene was asked about the most important attributes for her success, and she said the key for her was resilience, performance and belief. Her golf journey is continuing, and the latest milestone is being selected to represent Australia in the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific championship. Nadene at 56 is the oldest competitor among 95 women who will tee up at Hoiana Shores Golf Club in Vietnam.

“My two children didn’t even know that I played pro golf. And now their Mum has been picked to play for Australia, they think it’s pretty cool,” Nadene laughed.

The Golf Society thanks Nadene Gole and Lyn Swinburne for their time in a delightful dinner conversation, and the staff at Metropolitan GC for the presentation of the evening.

  Nadene with her US Women’s Senior Amateur trophy