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Golfer Bill Spiller Posted: Thursday,
March 11, 2004 |
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BRISTOL, CT.--- A few
weeks back in our BASN History Focus, we told you the story of
African American golfing legend John Shippen. We sneak back on
the fairways and tell you the story of Bill Spiller.
Born on October 25, 1913 in Tishomingo,
Oklahoma, Spiller moved to Tulsa as a nine-year-old to live with
his father and quickly learned the drawbacks of being black in
America.
One day, he went to a sto
However, golf was not one of them.
He didn't take up the game in earnest
until he was almost 30, but quickly became one of the top black
players in Southern California, where he had moved to live with
his mother after earning enough college credits to obtain a teaching
certificate in the state of Texas. He pieced together a game based
on the swings of his favorite PGA Tour stars.
By the mid-1940s, Spiller had won several
Black amateur tournaments in Southern California and felt ready
for bigger challenges. He played against the best African-American
players in the Joe Louis Invitational at Rackham GC in Detroit
and the nation's best pros in the Los Angeles Open and Tam O'Shanter
in Chicago, two PGA Tour events open to Blacks.
He befriended several white players,
including Lawson Little, and Jimmy Demaret who helped convince
CC president George S. May to invite Black players to his tournament.
In 1947, Spiller turned pro and toured the UGA with boxer Joe
Louis, among others. The competition forced him to take a reality
check. One day Spiller hustled Louis out of $7,000 in a showdown
that started at dawn and didn't conclude until it was too dark
for the pair to see each other.
He bought a small house with his winnings.
Peace of mind, however, would prove more expensive and elusive.
Spiller desperately sought to earn a living playing golf professionally
and that meant eschewing the paltry purses of the Black golf tour
for the more lucrative PGA circuit.
Only one thing stood in his way; the
PGA's exclusionary Caucasian-only clause. Spiller shot a 68 to
tie Ben Hogan for second place after the first round of the Los
Angeles Open at the Riviera Country Club in 1948. Although he
faltered and eventually finished 20 shots behind the victorious
Hogan, Spiller finished in the top 60, making him eligible for
the next PGA tournament, the Richmond Open outside Oakland.
However, when he showed up to play, PGA
Tour official George Schneiter enforced the White-only clause
and turned them away. It wasn't until four years later that Spiller
and his fellow outcasts, led by Louis, were able to deliver the
first effective blow to the PGA and its policy.
It came at the San Diego Open, where
tour officials refused entry to Spiller and another African-American
pro named Eural Clark. Louis was allowed to play after the PGA
was the subject of several critical reports by Walter Winchell
in a national radio broadcast that exposed the tour's racial bias
even toward a war veteran. Louis' tenacity forced a vote later
that week by the PGA Tournament Committee that resulted in a rule
change.
Essentially, African-Americans could
not be kept out of a tournament if they received one of the 10
sponsor exemptions or earned one of 10 spots in the field through
open qualifying. However, the association refused to budge on
the matter of allowing them to hold PGA Tour membership.
Spiller's lack of success in the PGA
Tour events in which he was allowed to compete (his best finish
was a 14th place at the Labatt Open in Canada) forced him to turn
to other means of supporting his family. He hustled golf lessons
and caddied at Hillcrest Country Club. That would hurt him collectively
more than anything else.
Later in life, when confined to a convalescent
home after suffering two strokes and being diagnosed with Parkinson's
disease, Spiller would clutch the faded newspaper clippings detailing
his protests in the clubhouses and exploits on the course.
Tragically, Bill Spiller died in 1988.
While Spiller's name is mentioned among some of the game's greats,
he should still be remembered as one of the many black pioneers
that paved the way for Charlie Sifford, Lee Elder, Calvin Peete,
and many others long before the phenomenon from California known
as Eldrick "Tiger" Woods
NOTE: The African-American Registry contributed
to this story.
Anthony McClean is a Researcher/Reporter/Writer
for ESPN and Black Athlete Sports Network. You can also hear
his sports commentaries every Saturday morning at 11:00 a.m. on
"Sport Talk" on WCLM-AM 1450 in Richmond, Virginia (www.wclmradio.com).
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