“Amateur golf will never see his like again.”
—Fred Ridley, Chairman, Augusta National Golf Club, Walker Cup Captain, 1987-89
At a black-tie gala in June 1988, Golf Magazine assembled the “100 Heroes of American Golf” in the grand ballroom of New York’s Waldorf Astoria. Among the legends making a rare public appearance was Ben Hogan. He was joined by Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Sam Snead, and many of the most celebrated figures in the men’s and women’s game.
Only two amateurs were in attendance, as the early legends like Bobby Jones, Francis Ouimet, and Chick Evans had long since passed away. Bill Campbell, past his competitive prime, was acknowledged for his USGA administrative leadership. The other amateur—still very much a force whenever he teed it up—was five-time national champion Jay Sigel, fresh off his third U.S. Mid-Amateur title just eight months earlier.
Perhaps the most striking aspect of the 44-year-old Sigel’s inclusion among the “100 Heroes of American Golf” was how much of his story was still ahead of him. In the years that followed, he added more championships, represented the United States on three additional Walker Cup teams, and eventually turned professional at age 50—setting Champions Tour records that endure to this day.
Sigel’s path to the Waldorf Astoria that night had once pointed toward a professional career. As the first recipient of the Arnold Palmer Scholarship at Wake Forest University, he seemed destined for stardom on the PGA Tour. But everything changed in an instant when an accident at school left him with a severely damaged hand and wrist. The injury reshaped his life and ambitions, a moment he would later describe as a “blessing in disguise.”
In this gripping memoir, Sigel brings readers along on his climb back—through the pressure, the pain, the heartbreaks, and the triumphs. His remarkable amateur career was built in the margins of a full life. For nearly half of every year, he put his clubs away to focus on the insurance business he built and the family he cherished. His victories were not the product of unlimited practice, but of extraordinary discipline, competitive fire, and an uncommon ability to rise to the moment.
Sigel’s journey also mirrors the transformation of amateur golf in the latter half of the 20th century, as the era of lifelong amateurs gave way to college stars preparing for the PGA Tour. Others would win national or regional titles after him, but no one dominated with his consistency or longevity. As Augusta National Chairman Fred Ridley observed, “We will never see his like again.”