Share: 

SuperMex

June 22, 2017

Buck started life with the odds against him. No one outside of his grandfather, who was a grave digger, and his mother who raised him in a three room shack without plumbing, cared about his future.

His father Joe had deserted the family when Buck was a baby and the world was a cold, hard place, as he soon learned when he started picking cotton at age five. Call it fate or luck, but Buck's dirt-poor yet loving home was located 100 yards from the seventh fairway at the Dallas Athletic Club.

His road to the Golf Hall of Fame had many twists and turns, but his uncle gets credit for starting young Buck on his journey. The simple gift of a few used golf balls and an old discarded club gave the youngster the incentive and motivation to take up the game - in secret. Since he had no money to join a golf club, and his family was beyond poor, Buck would sneak onto local golf courses around his home town of Dallas, Texas and practice developing his skills. He never once had a swing coach or instructor during his entire career.

At age fourteen, he quit school to work full time at the Dallas Athletic Club as a shoe shiner and caddie for the enormous sum of $30 per week. He would practice each day after work and hit hundreds of shots on the range and play the three holes for caddies behind the caddy shack.

He often earned extra income by playing and betting other caddies and local competitors on the golf course. (He once claimed in later years that he beat competitors on the course with only a shovel and a 32 ounce bottle of Dr. Pepper wrapped in tape.) At age seventeen, he joined the Marines and continued to play golf. He had a four-year enlistment, and among other duties played in Armed Forces Golf events in Asia. After his discharge from the Marines, he returned to Texas and became a head pro at an El Paso golf club and again supplemented his income by gambling for high stakes in head-to-head matches.

 

Who was this future Hall of Famer?

Lee Buck Trevino, the little-known golfer from Texas was first noticed when he played in the 1967 U.S. Open and came in fifth place; eight shots behind Jack Nicklaus. His paycheck for that victory was $6,000 and by the end of his first year on tour he had earned over $26,000 and was named Rookie of the Year by Golf Digest.

During his career, he won a total of 29 times on the PGA Tour. Although he never won the Masters, he did win six major championships, including the U.S. Open (1968, 1971), the Open Championship (1971, 1972) and the PGA Championship (1974, 1984). His playing style, as you know, was self-taught and he relied on a strong grip and open stance to combat a hook, which resulted in his trademark fade.

Growing up in poverty made him a strong person, but bad luck tested his character at least three separate times in his life. In 1975, he was struck by lightning at the Western Open and needed surgery to remove a damaged spinal disk. In his personal life, he also had bad luck in his investments and lost two separate fortunes on bad business ventures. The golf world and his fans nicknamed him SuperMex, for his showmanship on the course and his consistent wins around the globe. He was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1981.

 

19th Hole Trivia

• Lee Trevino has a major avenue named after him in El Paso, Texas.

• He played in the Ryder Cup six times with a 17-7-6, win, loss, half record.

• He won the Vardon Trophy six times for the lowest scoring average.

• Trevino had a cameo appearance in the 1996 movie Happy Gilmore.

• In 2000, Golf Digest named Trevino the 14th best golfer of all time.

• Trevino co-authored his autobiography, They Call Me SuperMex.

• Trevino boycotted the Masters in 1970, 1971 and 1974.

 
Tournament upcoming

The First Tee of Delaware is a youth development program that is dedicated to providing the core values of honesty, integrity, sportsmanship, respect, confidence, responsibility, perseverance, courtesy and judgement to all of the students in Sussex County and throughout Delaware through the sport of golf. The National First Tee Program is sponsored by the PGA and LPGA organizations on a national level and is implemented at the community level in Delaware through The First Tee of Delaware.

To support these programs The First Tee Delaware is sponsoring the second annual Delmarva Scramble Golf Tournament. Last year it was held at Bear Trap Dunes Golf Club. This year it will be held on Thursday, July 27 at the Heritage Shores Golf Club. Registration is $400 per foursome and the registration information can be found at www.thefirstteedelaware.org. July 20, 2017 is the deadline for tournament registration.

The First Tee of Delaware is also seeking sponsorships for the tournament to help maximize the fund raising efforts. If any business or organization is interested in either sponsoring a tee box (designated by a sign promoting your company) for $100 or donating a gift certificate for the tournament door prizes, please contact The First Tee of Delaware golf tournament coordinators Ty Spry at tspry5@msn.com or Steve Garner at stgarner@gmail.com by June 30, 2017. All donations are tax deductible.

Subscribe to the CapeGazette.com Daily Newsletter