My Shot: Tom Meeks

He's the best rules official in golf. Here's Tom Meeks' scorecard on life, signed and attested.

Tom Meeks

Tom Meeks, photographed April 2, 2004, in Far Hills, N.J


Interviewed By Guy Yocom
Photos By Darren Carroll June 2004

Tom Meeks • Age 63 • Annandale, New Jersey

At the players' dinner the night prior to the 1995 U.S. Amateur at Newport Country Club, I told the players to remember which golf course they were playing — we used two courses — and which tee they were going off of. The next day, wouldn't you know, a player from Montana shows up at the wrong course. An all-points-bulletin was put out, and when the player was notified, he caught a ride on the back of somebody's motorcycle and weaved through terrible traffic to get to the right course. Now, the year before, this fellow had missed qualifying by one stroke. It nearly broke his heart, but in '95 he made it. And when he finally got to the tee he was so late there was no choice but to disqualify him. He looked at me a long time and said, "Mr. Meeks, do you mind if I lie down here and cry for a minute?" And this grown man actually went to the corner of the tee, curled up and sobbed. It was all I could do to not go over and cry with him.

When a ruling goes contrary to what the player is hoping for, I always begin my announcement with, "I'm sorry, but ... " I mean it. In my heart I really am truly very sorry.

Charlie Yates at Augusta National tells of Bob Jones' dad being pressed into service as a rules official in one of the early years of the Masters. It had rained hard the night before the final round, and at the 12th hole a player requested relief from casual water. The Colonel asked him where he stood in the tournament. "Eighteen over," the player says. The Colonel says, "Hell, do anything you want," and walks away.

I started out as a casual, recreational golfer. I took up the game on a short nine-hole course in Lawrenceville, Ill., and like a lot of players I got used to moving the ball all over the place trying to find a good lie. When I was 25, I joined the men's club at a nine-hole public course in Noblesville, Ind. On the first hole of my first men's association event, I began raking my ball around. A guy in our group I'll never forget — his name was Bill McVey — came over and asked, "What are you doing?" I said, "Hell, I'm just trying to find a decent lie." He pointed his finger and said, "We don't touch it here." That was all he said. Bill McVey did a lot for me that day.

If a course is soft so balls will pick up mud, the PGA Tour will often adopt a local rule allowing lift, clean and place. That will never happen at a U.S. Open. We'd rather not play. You can't identify a champion by permitting wholesale relief all the way around the course. The late rules official Buddy Young said it best: Playing golf with the ball "up" is like playing tennis with the net down.

I was in charge of determining the hole locations at the Olympic Club for the 1998 U.S. Open. The 18th green at Olympic is small, but I was determined to use four distinct hole locations — front-right, front-left, back-right and back-left. It's traditional to do that, but the back-left location was very dicey. The slope there is severe, especially when the greens are running fast. The late P.J. Boatwright used the back-left hole location in 1987 and barely got away with it. Eleven years later it was even more slippery. When we cut the back-left hole on Friday morning I was very nervous, but I figured the grass would grow as the day went along and slow the green enough to make the hole location feasible. Well, it didn't grow fast enough. When the first group came through, I knew I was in trouble. Later that day Payne Stewart three-putted from eight feet and wound up losing by one. Tom Lehman four-putted. It was a disaster. A U.S. Open course is supposed to be difficult, and sometimes hole locations are on the threshold of being too difficult. But I crossed the line. It was a terrible mistake on my part and made the whole USGA look bad. There aren't a lot of highs and lows in my job, but this was a huge low. I still think about it.

Payne's three-putt wasn't the only thing that upset him. At Olympic he also had trouble with sand-filled divots, and on the 12th hole on Sunday I gave him a bad time for slow play. He was upset, and the following spring we met in Orlando to discuss things — sand-filled divots, hole locations, slow-play warnings, everything. Payne suggested to me that sand-filled divots be declared ground under repair. I told him such a local rule wasn't going to happen, and suggested — good-naturedly — that he might practice from sand-filled divots once in a while. Payne looked at the horizon for a while; you could see his mind spinning as he considered it. Finally he looked at me and said, "You're crazy."

At the 1999 U.S. Open a couple of months later, Payne came to me early in the week and complained that the 16th hole, a par 5 we turned into a long par 4, was unreasonable. "That green was not designed to accept a shot with a long iron," he said. I said, "I'll make a deal with you: We'll move the tee back a little and play it as a par 5, if you promise me you won't go for the green in two. Why would you even try, if the green isn't designed to hold a long-iron shot?" Payne said, "You are impossible," and walked away.

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