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The Butten Boy
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Episode.4: Ernest Butten came late to golf. An innovator by nature and an entrepreneur by trade, he did not even take up the game until he was 60 years old. Butten watched British golf with growing frustration. The Open Championship, the very tournament born on British soil, seemed increasingly dominated by American players. To him, this was not a matter of talent but of preparation. Given the right coaching, time, and facilities, he believed British golfers could once again stand at the summit of the game. 

 

In 1963, determined to turn conviction into action, Butten decided to invest his own considerable resources into an ambitious experiment. He selected four young players who showed exceptional promise. His vision was bold: create an elite training environment unlike anything British golf had seen before. And so, almost quietly at first, the “Butten Boys” were born — a small group carrying the hopes of a man who believed champions could be made as well as discovered. Among them was Jim McAlister, one of the original boys, and this is his story.

 

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