It’s probably best to clarify at the outset here – we can’t and will never know for sure how far Old Tom Morris would hit the modern golf ball with modern equipment. He’s been dead for 115 years and even if the likely-impossible happened and time travel became a thing, it’s unlikely scientists would use their new discovery to go back and see how far Old Tom Morris could hit a Callaway Elyte driver.
The following will then be largely conjecture, but it’s fun to speculate, isn’t it? Well, I think it is. So here we go.
Old Tom was obviously a great striker of the ball. You don’t win four Open Championships and countless money matches around the country without being able to give it a good skelp.
But, from the evidence we have, Tom wasn’t particularly renowned as a long hitter. He was more consistent and conservative than some of his contemporaries. Old Tom’s great rival Willie Park Snr was talked about as a more aggressive player than Tom. He swung harder and tried to generate more distance. He would generally outhit Old Tom.
Old Tom’s son Young Tommy Morris developed more of a reputation as a long hitter than his father during his tragically short career.
(Image credit: Getty Images)
Old Tom began his playing career using the “featherie” ball which the better players of the day could get to travel about 175 yards in normal conditions. He then moved on to the gutta percha “guttie” ball in the middle of the 19th century. It travelled a little further – more like 200 yards in standard conditions.
Golfing technique was significantly different in Old Tom’s playing days. Using wooden shafts and strangely designed weapons like Old Tom’s “driver putter” which he used to great effect on the links to win the 1867 Open, the players had to swing within themselves to keep control of the more flexible and less forgiving clubs.
That means Tom’s technique (as was) wouldn’t be optimal for getting the maximum out of modern equipment.
Also, the golf professional of the mid to late 19th century wasn’t focused on fitness like elite players of today. Old Tom didn’t spend two hours a day in the gym or practising yoga. On top of that, his golfing attire wasn’t exactly high performance. It’s quite difficult to make a full Rory McIlroy-style turn…
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