Synopsis
Colin Montgomerie has been Europe's No.1 golfer for the last eight years
in succession, an unparalleled achievement in the professional era. He is
universally regarded as the best player never to win a major title, twice
losing in play-offs. Born in Scotland in a keen golfing family, Colin showed
exceptional promise while still a small boy. His family insisted he complete
his education, so he took a management degree in the USA before turning
professional in 1986.
In his early years he was as famous for his fiery temperament as for his
play, culminating in a watershed incident in which he threatened a spectator
who coughed during his backswing. Determined to conquer his emotions, Montgomerie
concentrated on improving his game, with spectacular results. His new found
self-control stood him in good stead, particularly in the 1999 Ryder Cup,
where he withstood constant abuse from American fans, and went on to defeat
his close friend Payne Stewart on the 18th green, hours before the American
was killed in a bizarre plane crash.
Montgomerie's autobiography is the story of a prodigious talent, a hothead
who reformed his ways. It is about the most famous golfer in the world who
has never won a major, but who is determined to do so. And it is about the
hero of the most controversial and charged Ryder Cup in history. |