Top 19 Quotes & Sayings by Harry Vardon

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English athlete Harry Vardon.
Last updated on April 14, 2025.
Harry Vardon

Henry William Vardon was a professional golfer from Jersey. He was a member of the Great Triumvirate with John Henry Taylor and James Braid. Vardon won The Open Championship a record six times, and also won the 1900 U.S. Open.

I'm the best and I'll thank you to remember that.
More matches are lost through carelessness at the beginning than any other cause.
A great deal of unnecessarily bad golf is played in this world. — © Harry Vardon
A great deal of unnecessarily bad golf is played in this world.
Don't play too much golf. Two rounds a day are plenty.
To play well you must feel tranquil and at peace. I have never been troubled by nerves in golf because I felt I had nothing to lose and everything to gain.
If your opponent is playing several shots in vain attempts to extricate himself from a bunker, do not stand near him and audibly count his strokes. It would be justifiable homicide if he wound up his pitiable exhibition by applying his niblick to your head.
The most successful way to play golf is the easiest way.
No matter what happens, keep on hitting the ball.
For this game you need, above all things, to be in a tranquil frame of mind.
There are many ways of performing the operations successfully. I can claim, however, to be in a position to explain how not to putt. I think I know as well as anybody how not to do it.
Don't praise your own good shots. Leave that function to your partner who, if a good sport, will not be slow in performing it.
Never concede the putt that beats you.
Moderation is essential in all things, madam, but never in my life have I failed to beat a teetotaller.
Never saw one worth a damn.
There are only two types of player-those who keep their nerves under control and win championships, and those who do not.
Even in our darkest hour we must remember; never dispair.
Do not be tempted to invest in a sample of each golfing invention as soon as it makes its appearance. If you do, you will only complicate and spoil your game - and encumber your locker with useless rubbish.
The advent of the rubber ball was instrumental in creating an entirely different method of striking the object. The solid ball required to be hit for carry, whereas it was quickly apparent that the Haskell lent itself to an enormous run. I hold the firm opinion that from this date the essential attitude towards accuracy was completely lost sight of. This was the start of the craze for length and still more length.
Golfers find it a very trying matter to turn at the waist, more particularly if they have a lot of waist to turn — © Harry Vardon
Golfers find it a very trying matter to turn at the waist, more particularly if they have a lot of waist to turn
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