Dr Frank Stableford

Dr Frank Barney Gorton Stableford gave
his name to the most popular points
scoring system ever to be adopted.
He was an excellent golfer and with a
handicap of plus 1 in 1907 he won the
club championship at Royal Porthcawl.
Earlier he had served as a surgeon in
the Royal Army Medical Corps, and
spent some years in South Africa.
His medical career brought him to
Wallasey and he joined the golf club
in 1914. During the 1914-18 War he
served as a major with the RAMC. He
returned to Wallasey after the war,
and records of 1922 show that his
handicap had risen to 8.
His unique scoring method was born out
of frustration with the bogey system
of scoring at that time, where the
player played against the bogey (or
par) for the hole. The strong winds at
Wallasey made nonsense of this system
when players were unable to reach the
long par-4s in regulation.
Stableford had experimented with a
scoring system when briefly a member
of
Glamorganshire in 1898. He took the
scores from a normal bogey competition
and used a points system to identify
a 'winner', but the system
proved unsatisfactory and was not
repeated. It was only many years later
at Wallasey that he devised a formula
that worked. "I was practising on the
2nd
fairway at Wallasey Golf Club one day
in the latter part of 1931", he
said, "when the thought ran through my
mind that many players in competitions
got very little fun since they tore up
their cards after playing only a few
holes and I wondered if anything could
be done about it" The result was the
Stableford scoring system, and club
golfers have been indebted to the good
doctor ever since.
Wallasey held the first Stableford
competition on 16th May 1932, and it
was an instant success. As an
everlasting tribute to Dr Stableford,
Wallasey introduced "The Frank
Stableford Open Amateur Memorial
Trophy" in 1969. Of course, the event
is played as a stableford, and it has
become a major event in the amateur
golfing calendar.
Stableford's portrait by J.A.A.Berrie
hangs in the clubhouse, a reminder to
the members of the debt owed to the
club golfer's greatest benefactor.
"I doubt whether any single man did
more to increase the pleasure of the
more humble club golfer" (Henry
Longhurst)
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