April 22 2013

11:05 AM

Nicklaus, Player team up in Savannah

Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus are partners in this week's Champions Tour event in Savannah, Ga. (Squire/Getty Images)

 

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Click here for latest scores from the Demaret Division at Liberty Mutual Insurance Legends of Golf

By PGATOUR.COM staff

Jack Nicklaus made 594 starts on the PGA TOUR during his illustrious career, and another 84 starts in Champions Tour events. He seemingly has played in every golfing community in America ... except for Savannah, Ga.

This week, he gets to cross that city off the list, as he teams up with another legend, Gary Player, to participate in the Liberty Mutual Insurance Legends of Golf.

Nicklaus and Player are paired in the Demaret Division two-man team competition that takes place Monday and Tuesday at the Club at Savannah Harbor.

"I have no history of playing in Savannah, and I have no expectations," Nicklaus said during Masters week, prior to joining Player and Arnold Palmer for the ceremonial opening tee shot.

Player is usually paired with Bob Charles, but last year Charles couldn't make it. So Player partnered with Simon Hobday. When Nicklaus heard about the switch, he told Player, "I wish you'd asked me. ... I would love to play with you."

Player replied, "Well, you'll play next year."

As he finished recalling the story, Nicklaus added with a laugh, "I should have kept my mouth shut."

That's because Nicklaus hadn't played golf in a month and said that he's "not taking a golf tournament serious. I don't play golf anymore. I play occasionally if I have to."

But he added, "Gary and I will have a good time. We'll have fun."

Player has a different outlook. He's focused on winning.

Player and Charles won the Demaret Division twice; last year, he and Hobday finished fifth, six strokes behind winners Gibby Gilbert and J.C. Snead.

"I'm very happy to play with Jack," Player said. "Obviously we've gone up together and have a lot of respect for each other, but I'm not doing it for fun. I want to win."

MORE LIBERTY MUTUAL: All teams this week | Complete coverage

MONDAY TEE TIMES - Demaret Division

Tee time Team Team
11 a.m. ET Gibby Gilbert/J.C. Snead Jim Albus/Jim Dent
11:10 a.m. ET Jack Nicklaus/Gary Player Mike Hill/Lee Trevino
11:20 a.m. ET Bruce Devlin/Larry Mowry Charles Coody/Dale Douglass
11:30 a.m. ET Butch Baird/Larry Laoretti Don Bies/Tom Shaw
11:40 a.m. ET Jim Colbert/Bob Murphy Al Geiberger/Jimmy Powell
11:50 a.m. ET Frank Beard/Larry Ziegler Don January/Gene Littler
Noon ET Miller Barber/Jim Ferree Homero Blancas/Bobby Nichols
12:10 p.m. ET Tommy Aaron/Lou Graham Tommy Jacobs/Johnny Pott
12:20 p.m. ET Dow Finsterwald/Bob Goalby Jack Fleck/Bob Toski
12:30 p.m. ET Doug Ford/Billy Maxwell Billy Casper/Ken Still
12:40 p.m. ET Lee Elder/Doug Sanders Fred Hawkins/Howie Johnson

January 21 2013

2:45 PM

Discuss: Jack Nicklaus turns 73

Nicklaus won 73 times in his career on the PGA TOUR. (Carroll/Getty Images)

Jack Nicklaus turned 73 on Monday. He has the same number of career victories on the PGA TOUR, which ranks third all-time behind only Tiger Woods and Sam Snead.

What is your favorite memory of Nicklaus?

Share your thoughts and wish him a happy birthday below.

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January 15 2013

9:16 PM

Wilson scores big with Nicklaus

By Helen Ross, PGATOUR.COM

LA QUINTA, Calif. -- Mark Wilson has set the bar high.

He and his wife Amy, who is president of the PGA TOUR Wives Association, recently started a lectureship series at Indiana. Amy, who is a 1999 graduate of Indiana's Kelley School of Business, remembers attending free lectures when she was a student there and a member of Delta Gamma sorority.

So first, Mark put together the Spikes for Speakers Golf Classic Pro-Am, which was held on the IU championship course. Among the 12 pros participating were former Hoosiers Jeff Overton, Shaun Micheel and Stephen Wheatcroft. The event raised $100,000 to endow the lectureship series.

Then Wilson brought in the really big guns -- asking Jack Nicklaus to be the first speaker. All Nicklaus wanted in return was to try to raise some more money for charity so a dinner was arranged prior to his lecture that raised $75,000 for The First Tee of Central Indiana.

"We had just a really fun evening," Wilson said. "He was there with us for probably five hours. And I kept saying over and over, 'Thank you. Thank you so much.  I know these are so tough to do and we really appreciate it.' And he find finally looked at me and said, 'It's okay. It's okay, Mark. I enjoy doing this for you guys.'
 
"I think at the stage of his career he's, what, 73 years old now? He probably enjoys reminiscing, because they're going to ask him about his accomplishments and he can candidly talk about them-- instead of personally I know I have to go tee it up in a couple days, so I'm not going to share everything with you guys that I'm working on. Whereas, he's done with his career basically, in terms of competitive golf, so now he can just kind of relive all the fun moments.
 
"And I think that's what I saw in him that day. He soaked it up and he loved talking about golf and trying to pass along some advice to the young people at Indiana University."

Wilson acknowledged Nicklaus would be a tough act to follow. Someone suggested the defending champ of the Humana Challenge in partnership with the Clinton Foundation need only look as far as the tournament host and former president for next year's coup.

"There you go," Wilson said with a big grin.


September 20 2012

6:33 PM

Nicklaus: Tiger has ‘lot of wins’ left

Greg Norman created quite a stir earlier this week when he told FoxSports.com that he felt Tiger Woods was "really intimidated" by Rory McIlroy, the 23-year-old Northern Irishman with four wins this season.

The two players, who have a friendly rivalry, played down those comments on Wednesday on the eve of the TOUR Championship by Coca-Cola, where they are playing together in today's first round. The subject also came up during an interview Jack Nicklaus did on ESPN 980 in Washington, D.C.

“Quiet Greg, quiet," Nicklaus said. "Down boy. I think Tiger had a pretty darn good year this year. It’s the first time he has gotten himself back into contention in the majors, he didn’t finish them and I think by his own admission he said he had a hard time finishing them. That’s like anything else. He had a pretty big event in his life that changed a lot of things and he has to learn how to go back and play again. I think he’s learned how to play again, now he has to learn how to finish again. I think Tiger has a lot of wins left in him."

At the same time, though, Nicklaus went on to say that Woods has more competition than he once did. The Golden Bear noted that players like McIlroy and Keegan Bradley -- "and I could probably name a half dozen other guys," he said -- learned to win while Woods was injured and later revamping his swing. 

"They’re not scared of him anymore," Nicklaus said. "Before Tiger just showed up coming down the stretch and everybody said ‘oh there’s Tiger and I wilt.’ They don’t do that anymore. Tiger’s got his work cut out for him but I don’t think Tiger is by any means finished. I just think Tiger is too good of an athlete and too good of a player.”


July 11 2012

8:47 PM

Nicklaus and Federer: First meeting

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Getty/ATP World Tour
No players in their respective sports have won more big events than Jack Nicklaus and Roger Federer.

No golfer has won more professional majors than Jack Nicklaus, who has 18. No tennis player has won more Grand Slam events than Roger Federer, who has 17.

The two legends, arguably the best ever in their respective sports, finally met for the first time last week at Wimbledon, prior to Federer winning his seventh title in England.

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July 3 2012

9:00 PM

Watson on 82 wins vs. 18 majors

Interview: Tom Watson

Prior to the 2012 Greenbrier Classic, Tom Watson meets with the media and talks about The Greenbrier.

By Brian Wacker, PGATOUR.COM

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va. -- Tom Watson knows a little something about history.

He won 39 times on the PGA TOUR, including eight major championships, and another 14 times on the Champions Tour.

Given that resume, there are few players who can assess the careers of Tiger Woods an the late Sam Snead better than the man who’s played with and against both.

Woods has 14 career major championships, which puts him four shy of Jack NIcklaus’ record. Woods also has 74 career wins on the PGA TOUR, second all-time to Snead’s 82.

So which is the more impressive record?

“They're two separate animals,” Watson said. "The importance you put on the majors make that record probably the most important record, but the way I look at it, how many times have you won and have you won majors.”

Woods has won three times this season. None of those were majors, however. His last victory in a major came at the 2008 U.S. Open.

The last time Woods won at Bay Hill, Muirfield Village and Congressional in the same year, 2009, he went on to record six victories that season. Again, however, none at a major championship.

“It's how many tournaments you win,” Watson said. “Look at the majors, the last nine majors won by first-timers. Golf goes through cycles. You had the dominance of Woods for all these years, the resurgence of Woods now. When I look back at somebody's record, I'll say, first of all, how many tournaments did they win. That's number one. Did they win more than 20 tournaments? Then I'll say how many majors did they win, did they win more than three or four majors? Then that puts them up in the great category.”

Woods, of course, has done both, and if he keeps playing the way he has this season, he might surpass both records, too.


June 13 2012

5:50 PM

USGA to name medal after Nicklaus

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Carroll/Gettu Images
Jack Nicklaus counts four U.S. Opens among his 18 professional major titles.
By Helen Ross, PGATOUR.COM SAN FRANCISCO -- In honor of Jack Nicklaus' career and his four U.S. Open championships, the USGA announced Wednesday that it will name the gold medal that goes to the winner after the legendary pro. In addition, the organization is going to expand its museum in Far Hills, N.J., to include a Jack Nicklaus room dedicated to the 71 USGA events he played, starting with the 1953 U.S. Junior when he was just 13. There are already rooms honoring Ben Hogan, Bobby Jones and Arnold Palmer, and the USGA recently announced similar plans for one to commemorate the career of Mickey Wright. "Well, kind of neat, isn't it?" Nicklaus said, smiling. "Take an old guy and honor him. I think that's pretty nice.  It's pretty humbling and meaningful, these honors, both the medal and the museum. I appreciate that." Nicklaus, who played in a record 44 U.S. Opens, picked up his first victory as a pro in 1962 at Oakmont when he beat Palmer, the hometown favorite, in an 18-hole playoff. He went on to win the U.S. Open three more times, finish second on four occasions, post 11 top-five finishes and 18 top-10s, the latter two of which are records. Nicklaus ended his career with a record 18 majors, including six Masters, five PGA Championships and three British Opens. He won 73 PGA TOUR titles, a number tied two weeks ago by Tiger Woods at Nicklaus' own Memorial Tournament, to rank second all-time. In conjunction with the 50th anniversary of that first win, NBC will air a documentary titled "1962 U.S. Open: Jack's First Major" at 2 p.m. ET prior to the final round coverage of the 112th renewal of the national championship.  Nicklaus' final major victory came at the age of 46 when he won for the sixth time at Augusta National. "Well, they're just a couple of years apart," Nicklaus said when asked to contrast the two milestones. "One, I was a young kid and the other I was an old man  -- 46, an old man. I'd like to run back to 46. I'd just like to be able to run, actually." Nicklaus chuckled, as did his audience, before reflecting further. He'd finished second and tied for fourth in his two previous U.S. Opens and already the love affair with USGA tests was being solidified. In addition, he had three second-place finishes on TOUR that year, including the previous week at the Thunderbird Open, so he went to Oakmont with confidence. "I didn't realize, and I'm a young 22-year-old kid, I had no idea that Arnold Palmer lived anywhere near there or anything else about Arnold," Nicklaus said. "Arnold was a friend and we'd played a lot of golf together, but ... a 22-year0old doesn't have much of a brain anyway, sort of goes along and whatever happens, happens. "And all of a sudden, 20 years later, you look back on it and say, wow. That's sort of what I did. Looking back on it you go back and say, wow, that was pretty special. I guess I'd learned how to win a golf tournament by then. Or I did learn how to win a golf tournament that week. But … it was a learning process for me. "In '86 when I won the Masters, you know, I was basically beyond my career. And nobody thought I could win the golf tournament, including me. And getting myself in contention, I remembered how to play. I remembered how to win a golf tournament. And that was unbelievably exciting, to be able to come down and be able to, at 46, control your emotions, control your golf club and your golf ball enough to enable you to compete against the best in the world, which you hadn't competed well against for a couple of years. That was pretty thrilling. "So there are two totally different things.  One is you've got this young kid growing up and trying to figure out how to become a player. And the other one is you've got this older guy who has forgotten how to become a player and trying to remember again. It's totally opposite."
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May 30 2012

5:54 PM

Nicklaus on Bubba, Tiger and Arnold

Interview: Jack Nicklaus

The host of the Memorial meets the media during his traditional Wednesday news conference.

DUBLIN, Ohio -- As he does prior to every Memorial Tournament, Jack Nicklaus held an engaging interview session for the media on Wednesday. Among the topics were clip-on ties, the 1962 U.S. Open, Bubba Watson, slow play and family. Here are some of the highlights.

ON BUBBA WATSON: "He's got, to put it mildly, a rather unique golf swing, and I think that's to his credit, which is to me what the game is all about, is learning who you are and what you are and what you do. You know, people criticize Furyk for his golf swing, but Jim knows what he does and how he does it.  You look at some other golf swings and you see what you think is a perfect golf swing, but sometimes they don't know what they're doing with it. Bubba knows what he's doing with his golf club. He had to learn that. He had to learn how to do that. I think that's what's so unique about it and what's so good about it.’

ON SWING INSTRUCTORS: "When I was 19, Bobby Jones invited me down to his cabin at the Masters. My father and I went down. ... He said I had my seven lean years, and he said, every time I'd play, I'd run back to Stewart Maiden, who was his teacher, and get a lesson for the problems I was having, and so forth and so on. He said, it wasn't until I learned that I didn't need to run back to Sterling or didn't want to run back to Sterling that I became a golfer. ... Jack Grout taught me from the start. He said I need to be responsible for my own swing and understand when I have problems on the golf course how I can correct those problems on the golf course myself without having to run back to somebody. And during the years that I was playing most of my competitive golf, I saw Jack Grout maybe once or twice a year for maybe an hour. If I was in the Miami area or something, I'd run down and see Jack and we'd spend about an hour and we'd spend five minutes on the golf swing and an hour catching up. But he taught me young the fundamentals of the game.  He taught me how to assess what I was doing. When I made a mistake, when I was doing things, how do you on the golf course fix that without putting yourself out of a golf tournament and then teaching yourself. You've heard me say in many press conferences, I'm not hesitant to change my golf swing in the fourth round of the U.S. Open or the Masters midway in the round if I didn't like what I was doing, because I felt like if I didn't like what I was doing, pretty soon it was going to get me."

ON TIGER WOODS' SWING: "I sat with Arnold over here and I had Tiger over here at the Masters dinner this year, and Arnold and I, I can't remember what we were talking about because Arnold couldn't hear me, I guess, but we had a great time. We kid each other constantly, so we have a good time. And then Tiger over here ... I was asking him, Why do you need somebody to watch you all the time? He said, I really don't.  He said, I go to Sean and I get some ideas, but then I really go work on it myself and try to learn what I want to do and how I want to do it, which I think is the right way. I said, If you're doing that, you're on the right track, but all I read in the papers is how Sean is making a swing change on you. He said, That's not what I'm doing. I said, Okay, that's fine then, because he's trying to be responsible for himself."

ON THE 1962 U.S. OPEN AT OAKMONT: “Going to Oakmont it sounds funny, may sound ridiculous to all of you, but I didn't know who Arnold Palmer was for all intents and purposes. I didn't mean it that way, but what I mean is that all I had to do was worry about myself. I wasn't worried about Arnold or Gary or whoever might be there. I was interested because I felt like I really had the chance to win those two previous (Opens), and I had just finished second the week before to (Gene) Littler at Thunderbird and I was really playing well and I was charged up to play, and that was my sole thought was that this was my week. All of a sudden I found out I was in Arnold Palmer's backyard, but I found that out a couple weeks later after the tournament was over because I didn't pay attention to it while I was there. I don't know if you understand that, but that's what a 22-year-old kid thinks like. Maybe even a 16-year-old kid."


May 28 2012

3:59 PM

Live interview schedule: Memorial

Note: All interviews will be streamed live on PGATOUR.COM. Tuesday, May 29 12:30 p.m. ET: ET: Branden Grace 1 p.m. ET: Bubba Watson 2:30 p.m. ET: Dustin Johnson 3:30 p.m. ET: PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem Wednesday, May 30 11 a.m. ET: Jack Nicklaus Following 8:30 a.m. pro-am: Luke Donald Following 8:30 a.m. pro-am: Steve Stricker Following 8:30 a.m. pro-am: Rickie Fowler

April 17 2012

1:43 PM

Congratulate Nicklaus

The House has voted to bestow the Congressional Gold Medal on golfing great Jack Nicklaus. Nicklaus was cited for his golfing achievements, including a record 18 major championships, and his humanitarian work. Nicklaus heads the Nicklaus Children's Health Care Foundation and has raised more than $12 million to support pediatric health services. The Congressional Gold Medal is awarded to prominent military leaders, public servants, athletes and artists. It was last given in 2010 to Japanese-American World War II veterans. Rep. Joe Baca, D-Calif., sponsored the bill. Read more here Leave your congratulations for Nicklaus in the comments section below.
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