| If one
simply looks at the record books, Jack Nicklaus
is the greatest golfer of all time. Maybe he is
anyway. He is certainly the most successful, in
no small part due to the intense thoroughness
with which he always prepares himself and the
sheer strength which in his prime enabled him to
strike the ball as if it were fired from a
bazooka. He hit the ball farther than his
contemporaries and higher than anyone ever has,
especially with the irons. He has unbeatable
tally of 20 major championships: two US Amateurs,
a record six Masters, a record-equalling four US
Opens and five US PGA Championships, and three
British Opens. He has thus collected at least
three each of professional golf's most important
titles. Nicklaus's tally of seven Opens matches
the mark set by Harry Vardon and Bobby Tones. It could be that the 20th of
his 20 majors was Nicklaus's finest hour, because
when he won the 1986 Masters by playing the last
10 holes in seven under par, he was, at 46,
regarded by many as over the hill. As remarkable
as the number of tournaments the 'Golden Bear'
has won is the frequency with which he has been
second or third. Above all, he has always put his
wife and family first while simultaneously
managing to maintain a balance between his golf
on the one hand and business commitments in club
and clothing manufacturing and golf course design
on the other. His work as a golf course architect
in particular, with courses of the calibre of
Muirfield Village and Glen Abbey to his name, has
established a fine reputation for himself in
another sphere of the game. Variety of life is
part of the reason for his longevity at the
highest level. His success has carried on to the
(over-50) US Senior tour, where he won on his
debut in 1990 and has regularly since - that is,
when he can be bothered to play in the 'minor
league'. Nicklaus is today regarded with
universal affection and respect.
It was not always so.
As an overweight, crew-cut kid who ousted Arnold
Palmer before the hero's reign had hardly begun,
he was subjected to ridicule and venom by overly
partisan spectators. The stoical manner in which
Jack Nicklaus accepted all that stamped him as a
man apart, and stamped him also as a worthy heir
to Jones's reputation for graciousness and
sportsmanship.
|
 Nicklaus - a career that will
never be matched

A
fierce determination and peerless concentration
have made Nicklaus maybe the best golfer of all
time.
|