Barber takes flight

Blayne Barber had two goals. He didn’t want to pass out. He didn’t want to have to dip into that canister of barf bags by his seat, either. “The people that (do these) throw up pretty regularly,â€� Barber explains. “So they have everything situated right there for you.â€� Turns out, he’s got a strong stomach. And Barber accomplished both goals that day in September when he went flying with the Blue Angels, the U.S. Navy’s acrobatic flight demonstration team. “It’s something I will never forget,â€� he says. Barber has always been interested in flying. His grandfather, Joe Shearer, served 27 years in the U.S. Air Force and Naval Reserve, retiring in 1975 as an E9 Master Sergeant. He enjoyed building and flying remote control airplanes, and Barber learned to love it, too. “I grew up being fascinated by airplanes and fighter planes,â€� he says. “I’ve seen the Thunderbirds (the Air Force’s demonstration squad) in person multiple times growing up and I think it’s just kind of something like, man that would be so cool to do. “I don’t really know if I actually thought I would ever get the chance. So to do that was definitely a dream fulfilled.â€� And as an added bonus, Shearer was on hand at the Naval Air Station in Pensacola, Florida, to see his grandson take off. “He never had the opportunity to fly in a fighter jet because he was more in civil engineering and kind of did stuff on the ground moreso,â€� Barber says. “so he was living vicariously through me a little bit.â€� Barber found out he was going to be able to go up in a VIP flight about two weeks before it happened. He admits he was pretty stressed in the days leading up to the one-in-a-lifetime experience. He was anxious and didn’t sleep well. “I knew it was going to be really intense but I didn’t know what to expect,â€� Barber says. “So I can definitely say I was nervous.â€� The pre-flight briefing probably wasn’t all that reassuring, either. The F/A-18 Hornet that he would be flying in was, after all, an active military aircraft that was about to all but defy gravity with Barber strapped into the back seat. “You go through what happens in the event the jet goes down and your ejection seat deploys and your parachute goes out,â€� Barber recalls. “And here are probably three or four different gauges that if you click them something bad’s going to happen — and they are right there around me in the back seat.â€� Once he got up in the air, though, Barber was hooked. He didn’t flinch when the plane flew upside down. Ditto for when it pulled up and headed straight into the air. The full loops and barrel and aileron rolls were icing on the cake. “It was just very physically intense.â€� Barber says. “… I never had too much motion sickness problems so I wasn’t super concerned about throwing up. But obviously, I’ve never been twirled around in the air at 10,000 feet. So, I didn’t know what to expect on that front. “Just the G forces and the force that is exerts on your body is the most intense thing. When we got done, I just felt like I had worked out. It’s very taxing.â€� The jet cruised at between 400-500 miles an hour. At one point, the plane even broke the sound barrier, which means it was flying in excess of 767 mph. “That was pretty cool,â€� Barber says. Throughout the flight, the pilot was in constant communication with Barber, making him feel comfortable about what was about to happen and explaining maneuver the plane was about to attempt. And let’s face it, Barber wouldn’t have been up there if he wasn’t keen on the experience. “He was like, are you ready to do this and I’d say, yes,â€� Barber says. “… He wasn’t going to go up there and just try to make me miserable which I appreciated. “He was explaining avionics and different things that were probably above my head but it made me feel like I was understanding everything that was happening more. It was neat that he kept me engaged.â€� Barber says he would go on another flight in a “heartbeatâ€� although he’s not sure that fun is the right word to describe the experience. “If you’re OK with an adrenaline rush and some crazy movement, then, yes (it is),â€� Barber says. The sheer power of the jet was almost overwhelming at times. “When you’re flying on a commercial airline you can only move so fast because it’s so heavy and there are so many people,â€� Barber says. “So just to feel that much intensity and to be able to change direction or change speed so quickly was really cool.â€� And what about the next time he steps into plane to head to a PGA TOUR stop? Will flying with the Blue Angels make the jaunt to places like San Diego or Phoenix or San Antonio seem like a breeze? “It will probably just make it boring,â€� Barber says.

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Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
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Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+900
Justin Thomas+1800
Collin Morikawa+2200
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Ludvig Aberg+2500
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
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AdventHealth Championship
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Kensei Hirata+2000
Mitchell Meissner+2200
SH Kim+2200
Neal Shipley+2500
Seungtaek Lee+2800
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Chandler Blanchet+3500
Pierceson Coody+3500
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Steve Stricker+650
Ernie Els+700
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Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
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US Open 2025
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Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
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Ludvig Aberg+1400
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The Open 2025
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Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
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USA-150
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Cypress trees claim first victim at PGA ChampionshipCypress trees claim first victim at PGA Championship

The golf gods giveth, the golf gods taketh away. Just four days after reclaiming his position as world No. 1 with a victory at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, Justin Thomas (1-over 71) lost his ball in a tree at the par-4 seventh hole at the 102nd PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Nine things to know about Harding Park | Woods opens with solid 68 Thomas was in the marquee group of the morning, with Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy, which started on the back nine. Thomas had double-bogeyed the third hole, but steadied himself with three straight pars to remain at even par as he stood on the seventh tee. He lost his tee shot right. Then he literally lost it. The ball soared into the lush greenery of a cypress tree, and lodged there. “It’s going to be a test, with the overhang of these cypress trees and the ball – there may be a couple lost balls here,” Woods said before the tournament. “Cut a corner and ball hangs up there, that could happen very easily here and has happened and I’m sure will this week as well.” It did. Thomas stood in the rough, looking forlornly up at the tree, recalling a similar moment in the first round of the 2014 John Deere Classic, when he also lost a ball in a tree. He later tweeted: Well, it wasn’t the last time. And it wasn’t funny this time, either. When his ball never came down at TPC Harding Park, Thomas was forced to trudge back to the tee and hit three. It was unlucky, and with the stiff penalty he made another double-bogey. He did well just to salvage a 71 with a birdie at the difficult ninth hole. McIlroy shot even-par 70, Woods 68. To Woods’ point, the incident was somewhat predictable. Lee Janzen saw his ball get stuck in a tree at neighboring Olympic Club at the 1998 U.S. Open, but it fell out just before the five-minute search limit and he went on to win the tournament. Lee Westwood lost his ball at the 2012 U.S. Open at Olympic. Even Woods, who attended Stanford University in Palo Alto, just down the peninsula from TPC Harding Park, admitted to having lost golf balls to the cypress trees. “Well, not here,” he said. “I’ve had a few at (nearby) Lake Merced. That’s one of the tightest golf courses and most claustrophobic places that I’ve ever played. Yeah, I’ve lost a few there.”

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Nine Things to Know: Southern Hills Country ClubNine Things to Know: Southern Hills Country Club

His invincibility was shattered there with a tinge of shock in 2001. His aura was rekindled there with pulsating precision in 2007. The man: Tiger Woods. The place: Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Anticipation is ripe for a return to Southern Hills and the 104th PGA Championship. Gil Hanse has restored this Perry Maxwell gem, and now Woods at 46 returns to the site of disappointment (2001 U.S. Open) and triumph (’07 PGA Championship) in the prime of his career. Here are Nine Things to Know about Southern Hills: 1. Woods has looked both mortal and unbeatable At the 2001 U.S. Open, Woods was 26 and the winner of four consecutive major championships. That run ended at Southern Hills. He double-bogeyed his ninth and what turned out to be his final hole Thursday, thanks to torrential rain. Although he had not played a PGA TOUR event in an over-par score for 72 holes since July of 1999, he was 3-over for nine holes. “If he wins this time,” one adversary quipped, “he’ll be my idol.” It didn’t get much better. A whisper of a rally (69-69) left Woods at 3 over and T12. He accepted defeat, seemingly convinced he would do better should he get another chance at Southern Hills. Six years later, that chance arrived at the 2007 PGA Championship, where Woods opened with a modest 1-over 71. He was now 12 over in nine competitive rounds at Southern Hills, dating back to the 1996 TOUR Championship, but a second-round 63 changed everything. It could have been better, but his 18-foot birdie putt at the last ringed the cup. Woods called the round a “62 1/2.” His two-stroke lead might as well have been a 22-stroke lead. Ernie Els, who had watched his rival bounce back from the ’01 U.S. Open by winning six of the next 25 majors, said he would bet his house on another Woods victory at this PGA. Sure enough, Woods shot 69-69 (the same weekend scores he’d shot in ’01) for an 8-under 272 to beat Woody Austin by two. Woods had hit 37 of 56 fairways, and 50 greens, and one-putted 25 times. “It’s pretty much what he’s been doing since 1997,” Trevor Immelman said with a sigh. Immelman would win the next major, the 2008 Masters, eight months later. Runner-up: Woods. 2. Perry Maxwell put his stamp on it Perry Maxwell started as a bank vice president who decided he could design a golf course on his dairy farm. He became the awe-inspiring, incredibly prolific “Father of Oklahoma Golf.” Maxwell did the bulk of his work in that state – by the time he got to Southern Hills in 1935-36, during the Great Depression, he had already designed more than 40 golf courses – but, oh, how he shared his work beyond the borders of Oklahoma. Golf writer Mac Bentley once said of Maxwell that “his genius came from recognizing Mother Nature’s design.” Others agreed. Dr. Alister MacKenzie partnered with Maxwell to create Crystal Downs in Michigan, Melrose CC in Philadelphia, Oklahoma City Golf & CC, and Augusta National. Maxwell also helped renovate Pine Valley, Merion and the National Golf Links of America. He joined Marvin Leonard to build Colonial in Fort Worth, Texas; Maxwell and his son, J. Press Maxwell, gave life to Prairie Dunes in Kansas; and premier courses on the campuses of Oklahoma, Ohio State, Michigan, and Iowa State have Maxwell’s fingerprints all of them. Maxwell cited a trip to Scotland after his first wife, Ray, died in 1919 of appendicitis, as having inspired his design philosophies. He used the topography, embracing contours in fairways, undulated greens, and swells around and on the greens, so-called “Maxwell rolls.” When he took on Southern Hills, workers stood in line to earn 25 cents an hour, and the job was completed for $100,000. Every hole had twists and bends, bunkers were deep and well placed in prime spots where doglegs began, and a stream snaked through the property. But the most dynamic aspect to Southern Hills were the greens, and Gil Hanse, trusted to the restoration project in 2018, some 66 years after Maxwell’s death, said that hasn’t changed. 3. Gil Hanse restored the luster When they took on the task of restoring Southern Hills in 2018, Gil Hanse, Jim Wagner and crew had a skeptic eying them from afar: Legendary Oklahoma head pro Jerry Cozby, whose workplace for 41 years had been another Perry Maxwell gem, Hillcrest CC, 45 miles away. Cozby had his doubts until his oldest son, Cary Cozby, the Director of Golf at Southern Hills, invited him out to see the restoration work being completed. Jerry Cozby loved it. “This guy (Hanse) gets it,” Jerry Cozby said to his son. Hanse said he didn’t really get the whole topography thing that Maxwell had going for him until he opened the place up. Too many trees had thickened, too much grass hid the stream, too many fairways had become narrow. Once Hanse’s crew got to trimming back trees and giving more prominence to the stream, they focused on shorter grass and sharper edges along the greens and return the slope and contours to the fairways. “The classic character of Southern Hills was preserved,” Jerry Cozby told reporters. 4. Three holes stand above the rest Give him a chair and time and Gil Hanse knows where he’s headed. “No. 10 is a cool hole. It’s probably where I’d camp out,” he told Andy Johnson on The Fried Egg podcast. It’s 441 yards but will play shorter thanks to a downhill tee shot. A bold tee shot will leave only a short iron into the severely sloped green, but players who get too aggressive off the tee will find the diabolical Southern Hills stream that cuts across the fairway. Ben Hogan sang the praises of the picturesque par-4 12th, Southern Hills’ signature hole. A 456-yard dogleg left, its fairway slopes right-to-left, pushing balls toward the stream that runs all the way to the green, which is also protected by three daunting bunkers. Give a guy a one-shot lead in a major on Sunday and the choice of which 18th hole he’d play to protect it, chances are no one would pick Southern Hills’ par-4 18th. “Killer finish,” said Hanse. “Quintessential finishing hole.” In seven men’s majors here, only two winners have managed to par the closing hole – Tommy Bolt at the 1958 U.S. Open and Tiger Woods at the 2007 PGA. The 18th will play up to 491 yards, with the second shot uphill to a green that slopes treacherously from back to front. Put it on the wrong spot on the green and good luck two-putting. In the fourth round of the 2001 U.S. Open, the top three finishers – Retief Goosen, Mark Brooks, and Stewart Cink – all three-putted 18 with victory in their grasp. 5. Hubert Green played under a death threat Hubert Green was leading the 1977 U.S. Open at Southern Hills by one stroke with four holes remaining when he pulled his tee shot left of the 15th fairway. He tried his best to keep his distance from his caddie, Shayne Grier. The caddie knew why. Told of a death threat on his life called into the Oklahoma City FBI – an anonymous woman said gunmen would shoot Green at the 15th hole – Green had been given options by USGA President Sandy Tatum and police officers. Green said there was only one option. He’d play on. In an interview with the Boston Globe in 2007, Grier said Green was keeping his distance so if there was a shooting, the player would be the only target. The gregarious Grier, still a volunteer official with Mass Golf, said he caught up with Green on the 15th and said, “Let’s give them two targets to shoot at.” The levity might have helped. Green recovered from the left rough and made par at 15, then birdied 16 to increase his lead to two. He negotiated a par at 17 and could afford the safe bogey at 18 to win by one over Lou Graham. 6. Frontrunners have held their position Of the seven men’s majors here – three U.S. Opens, four PGAs – the winner has had at least a share of the lead in each round on five occasions. The exceptions: Dave Stockton at the 1970 PGA opened with 70 and was T-5, two behind Jack Nicklaus and Johnny Miller; and in 2007, Woods had a first-round 71 and was T-23, six behind unheralded Englishman Graeme Storm. With rare collapses by Nicklaus (76) and Miller (77), Stockton’s second-round 70 got him into a share of first after Round 2, and he led the rest of the way. Woods’ second-round “62-and-a-half” (detailed above) put him in the 36-hole lead and he cruised from there. Beyond Stockton’s PGA win in ’70 and Woods’ PGA triumph in ’07, these SHCC major winners found the top spot to be quite comfortable start to finish: * Tommy Bolt at the 1958 U.S. Open, the year he birdied the first and reportedly said, “Who’s going to finish second?” * Green at the 1977 U.S. Open when he was part of a seven-way tie for first after Round 1, then was all alone the rest of the way. * Raymond Floyd, owner of arguably the greatest stare in golf history, led by three after opening with 63 and pretty much had it in his pocket all the way at the 1982 PGA. * Nick Price was tied with Colin Montgomerie after an opening-round 67, but followed it up with a 65 to seize command and eventually won by six at the 1994 PGA. * Retief Goosen opened with 66 for the solo lead, then shared it after the second, third and fourth rounds – he three-putted from 12 feet at the last Sunday but won a playoff. Of the seven SHCC winners above, only Stockton is not in the World Golf Hall of Fame. 7. The Babe was in all her glory When golf returned from the World War II break in 1946, Tusla fans got a treat as the U.S. Women’s Amateur came to Southern Hills. So did “Mrs. Babe Didrikson Zaharias of Denver, Colo., nonpareil of America’s women athletes,” as the AP called her. You could quibble with the reporter not using her real name, Mildred, but not with the “nonpareil” description. Then 35, The Babe was still a national hero for those two golds and one silver she won in track and field at the 1932 Los Angeles Summer Olympics. At Southern Hills, her score of 156 in stroke play was four off the medalist’s score, but in five matches Didrikson steamrolled Peggy Kirk (4 and 3), Betty Rucker (4 and 3), Maureen Orcutt (5 and 4), Helen Siegel (3 and 2), and Clara Sherman (11 and 9 in the final) without ever once trailing. It remains the third-largest margin of victory in a U.S. Women’s Amateur final. It was win No. 5 on a 1946-47 stretch that saw The Babe win 17 consecutive tournaments. 8. The Cozby name is big If there is a little extra heat at Southern Hills next week, it might be Jerry Cozby’s smile beaming down. For 41 years he was the head pro at Hillcrest CC in Bartlesville, approximately 45 miles north of Tulsa. Beyond morphing into the dean of Oklahoma club professionals, Cozby – who died in 2020 at 79 – and his wife, Karole, raised three boys who are passionate about golf, played at Oklahoma University, and are fully involved in the game. Chance, the youngest, is Executive Director of the Thunderbirds, host organization to the WM Phoenix Open on the PGA TOUR. Craig, the middle son, is a sales rep for PING in Missouri. And the oldest, Cary, has been at Southern Hills since 1995, going from head professional to Director of Golf. (Jerry Cozby, in 1985, and Cary, in 2016, are the only father-son winners of the PGA Professional of the Year.) Cary gained some fame a few weeks ago when he caddied for Tiger Woods in the latter’s pre-PGA reconnaissance round. 9. Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw built a nine-hole course Perry Maxwell built the original tournament course that was later renovated by Gil Hanse. Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw built a nine-hole course there in 1990. How’s that for a world-class lineup? Land for the nine-hole course had been there since a fire destroyed the club’s horse stables in 1976. With the skeet range and polo field not drawing much interest, the club opted to double down on golf. Leaning on Coore and Crenshaw’s vision, the club built a nine-hole gem with two par 3s, two par 5s, four par 4s – and a whole lot of membership love for these 3,094 yards (3,301 from the tips) where the rating is 71.8 and the slope 126.

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80 things for Jack Nicklaus’ 80th birthday80 things for Jack Nicklaus’ 80th birthday

It’s Jan. 21, 2020, and that means Jack Nicklaus turns 80 today. While celebrations of the Golden Bear should not be limited to milestone birthdays, it’s worth carving out a few moments to reflect on his remarkable career – certainly the best player of his generation, arguably the greatest of all time. Here are 80 things you may or may not know about Nicklaus, including a few words of wisdom from the man himself. Feel free to sing “Happy Birthdayâ€� to Jack as you scroll through some of his achievements. 1. At age 10, he carded a 51 for the first nine holes he played. 2. Won five consecutive Ohio State Junior Championships from 1952-56. 3. His instructor, Jack Grout, was once an assistant pro in Fort Worth, Texas, at Glen Garden, where he played with Byron Nelson and Ben Hogan. 4. Over 600 professional golf tournaments have been staged on more than 90 Nicklaus-designed courses. 5. Made his PGA TOUR debut at the 1958 U.S. Open at Southern Hills, finishing T41 with a score of 24 over. 6. In 1961, he became the first player to win the U.S. Amateur and NCAA Championship in the same season. 7. Won the inaugural THE PLAYERS Championship in 1974 at Atlanta Country Club. 8. Won three of the first five PLAYERS Championships. Remains the tournament’s only three-time winner. 9. Holds the record for longest span between U.S. Open victories (18 years, 1962-1980). 10. Twice set the U.S. Open scoring record, shooting 275 at Baltusrol in 1967 and then breaking it with a 272 at the same course 13 years later. 11. Is the only player to win two U.S. Opens while holding at least a share of the lead after every round (1972, 1980). 12. Holds the record for most top-10 finishes in U.S. Open history (18). 13. His 73 PGA TOUR victories are third all-time, behind only Tiger Woods and Sam Snead, who both have 82. Oh, and perhaps you heard that his 18 major wins are the most of any professional golfer. 14. Won a PGA TOUR event in 17 consecutive seasons (1962-78), tied with Arnold Palmer for most all-time. 15. Longest winning streak was three consecutive tournaments (1975 Doral-Eastern Open, Sea Pines Heritage, Masters). 16. Holds the record for most Masters (6) won and shares the record for most PGA Championships (5) and U.S. Opens (4). 17. Won 30 times in his 20s, second only to Tiger Woods (46). 18. Won 38 times in his 30s, trailing only Arnold Palmer (42) and Ben Hogan (43). 19. The first player to win the career Grand Slam three times. Tiger Woods is the only other player to accomplish that feat. 20. Is the youngest player since 1934 to win three majors. Won his third major, the 1963 PGA, at the age of 23 years, 6 months, 1 day. 21. Named Sports Illustrated’s Best Individual Male Athlete of the 20th Century. 22. Was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005. 23. Won 105 times worldwide, including six Australian Opens. 24. Played in a record 154 consecutive major championships for which he was eligible from the 1957 U.S. Open to the 1998 U.S. Open. 25. Won 10 of the 12 times that he held at least a share of the 54-hole lead in a major championship. 26. Was given the Golden Bear nickname by Australian sportswriter Don Lawrence in the early 1960s. 27. According to the Jack Nicklaus Museum in Columbus, Ohio, a young Nicklaus once played 61 holes in a single day. 28. Was 13 years old when he broke 70 for the first time (at his home course, Scioto Country Club). 29. Won the Ohio Open at age 16, shooting 64-72 on the final day to become the youngest winner in the tournament’s history. After playing the second round in the morning, he flew to an exhibition match with Sam Snead in the afternoon before returning to play the final 36 holes the next day. In that exhibition match, Nicklaus shot 72 to Snead’s 68. 30. Quote from his instructor, Jack Grout: Jack plays such sensational golf with such apparent ease that many people … gain the impression that his skills were heaven-sent. That isn’t true. No one ever worked harder at golf than Nicklaus during his teens and early 20s. 31. Growing up, he played football (quarterback), baseball (catcher), basketball and tennis in addition to golf. How did he end up focusing on golf? “A process of elimination,â€� Nicklaus said. 32. As a 17-year-old freshman at Ohio State, he met his future wife Barbara, who was also a freshman. 33. To make ends meet after leaving college, he sold insurance (making $12,000 a year) and worked for a local clothing company, playing golf with the manufacturer’s customers (making another $12,000 annually). 34. Played most of his career with three pennies in his pocket — one to mark his ball, one as a backup and one in case his playing partner needed one. 35. Never broke 60 on the PGA TOUR but shot a course-record 59 at The Breakers in 1973 while playing the American Cancer Society’s Palm Beach Golf Classic. 36. Once went six years and 105 starts — from November 1970 to September 1976 — without missing a cut. It’s the third-longest streak in TOUR history. 37. Won his sixth Australian Open in 1978 despite topping his opening tee shot. Was sore from catching a 1,358-pound marlin earlier in the week. 38. Was named an Honorary Doctor of Law by the University of St. Andrews in July of 1984. 39. Played his 10,000th hole in a major during the 1997 U.S. Open at Congressional. It was the 10th hole and he parred it with an 8-foot putt. He was 57 years old and battling arthritis in his hip. 40. Eight of his 10 wins on PGA TOUR Champions were in major championships. 41. Had a TOUR-record 18 multiple-win seasons, including 17 in a row (1962-78). 42. “If there is one thing I learned during my years as a professional, it is that the only constant thing about golf is its inconstancy.” — Jack Nicklaus 43. Won the 1960 World Amateur Team Championship at Merion by 13 strokes. “You could have fired a cannon between my legs as I stood over a 3-foot putt that week and I would have stroked it right in the heart without missing a beat,” he said. 44. A plaque honoring Nicklaus’ six Masters titles was unveiled at Augusta National in 1998. He finished T6 later that week at age 58, beating defending champion Tiger Woods. 45. Was the youngest winner in Masters history when he won in 1963 at age 23 (record since surpassed). 46. More Masters achievements: Nicklaus finished under par in 22 Masters, five more than any other player in tournament history. His 506 birdies are the most in Masters history, as is his 37 cuts made, and his 71.98 scoring average is the lowest in Masters history among players with at least 100 rounds played. He’s also the oldest player to finish in the top 10 at the Masters (T6 in 1998 at age 58). 47. Nicklaus’ playing partner at the 1998 Masters, Ernie Els, said, “Jack was winking at me the whole time. Every time he made a putt he winked at me.” 48. He earned his first check as a pro at the 1962 Los Angeles. He won $33.33 for finishing T50. 49. Bobby Jones famously said, “He plays a game with which I am not familiar,” after Nicklaus won the 1965 Masters by nine and set the tournament scoring record. 50. Nicklaus had a love affair with Pebble Beach, winning the 1961 U.S. Amateur, 1972 U.S. Open and three Pebble Beach Pro-Ams. He was also in the hunt in 1982 until his good friend Tom Watson chipped in from off the 17th green in 1982. “If I had one round left to play, I would choose to play at Pebble Beach,” Nicklaus said. 51. His three PLAYERS victories came at three different courses: Atlanta Country Club, Inverarry Golf & Country Club and Sawgrass Country Club (THE PLAYERS moved to TPC Sawgrass in 1982.) 52. He won the 1978 PLAYERS at Sawgrass Country Club with a 9-over 289, matching the highest winning score in tournament history. “I’m not sure if I won it or whether I was the only one to survive it,” he said. 53. “Whether one likes it or not, luck is an enormous factor at every level of golf. Even when the breaks have been against me, I have tried to accept them as part of the game’s challenge and charm, because I believe it would be a pretty dull affair if it were entirely predictable.” — Jack Nicklaus 54. “Confidence is the most important single factor in this game, and no matter how great your natural talent, there is only one way to obtain and sustain it: work,” – Jack Nicklaus 55. Picked July 23, 1960 as wedding date because it was the Saturday of the PGA Championship for which, as an amateur, Nicklaus was ineligible. Spent part of his honeymoon playing Winged Foot and Pine Valley. 56. His Nicklaus Design company has developed over 400 courses in over 45 countries and 40 states. 57. Nicklaus has had numerous lifestyle products under his name and Golden Bear nickname. These include men’s and women’s apparel, accessories, headwear, restaurants, beverages, beverageware, win, home furnishings and ice cream. 58. “Don’t be too proud to take lessons. I’m not.” – Jack Nicklaus 59. The Jack Nicklaus Museum is located at The Ohio State University sports complex in Jack’s hometown of Columbus, Ohio. It is a 12,000 square-foot educational and historical facility with over 2000 pieces on display. 60. Nicklaus went 2-1-1 as a captain of the U.S. Presidents Cup team and 1-1 as the Captain of the U.S. Ryder Cup team. 61. Nicklaus played in six Ryder Cups, winning five and tying another. From 28 matches he had a 17-8-3 record. 62. “It takes hundreds of good golf shots to gain confidence, but only one bad one to lose it.” — Jack Nicklaus 63. Opened his signature course Muirfield Village in 1974 and hosts The Memorial Tournament Presented by Nationwide there each year. The course has also hosted the Presidents Cup, the Ryder Cup, the U.S. Amateur, the Solheim Cup and the U.S. Junior Amateur. 64. Nicklaus built Muirfield Village on the same grounds he and his dad used to hunt on. “Never shot much,â€� Nicklaus said, “but we hunted it. An occasional rabbit we’d scare or something like that. I think we thought we were going to scare some pheasant, but we didn’t scare many of those.â€� 65. Served as Presidents Cup captain four times (1998, 2003, 2005 and 2007), the most in the event’s history. 66. Birdied the 18th at St. Andrews at the 2005 Open Championship to close out his major championship career 67. Won his very first start on PGA TOUR Champions at the 1990 Tradition, a senior major. 68. Conceded a putt of some three feet to Tony Jacklin to halve the 18th hole, the match, and the 1969 Ryder Cup. 69. Was gracious in defeat (66-65) as he lost to Tom Watson (65-65) at the 1977 “Duel in the Sun” Open Championship at Turnberry. After it was over, Nicklaus put his arm over Watson’s shoulder and told him, “I gave you my best shot, but it wasn’t good enough.â€� 70. Showed yet more sportsmanship as he and opposing captain Gary Player agreed to end the 2003 Presidents Cup in South Africa in a tie. “Everybody’s comfortable that this is the most unbelievable event the game has ever seen,” Nicklaus told then-PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem in explaining their agreement. “We should share the Cup.” 71. Proposed in 1977 to bring all of continental Europe into the Ryder Cup, opening the door for Spain’s Seve Ballesteros, among others. 72. Along with Arnold Palmer, Tom Watson and Gary Player, helped launch the wildly successful Skins Game in 1983. 73. Named Arnold Palmer as the Memorial Tournament honoree in 1993 “while he can still play, while his fans can enjoy it.” 74. Hosts a well-attended tournament called The Jake to honor his late grandson, who tragically passed away in an accident at 17 months old. 75. He loves dogs; Gerald Ford once gave him a golden retriever puppy born to presidential pooch Liberty. 76. He appeared on a five-pound note in Great Britain. 77. Asked why he developed his own wine label, he said, “Because it’s fun to walk into a restaurant and order your own wine!” 78. Is gracious with his time, always willing to help out younger players. But he won’t impose on them. “I don’t go out and seek this,â€� Nicklaus said recently. “I’m always available. I might have some knowledge, you might call it wisdom, that you can impart to the kids that might help them. It’s very honoring to me that people would want to hear from an 80-year-old. You never listen to your dad, why would you listen to your great-grandfather? It’s very nice and I enjoy it.â€� 79. Nicklaus and wife Barbara established the Nicklaus Children’s Health Care Foundation in 2004, continuing a pledge they made as new parents in the 1960s to help children in need after almost losing their daughter Nan to pneumonia. Have helped raise millions for Childrens Hospitals. 80. Asked what he usually gets for his birthday, Nicklaus replied: “Love. It’s all I need.â€�

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