Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Dustin Johnson breaks scoring record in Masters win

Dustin Johnson breaks scoring record in Masters win

AUGUSTA, Ga. - All week it wasn't just the Masters, it was the stripped-down acoustic version of the Masters. You could hear the biophany of bird life chirping, unseen golf carts motoring, the train whistles coming in on the breeze. The only other audio was the regular thwack of a golf shot and the hissing vapor trail of a ball flying through the air. The clubs did almost all the talking. It was a Dustin Johnson kind of week. In a game obsessed with youth, Johnson, 36, is just coming into his prime, a reminder that great careers are revealed over decades, not social media hot takes. After carrying a four-shot lead over three players into Sunday, Johnson, whose languid strut and taciturn nature recall an Old West cowboy, started slowly but steadied himself to shoot 68 and win by five. His 20-under total breaks the Masters record of 18, shared by Tiger Woods and Jordan Spieth. RELATED: Final leaderboard | What’s in DJ’s bag? Sungjae Im and Cameron Smith shot 69 to tie for second at 15 under. Johnson hugged his brother/caddie Austin on the 18th green, and Austin started crying first, the emotion soon spreading to his brother. They grew up an hour away, close enough to know all about Augusta National but not close enough to actually play it. "Well, as we’ve all seen, he’s an amazing athlete," said Woods, whose title defense ended with a 76 that featured a 10 at the par-3 12th hole. "He’s one of the first guys to ever bring athleticism to our sport. DJ has just an amazing ability to stay calm in tough moments ... and we all know as past champions how hard it is, the emotions we have to deal with out there." The day featured only fleeting suspense. Im cut the lead to one after Johnson made back-to-back bogeys, but Johnson restored order at the par-3 sixth, converting a short birdie putt. Smith made things interesting with a front-nine 33, including wild birdies at Nos. 7 and 9, but Johnson was always going to have to come back to the chase pack, and instead went the other way. There were polite claps amongst the 100 or so members - retired NFL greats Peyton Manning and Lynn Swan among them - plus wives and girlfriends and others following the final group. Absent the context you might have thought it was the club championship. By the time Smith, marching up the 15th fairway, looked back and saw that it was Johnson who was close to the pin on the 14th green, it was all but over. Smith frowned and looked down at the grass, Johnson made the six-foot putt, and the lead was five strokes with four holes remaining. This rain-delayed, pandemic-delayed Masters was essentially over. Was Johnson's arrival on this stage, the green jacket ceremony in Butler Cabin, also delayed? Not really. Before Woods, it was widely accepted that golfers peaked in their 30s. By that metric, Johnson is right on time. This is what he had in mind all those years ago when he honed his game at Weed Hill driving range in Columbia, South Carolina, just an hour or so from Augusta National. Johnson knew of the special tournament just down the road, even if he never had the connections to actually play here until he qualified for his first Masters in 2009. "Obviously growing up in Columbia, in high school, I hit a lot of golf balls at Weed Hill," he said in a rare reflective moment. "So definitely remember hitting up there in the dark. They had lights on the range, and most nights I would shut the lights off when I was leaving." It paid off. Johnson was twice a first-team All American at Coastal Carolina, where he won seven times, and his immediate success on TOUR was not unexpected. He won the 2008 Turning Stone Resort Championship and kept winning each year like clockwork from there. He had major championship type game, but the majors eluded him, sometimes gruesomely. All anyone wanted to talk about at Augusta was his 0-for-4 record closing them out when he had at least a share of the 54-hole lead - the gum on his shoe since the 2010 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, when he lost his three-shot lead with a second-hole triple bogey, shot 82, and finished T8. He almost atoned for his mistake at the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits two months later, but unintentionally grounded his club in a bunker on the 72nd hole. The ensuing two-stroke penalty kept him out of a playoff with Bubba Watson and eventual champion Martin Kaymer. Johnson had one hand on the trophy at two other U.S. Opens, but couldn't keep the lead there, either. A fellow player, of all things, mentioned these lapses when Johnson took the lead into the final round of the PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park in August, and it happened again. The snakebit leader shot a solid 68 only to lose to 23-year-old Collin Morikawa (64) by two. But good luck asking Johnson to get worked up about any of this. "That stuff doesn't bother me," he has said more than once. He just keeps on giving himself chances. The Masters marked the fifth time in his last seven TOUR starts that Johnson had held the 54-hole lead/co-lead, a run in which he'd already won THE NORTHERN TRUST and TOUR Championship to take the FedExCup. He also lost a wild head-to-head showdown with Jon Rahm at the BMW Championship. "I think I’ve got a good game plan," Johnson said from the stately, wood-paneled interview room in Augusta's cavernous press building Saturday night. "I’m not going to change it." And he hasn't. Instead of getting into a war of words over his major letdowns, the Johnson way has been to answer with blistered drives, laser-like approaches, and an improved putting stroke built with input from his caddie/brother Austin, and a lesson from World Golf Hall of Famer Greg Norman. And now he's gone and converted a 54-hole lead at the major players covet most just three months after his fitness for doing so was questioned more publicly than ever. Norman, of course, never did win here. He bled away a six-shot advantage and more to lose to Nick Faldo in '96. Rory McIlroy collapsed on the back nine and carded a final-round 80 in 2011, and Jordan Spieth quadruple-bogeyed the 12th hole to lose in 2016. Both lost four-shot leads. There are no guarantees at Augusta, or anywhere. At the 2017 World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions, Johnson shot 77 and became the second player in TOUR history to lose a six-shot 54-hole lead. He won the Sentry Tournament of Champions in his next start, five weeks later. Johnson is like the metal man in "Terminator 2" who keeps moving ever forward even as he keeps getting holes blown through him. He forgets quickly. He's a fast healer. This was Johnson's second major (2016 U.S. Open) and 24th TOUR win. He pulls even with Woods for most consecutive seasons with a win to start a career with 14, and moves from 17th to first in the FedExCup, which is where he ended last season. We are seeing the peak years of perhaps the most gifted golfer of his generation; Johnson's best may be better than anyone else's. The Weed Hill driving range closed in 2015, sold for development. But Bobby Weed, who built it when he was in high school to work on his own game, has gone on to a successful golf course design business. Johnson, meanwhile, glides and strides ever forward into the golf history books. His clubs have never spoken so loudly.

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Webb Simpson continues his passion for junior golfWebb Simpson continues his passion for junior golf

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Webb Simpson counts the 2012 U.S. Open and 2018 PLAYERS Championship among his seven PGA TOUR victories. He’s played on three Presidents Cups and a trio of Ryder Cups, as well. But that doesn’t mean the 36-year-old doesn’t remember being a teenager growing up in Raleigh, North Carolina, and wondering whether he’d ever be good enough to play the game he loved at the highest level. Or horror upon horrors, what he’d do if he couldn’t. Simpson hasn’t forgotten the many battles he had with crosstown rival Brendon Todd, who moved to nearby Cary when he was 11 and won the state high school title three times, either. Or the time he beat Todd in the championship match of the 1999 N.C. Junior Boys. Both went on to play college golf – Todd at Georgia, Simpson at Wake Forest – and are still pushing each other to excel, only now it’s on the PGA TOUR. Those memories are literally everywhere, and Simpson wanted to find a way to make more for the teenagers to come. That’s why he’s hosted the Webb Simpson Challenge for the last 12 years. And why he was only too happy to serve as honorary chairman of the U.S. Junior Amateur when it was played in July at the Country Club of North Carolina where Simpson has a second home. “I had such an amazing childhood of junior golf, just guys older than me letting me come play with them, and I think that’s part of the reason I developed at the rate I did, because I was always challenged by guys who were older, more experienced, better players,” Simpson says. “So, it just felt like a fun way for me to give back. “I love being around kind of the youth of the game who are passionate about golf. They want to get better. They might want to play college golf or even at the professional level.” But the Webb Simpson Challenge is more than competition. Much more. The way the seven-time TOUR winner, who is playing in the Wyndham Championship this week, sees it, the goal is to combine faith, fun and golf – essentially a hybrid of a camp and a golf tournament. This year’s event was held June 27-29 in Southern Pines. The competition is held at two of the area’s great old Donald Ross courses, Mid-Pines and the legendary Pine Needles, which will host its fourth U.S. Women’s Open next year. The teens stay at the Inn at Mid-Pines. The Webb Simpson Challenge is open to rising ninth grade boys through seniors in high school. On the high side, there have been about 90 participants. This year’s group was 49. What Simpson calls the “secret sauce” of the event are the nearly two dozen NCAA Division I and II golfers who come to hang out with the teenagers and act as small group leaders. All are part of the College Golf Fellowship, and many have previously attended the Challenge. “So now that I’m 36, these kids kind of look up to them more than me because they’re only a few years older and they’re these great college golfers,” Simpson says. “We’ve had guys pretty much every year, the top 10 of college golf rankings come. “And I think these juniors, we have a lot of repeats. They have so much fun doing it. Also, obviously the faith component, we tell them about our faith. And we’re very upfront about it on our website. So, it’s no surprise or anything. The parents know what they’re getting into. But most people have given us great feedback. One of those “repeats” is Stephen Franken, who has four top-10s on the Korn Ferry Tour this year. He came to the camp as a junior, then volunteered as a small group leader while he was playing golf for N.C. State. Franken came back again this year and spoke this year. Among the others giving their testimony were Peter Fountain, who won the ACC Tournament this year as a sophomore at the University of North Carolina, and William Kane, who was Simpson’s caddie for his first two years on TOUR and now works for the College Golf Fellowship. “We want to give these junior golfers access, not only to college golfers and what to expect, how to choose a college, what should be important to them, but also pro golf,” said Simpson, who attended the first two days of the event and did a clinic for the teenagers. “We really want to expose them to what they might be getting into with golf in the future.” Simpson has long had an association with Pinehurst and Southern Pines. As he was growing up, his parents owned several houses in the area, including three different ones at CCNC, where he now brings his own family of seven a couple of times a month. Once Simpson got his license, he’d drive down on the weekends, taking day trips to play golf or staying overnight when his parents were there. One of his fondest memories is of the 2007 Southern Amateur that he won on CCNC’s Dogwood Course with his late father on the bag. So, the memories are strong in the Sandhills, and with the Webb Simpson Challenge, he has come full circle. He calls the event “one of my favorite weekends of the year.” “There’s an energy about it I think that’s really fun,” Simpson says. “And it brings some nostalgia, and it brings memories back. Some of my favorite memories in golf, even though I’ve been a pro now for 13 years is junior golf going to two-day tournaments with my dad, or even in the amateur golf, playing some of these great courses that amateurs get to play before turning pro. “So, it doesn’t feel like work for me, it feels fun. And I’ve gotten a lot from them as well.”

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Presidents Cup: Thursday Foursomes match recapsPresidents Cup: Thursday Foursomes match recaps

The 14th Presidents Cup commenced Thursday at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, with Day 1 of competition featuring five Foursomes matches (alternate shot). The Presidents Cup is contested across four days and 30 matches – five Foursomes matches on Thursday, five Four-ball (best ball) matches on Friday, four Foursomes and four Four-ball matches on Saturday, and 12 Singles matches on Sunday. The U.S. Team, captained by Davis Love III, entered the week undefeated in seven past Presidents Cups on American soil (7-0), with an 11-1-1 overall record. The International Team, captained by Trevor Immelman, aimed to rally around its underdog status with eight first-time President Cup participants. Here’s a match-by-match breakdown of how Day 1 unfolded at the Presidents Cup. PRESIDENTS CUP: Scoring | The five key clubs for the International Team at the Presidents Cup | The five key clubs for the U.S. Team at the Presidents Cup THURSDAY: FOURSOMES MATCH 1 Patrick Cantlay/Xander Schauffele (U.S.) def. Adam Scott/Hideki Matsuyama (Intl.), 6 and 5 The International side put its most experienced guns out first, but they were no match for Cantlay/Schauffele, the day’s lone bogey-free team. By the time this match reached the eighth tee, the U.S. owned a 4-up advantage. Scott struggled with the pace of the greens early, and the Internationals handed away the par-4 third with a three-putt. Cantlay would get hot with the putter, rolling in birdie putts on Nos. 5 (9-feet) and 6 (13-foot curler). Schauffele had but 167 yards left into the par-5 seventh after a 360-yard bomb off the tee by Cantlay, setting up another easy birdie. The U.S. was 4-up. The Internationals birdied No. 8, but Scott missed from 8 feet for birdie at 10, a putt that would have cut the deficit to 2-down. From there, the U.S. rolled, with Scott and Matsuyama finishing with three bogeys and the match ending on 13. They fell to 1-4-1 when teamed in the Presidents Cup. Cantlay/Schauffele are 5-0 in Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup Foursomes. QUOTES: “With the wind picking up and that storm getting close to us, we felt like the wind was all over the place. We told ourselves to ballstrike the heck of out this place, and that’s what we did. – Xander Schauffele “We’ve played a lot of alternate-shot with each other, and I think we just feel very comfortable and confident. On a day like today, to make no bogeys, that was really good golf.” – Patrick Cantlay Score at match’s conclusion: U.S. Team 1, International Team 0

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The story behind Arnold Palmer’s famous signatureThe story behind Arnold Palmer’s famous signature

It was Tuesday morning, 48 hours before the first tee shot would be launched at the 2011 Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard. William McGirt, then a PGA TOUR rookie, had just made his way through the nearby autograph line and was now on Bay Hill’s practice green with his caddie and coach. Suddenly, a thick, meaty hand clamped down on his shoulder. McGirt, a bit startled, turned around. It was the tournament’s namesake. “I just want to say thank you,” said Arnold Palmer. A million thoughts suddenly ran through McGirt’s head. Why would this golf legend, whose schedule no doubt was jam-packed that week, take the time to approach the world’s 354th-ranked player? And why was he thanking him? McGirt had played the previous day in a Monday pro-am; perhaps that was the reason? It wasn’t. Arnie had just finished signing autographs for the same group of fans McGirt had accommodated earlier. Many of those fans had multiple autographs of players on their pin flags and caps. “Yours was the only signature I could read,” Palmer told McGirt. A sly smile crossed the rookie’s face as he offered up a response. “I remember some old guy said one time, if you’re gonna take the time to sign it, at least make it legible,” McGirt explained. Arnie winked, gave the rookie a thumb’s up, then went on his merry way, satisfied that another young golfer was faithfully adhering to his message. Arnold Palmer’s impact on the game of golf came in ways too numerous to count, and no aspect is too small to ignore. Yes, he may be remembered most for the way he changed golf in terms of marketing and advertising, or for how he brought the sport into the age of television, eventually helping to launch an entire network devoted to it. His golf course design, his business approach, his brand — all provide lessons that generations of future pros will lean on. But his impact on something as simple as an autograph is equally compelling. For Arnie, it wasn’t just a scribble on a piece of paper, or a fleeting, forgettable, inconsequential moment. He viewed his autograph as a direct connection with his fans, a way to deliver a little part of himself, a chance to bond with those who had joined his Army. That’s why his signature became the most iconic in golf, possibly in all of sports, and joined his famous umbrella logo as the symbol of his brand. It’s why legibility was so important. What was a name if it’s not readable? Plus, legibility showed respect, showed the he cared enough to deliver his best effort. It was a sermon he had preached to others long before his brief encounter with McGirt at Bay Hill. Peter Jacobsen learned the lesson soon after he joined the PGA TOUR in the late 1970s. He occasionally would play exhibitions with Palmer, and one day was signing a variety of programs and pin flags. Palmer saw the incomprehensible squiggly lines — and was not impressed. “That’s a terrible signature,” Arnie told Jacobsen. “It’s way too sloppy. You can sign that on a check or a contract; you can slop it there. But if you’re signing a piece of memorabilia, you sign it so people can read it.” Jacobsen immediately adjusted his signature. “I’ve taken that to heart my entire life,” he says now. “I don’t sign my name anymore. I draw my name, just like Arnold did. I take time so that it’s legible.” Jacobson soon became one of Palmer’s key disciples, spreading the message to other pro golfers. One day early in his career, Matt Kuchar heard Jacobsen retell the tale. “That story gets passed down,” Kuchar says, “and when it comes from Arnold Palmer, you go yeah, I need to make sure that when people get home, they know who signed it. That story came straight from Peter Jacobsen, and I’ve retold the story myself to others. I don’t know if it’s impacted anybody I told it to, but certainly when Peter told it to me, it had an effect.” Ernie Els didn’t even need to hear the message; just seeing the actual product made him change his signature. In his younger days, Els used to sign his first name legibly, but let his last name trail off in an indecipherable flourish. After noting how tightly Arnold Palmer’s signature was constructed, Els went for a similar look. “I put the (first and last names) close together now, pretty much like Arnold,” Els says. “And my signature is now a little bit more like his, up and down. I wouldn’t say I tried to copy what he did, but I definitely saw what had to be done.” Palmer’s message of legibility was not limited to simply the PGA TOUR, or even to other male golfers with whom he crossed paths. Over on the LPGA Tour, the players took notice. Jacobsen recalls playing an exhibition with Paula Creamer, and they were both making their way down the autograph line. Suddenly, one of the fans told Creamer: “Paula, your signature is so nice.” Jacobsen had yet to tell her the legibility story. As it turns out, Arnie had already delivered it. “I was playing with Arnold Palmer in a tournament one time,” Creamer told the fan, “and he told me to make sure people could read my name.” Palmer, however, may have saved his harshest criticism for his own family. As a schoolboy, Sam Saunders had one dream — to become a pro golfer, just like his famous grandfather. He knew if he fulfilled his dream, there might be requests for his autograph. So on the days when his mind wandered in class, he began practicing. “I wanted to have a cool, good-looking signature,” Saunders recalled. “Something you can take pride in.” But when Grandpa Arnie saw the teenage Sam’s signature, he felt compelled to impart the lesson. “I looked at that autograph and I couldn’t read it,” Palmer recalled. “I didn’t know what the hell it said. … Now when he gives an autograph, you can read it.” Palmer told that story back in 2008 during his pre-tournament press conference at Bay Hill. A year later, his grandson fulfilled his dream of turning pro. Soon after, Saunders realized the full impact of his grandfather’s autograph. “Obviously he had a lot of fans who wanted his signature,” Saunders says, “but when I saw my peers and some of the caddies I’ve known out here for a long time wanting to get things signed by him — well, he was so important to them. That’s when you really realize how much his signature means to golf.” A Method writer Golf’s most important signature was developed in the mid-1930s in Rita Taylor’s first-grade classroom at the old Baldridge School, about a mile up the hill from the Palmer family home in Latrobe, Pennsylvania. That’s where young Arnold Palmer learned to write, using his hands for something other than swinging a cut-down club, building model airplanes or playfully exchanging punches with the likes of childhood pals Bert Lambert or Berkey Shirey on the street outside his grandmother’s home. Up on Ms. Taylor’s blackboard was a chart that showed how to write each letter of the alphabet, both capitalized and lower case. Fittingly, the handwriting system was named The Palmer Method. No, it was not Arnie’s first endorsement deal. The Palmer Method was created by Austin N. Palmer, a native New Yorker who developed his fondness for penmanship after his family moved to New England. In 1888, he published the first edition of “Palmer’s Guide to Muscular Movement Writing.” After his method was introduced into the New York City school system in 1905, the rest of the classrooms across the country soon followed. By the time of his death in 1927, more than 25 million Americans had learned how to write using the Palmer Method. The numbers would continue to rise. And so it was this method — which focused more on arm movements rather than finger dexterity, thus creating a more rhythmic and readable flow — that Arnold Palmer began forging his brand as a 6-year-old. The pronounced capital “A” and “P.” Forward slant. Invisible line at the bottom so that all letters properly line up, even when he signed with an upward angle. Perfect. “You could slide a ruler directly under his signature,” certified graphologist Kathi McNight noted in her handwriting blog soon after Arnie’s death on Sept. 25, 2016. “In fact it appears that ALL of his handwriting would sit ‘perfectly’ on said ruler.” McNight added that the slant of Palmer’s signature “reveals he was an extremely heart-centered soul. So if you were in his inner circle of family and friends, you were well loved by him. His writing tells me that in his lifetime, the highs were high and the lows were low and he led a richly emotional life. But the upslope baseline reveals he always brought his A-game whether he was playing golf or making iced tea AND lemonade mixed together!” Cori Britt, the Vice President of Arnold Palmer Enterprises who had a 31-year working relationship with Palmer, describes the signature as “very reflective of him and his personality. He prided himself on keeping a neat appearance. Anything he ever did, he took the time to do it right. His signature was always neat and he did not rush through it. “The care to which he gave his signature is a token of his appreciation for his fans and representative of how much he cared for them.” Back in the 1930s, young Arnie was not the only future superstar of his generation developing a legible signature. A little farther north, up in Saskatchewan, Canada, a junior hockey player named Gordie Howe — just over a year older than Palmer – would one day own the most distinguished and legible signature of his sport. Howe also shared the same perspective as Palmer – respect your fans by giving them a readable autograph. Other athletes of that same generation did the same; just look at the signatures of baseball players such as Al Kaline and Mickey Mantle. Andy McGowan once worked with Howe while interning with the Hartford Whalers, and recently began working with Arnold Palmer Enterprises. Although McGowan never had the opportunity to deal directly with Palmer, his memories of Howe are eerily similar to Palmer’s approach. “One event I remember was a fan fest at the Hartford Civic Center,” McGowan recalls. “Gordie was set up at a table and the line for his autograph and a photo was the longest – by far. And he sat there signing and posing for photos for hours until every person was taken care of. I remember being the last person there with Gordie, telling him that the signing session had ended and that we could pack up. He just smiled at me and kept on signing. He never wanted to disappoint the fans. “And what I also remember was his meticulous signature. He took his time to make sure that it was legible for the fan. I once asked him about it and he told me that it was important that the fan be able to read his signature. If you look at it, it’s very distinctive and legible. He was just that way. He knew how important the fans were to his success.” It’s fitting that Palmer and Howe eventually crossed paths when Arnie was at Oakland Hills to accept an honorary membership. They posed for photos that one day would include both of their signatures. It’s also fitting that one day the next generation of Palmers would be sitting in a classroom, looking up at the blackboard and learning how to write using the same lessons as their dad. “In elementary school, we were taught the same Palmer Method of writing as was he,” recalls Amy Palmer Saunders, the youngest of Arnie’s two girls. “It emphasized regimentation, discipline and character-building through good penmanship. In my early school years when the Palmer Method was introduced, I actually thought my father had written it, and he had to enforce what he expected of us.” Eventually, she would learn that it meant more than just a name on a piece of paper. “Seeing my father’s signature, for me, is more about what it came to represent,” Amy says. “His signature defined his character. It was not simply an autograph.” More than a million It may be the biggest mystery in golf. Bigger than why some people still use “double eagle” instead of “albatross” or why we insist every putt breaks “toward the ocean.” How many autographs did Arnold Palmer sign in his 87 years on earth? Given that he was golf’s most tireless signer, and that he spent the better part of six decades under constant demand for his autograph, the number would seem astronomical. Perhaps even record-setting, if there was such a way to measure those things. Recently, the good folks at Arnold Palmer Enterprises took an honest attempt at figuring out the number. Vice-President Cori Britt, who was on the bag when Palmer played his 1,000 Tour event, estimates that in the course of a given tournament week — between practice, pro-am and competition days — Arnie would sign 400 autographs. Multiply that number by tournaments played, and we get 400,000. Technically, Palmer made 1,053 starts between the PGA TOUR and PGA TOUR Champions. Fifty of those starts, however, were at the Masters — and the demand for Arnie’s autograph that week was even higher. Call it 500 autographs per week times 50 starts, so 25,000. Next are general items sent to his offices in Latrobe and Orlando to be signed. Between 1958 and 2016, the company estimates that Arnie averaged 250 items a week. Multiple that by the number of weeks, make some slight adjustments for variable weeks, and the number is 696,000. Now time to add it up: 400,000 plus 25,000 plus 696,000. The final total of autographs signed: 1,121,000. If that number sounds conservative to you, that’s OK with the team at Bay Hill. They didn’t want to arrive at some outlandishly high figure that couldn’t have been humanely possible to achieve without benefit of handwriting PEDs or robotic arms. They wanted a real estimate, one that Arnie could have legitimately achieved. Of those million-plus Palmer autographs, 46 are owned by collector Joe Galiardi. He’s the author of “Hooked on Autographs” and is in the Guinness Book of World Records for having the largest collection of autographed golf balls. He currently has balls signed by 417 different golfers, other sports personalities, celebrities and politicians (including the last nine presidents, starting with Richard Nixon). He was more fan than collector when he attended a practice round at the inaugural Transamerica Senior Golf event at Silverado in Napa, California in 1989. Being from Western Pennsylvania, Galiardi just wanted his hero’s autograph on a golf ball. So he waited for Arnold Palmer to finish his practice round (which Arnie did by draining a 25-foot putt for eagle). “As Arnie walked off the 18th green, he was mobbed with autograph seekers, including me,” Galiardi recalls. “When my turn came, I thought of introducing myself as a fellow Western Pennsylvanian but decided not to. I handed Arnie a Pebble Beach Golf Links logo ball and he willingly signed it. I thanked him and walked away with my first autographed golf ball. That eventful day marked a turning point in my life — with that prized autograph, my fascinating new hobby was launched.” Just two of Galiardi’s 46 Palmer autographs are on golf balls; because of his desire to sign legibly, Palmer was often frustrated by the dimpled balls that played havoc with his penmanship. Of the other 44 autographs, 18 are on books — including the first book Palmer wrote in 1961 called “Hit It Hard” — 12 are framed photographs, 10 are personal letters, three are on golf magazines, and the other is on the handle of a numbered Bulls Eye putter. Galiardi also obtained other Palmer signatures, donating those for charitable organizations such as the Paralyzed Veterans of America. Each of those 46 Palmer signatures has a story behind it. Galiardi’s favorite came from 1995 when he attended the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf event in La Quinta, California at PGA West. “Halfway through the tournament, I sat down on a grassy mound with five other unknown spectators waiting for Arnold Palmer to arrive at one of the tees,” he says. “While the other players in his threesome headed for the tee, Arnie did something I’ve never seen done before in all of the PGA TOUR tournaments I attended. He came over to the six of us, shook our hands and thanked us for supporting the senior tournament. He made us feel like we were special. “To me, that attention to his fans showed his rare trait of warmth and down-to-earth thoughtfulness. His caring and generous spirit is what made us love him.” The total number signed — 1,121,000 — is impressive. But it only hints at the true meaning of a Palmer signature. GOING THE DISTANCE The average Arnold Palmer signature, according to company officials, is 2-1/2 inches. If you multiply that by the 1,121,000 autographs he’s estimated to have signed, here’s how the total length of those autographs would translate in various distances. Signing sessions Arnold Palmer was a fixture at Augusta National Golf Club, making a record 50 consecutive starts in the Masters. Autograph seekers eventually realized they could send their requests to the club, knowing that Arnie would see them upon his arrival each April. There were only a handful at first. Then in his later years, more and more requests came in. After playing the Par-3 Contest on Wednesday, Arnie would retreat to the back porch of his cottage, going through his mail and fulfilling requests before placing the items in the provided return envelopes so that it could go out in the next day’s mail. Word eventually got out — anybody who wanted Arnie’s autograph only needed to send their items to Augusta National. The amount of mail that once could fit easily on a shelf in his locker was now being collected in big plastic tubs in his last few visits. Arnie knew he didn’t have time to fulfill all those requests while on the back porch. So he had the dozen or so tubs shipped to his office, where he would endure some of the legendary signing sessions that would define his devotion to his fans. Requests, of course, also came directly to Bay Hill and Latrobe. Those items, too, would be held and arranged for when Palmer found the time. Surrounded by his staff, Palmer would work through a three- or four-hour session, averaging about six seconds for each signature. Balls, as mentioned above, were a bit troublesome. Books, especially the ones he had just written, were especially pleasing. For some reason, fans also sent in a lot of baseballs to sign. Obviously, not all the items had honest intentions from his fans. Collectors seeking to profit off an Arnold Palmer signature would send in multiple items. Some would try to disguise their intentions; for instance, instead of sending a half-dozen pin flags in one large envelope, they would separate the pin flags in six different postings. Whenever Britt pointed this out. Palmer just shrugged and kept signing “He couldn’t say no — even when he knew the item was destined for eBay,” Britt says. The legendary signing sessions were not limited to his office. “I remember playing golf with him,” says actor/comedian/amateur golfer Bill Murray, “and he was grinding because he was getting ready for a Senior Open. So he was very focused on playing. But then he signed autographs for almost three full hours straight. … I mean, he was sitting down and they kept giving him short glasses of Rolling Rock, but it was like 2 hours, 45 minutes. I never saw anything like it. It was amazing.” After playing in the U.S. Open for the final time in 1994 at Oakmont, Palmer spent more than 90 minutes signing autographs. The estimate in that session alone was nearly 1,000. Then he went to the volunteer tent and signed some more. Eight years later, Palmer played the 2002 U.S. Senior Open at Caves Valley in Maryland. He was 72 years old at the time, and the weather was scorching hot that week in June. During practice rounds, he would play a hole, then sign for fans as he walked from green to the next tee. “Despite the heat and exhaustion from walking the hills of Caves, he signed for nearly everyone on the course,” recalls Britt, who was Palmer’s caddie that week. “After the round, he did not rush into the clubhouse but continued to stand in the sun, signing for everyone.” There was always demand at tournaments, whether as a player or as host of his TOUR event in Bay Hill. As Arnie made his way down the line, his golf shirt began its own collection – of errant sharpies being held out by fans that had touched his shirt and left an unintentional mark, maybe in the form of a squiggly line or circular dot. Sam Saunders was 12 years old when he walked inside the ropes with his grandfather at the 2000 U.S. Senior Open at Saucon Valley in Eastern Pennsylvania. “Sharpie marks all over his shirt and he still always took the time not just to sign but to sign legibly,” Saunders recalls. “I don’t know how many golf shirts he had to throw away because overzealous fans were pushing their item in one hand and an open Sharpie in another and they got ink on his shirt,” Britt says. “I had a few of mine ruined too. When I was with him at golf course situations or crowds, I reminded people that he has his own pen. That helped but did not eliminate the problem.” As age became a factor, the signing sessions became more challenging. Palmer was determined to fulfill all requests, so he would sign until his hands wore out. Someone on his staff would retrieve a bottle of soothing hand lotion, and gently massage Palmer’s hands until he felt well enough to continue signing. Meanwhile, Arnie never took a dime. If fans provided postage money along with their autographed items, Arnie always returned both the item and the funds. And if fans didn’t provide postage or a self-addressed stamped envelope? No problem. Arnie just paid for the postage itself. The bill ran $250,000 a year. “This man is the all-time king when it comes to not just the game, but signing autographs,” said former PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem, who counted Arnold Palmer’s autograph as one of his most cherished items inside his office at TOUR headquarters. “He signs everything for everybody — without hesitation.” Connecting with people Ultimately, the power of Arnold Palmer’s signature is not derived from its legibility, its volume or its marketing and brand impact. Palmer used his right hand to sign all those autographs, but the source comes from his heart. He loved his fans. He appreciated them, he fed off them, and he was as devoted to them as much as his Army was devoted to him. Anybody can spend an average of six seconds to sign a 2-1/2-inch long autograph. Arnie made those six seconds last longer because this was a mutual investment. “What was extraordinary to me was the amount of time and patience he dedicated to signing autographs,” says daughter Amy. “When we were young children and traveled more extensively with our parents, I vividly remember sitting in the back seat of the car for what seemed like hours while he accommodated every person who made a request of his time. He signed every autograph. And he would engage the fans by sharing stories with everyone who had waited to be acknowledged. “His feelings stemmed from the great appreciation and inspiration these followers showed him. They were a significant catalyst to the success he was able to later realize. He always had all the time in the world for the fans as he never forgot how important they were to him.” World Golf Hall of Famer Annika Sorenstam feels fortunate to become a close friend of Palmer’s in Orlando. They even worked together on a golf course design project in Minnesota, and when her son Will was born nine weeks prematurely, it was the Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children that took care of her and her baby. Afterward, Arnie stopped by their house, telling Annika and her husband Mike McGee that young Will could one day play in his event at Bay Hill. (Alas, Will, who turns seven the week of this year’s event, has shown a bit more interest in soccer and basketball.) During her heyday, the demand on Sorenstam’s autograph was arguably bigger than anybody else’s on the LPGA Tour. Unlike Palmer, she was naturally shy, a by-product of her stoic Swedish background. She signed but she did not always connect … until she met Arnie. “I learned a lot from him to open up a little bit more and welcome people, the way you look at them with eye contact,” Sorenstam says. “Keep in mind, I was really, really shy. I’m still very shy but Mr. Palmer was very different, how he interacted with them and how he made them feel. I think that’s something I learned from him. That doesn’t mean I do it as well or as often as he did, but I try. “He was just amazing. He would look people in the eye, take the time, maybe ask one little question or something. Make it really personal. He always made it feel like you were the only one. He didn’t make you feel like he was in a hurry to get anywhere. “People were like his oxygen, if you know what I mean. He lived by it.” The modern-day golfer most inclined to breathe that same oxygen is Phil Mickelson. Like Arnie, he’s always willing to offer a thumb’s up or a tip of his cap to adoring fans. And, like Arnie, he’s a tireless worker along the autograph line. Unlike Arnie, though, his signature is not the most artistic or legible. By the time Mickelson went to school, the Palmer Method had fallen out of favor in American schools. “He and Ben Hogan and Jack Nicklaus have very legible signatures and I always try to make mine legible as well – or at least know that it’s me if you look at it from a distance,” Mickelson says. “But that’s not what struck me about Arnold. It was the way he interacted with people and the way he made them feel comfortable when they were around him.” Arnold Palmer often called it a “privilege” to sign autographs, and every fan who wanted one considers it both a cherished item and a priceless memory. But there was at least one Palmer autograph that earned a less-than-enthusiastic reception. It came after Sam Saunders won his club championship as a 16-year-old. The trophy for winning was a signed photo – of his granddad. “Great,” Saunders recalls when he told his granddad what he had won. “I’ve got a signed photo of you. Thanks a lot.” Of course, Saunders kept it — and it’s now one of his treasured mementoes. But his most cherished piece of memorabilia from his granddad is not signed. It’s the caddie suit that Sam wore when accompanying Arnie at the Masters in 2004. The “Palmer” nameplate still adorns the back. That week was an emotional time for the entire Palmer family – it was Arnie’s 50th and last Masters, and also his last start in a PGA TOUR event. But once the tears dried and once all the well-wishes and toasts had been issued in his name, Palmer soon returned home. Eventually, he settled into the chair at his office, pulled out a Sharpie from his desk drawer, and started fulfilling the autograph requests that had piled up. If people were indeed his oxygen, there was no better way to catch his breath.

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