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OT: Memorial weekend - Ridiculous Nicklaus stat...

MtNittany

Well-Known Member
May 29, 2001
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...in the 70's, Jack played in all 40 majors. He had 35 top 10 finishes.

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That got me thinking. How many majors should Jack have won? I've concluded that he easily could have set the bar at 28. Ridiculous, you say? Here's my list of the 10 majors that got away.


1960 U.S. OPEN (Cherry Hills)

Arnold Palmer 72-71-72-65—280

Jack Nicklaus 71-71-69-71—282

Six tied 283

The game's past, present and future—Ben, Arnold and Jack—came together. A 20-year-old amateur, Nicklaus was awful on the greens, prompting Hogan to remark, "I played with a kid who should have won this thing by 10 shots." Hogan tied for ninth, while Palmer cemented his legacy with a famous final-round charge, sparked by his driving the green on the 346-yard, par-4 1st hole.

1963 BRITISH OPEN (Royal Lytham & St. Annes)

Bob Charles 68-72-66-71—277

Phil Rodgers 67-68-73-69—277

Jack Nicklaus 71-67-70-70—278

Nicklaus came to the last hole thinking he had a one-shot lead, but he was actually tied. He made bogey from a fairway bunker and missed the 36-hole playoff, which Charles won. "Lytham was the only one I really gave away," Nicklaus said years later. "It was a learning experience."

Photo: HEINZ KLUETMEIER
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Jack tied for second at the 1971 Masters.
1971 MASTERS (Augusta National)

Charles Coody 66-73-70-70—279

Johnny Miller 72-73-68-68—281

Jack Nicklaus 70-71-68-72—281

Coody chased down Miller with birdies at the 15th and 16th holes, while Nicklaus couldn't get anything going. Coody played the back-nine par-5s in one under on Sunday, while Nicklaus made two pars, even though he was hitting 4-iron into the greens while Coody was using woods. Jack did himself no favors with four Sunday three-putts.

1971 U.S. OPEN (Merion)

Lee Trevino 70-72-69-69—280

Jack Nicklaus 69-72-68-71—280

Two tied 282

Nicklaus missed a 15-foot birdie putt at the 72nd hole, and Trevino won the 18-hole playoff 68--71. He got some help from Jack, who left a ball in the bunker at the 2nd (bogey) and the 3rd (double), and chunked a wedge from the 10th fairway. Nicklaus was the runner-up in four of Trevino's six major victories.

1972 BRITISH OPEN (Muirfield)

Lee Trevino 71-70-66-71—278

Jack Nicklaus 70-72-71-66—279

Tony Jacklin 69-72-67-72—280

Nicklaus has called this his most disappointing loss, undoubtedly because he was playing the best golf of his career. The Grand Slam was in his sights—he'd already won the Masters and the U.S. Open. He trailed Trevino by six shots going into the final round but pulled into a tie by playing the first 15 holes in six under. Nicklaus missed a five-foot par putt at the 16th, and Trevino held on after chipping in for a crazy par at the 17th hole.

Photo: AP Photo
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Jack Nicklaus (left) was edged by Lee Trevino at the 1971 U.S. Open and again at the 1972 British Open.
1977 MASTERS (Augusta National)

Tom Watson 70-69-70-67—276

Jack Nicklaus 72-70-70-66—278

Two tied 280

In search of his first major, Watson took a three-shot lead into Sunday. The two were tied as the fast-closing Nicklaus stood in the 18th fairway, but then Watson rolled in a 20-foot birdie putt at the 17th. The ensuing roar forced Nicklaus to back off his shot, and he would seal his fate with a last-hole bogey.

1977 BRITISH OPEN (Turnberry)

Tom Watson 68-70-65-65—268

Jack Nicklaus 68-70-65-66—269

Hubert Green 72-66-74-67—279

It became known as the Duel in the Sun, and it turned into quite the weekend as Nicklaus and Watson, playing in unusually dry conditions, left the field in the dust. Nicklaus was two up with six holes to play, but Watson answered with a birdie, then pulled even at the 15th when he holed a 60-foot pin-rattling birdie putt from the fringe. The par-5 17th was the decider. Watson two-putted for birdie, while Nicklaus missed a three-footer. They closed with dramatic birdies, then walked off the 18th green arm in arm.

1977 PGA CHAMPIONSHIP (Pebble Beach)

Lanny Wadkins 69-71-72-70—282

Gene Littler 67-69-70-76—282

Jack Nicklaus 69-71-70-73—283

Littler, 47, led Nicklaus by four and Wadkins by six heading into the final round, but he caught a ride on the bogey train on the back nine. When Nicklaus birdied the 15th hole, he and Littler were tied, with Wadkins one back. At the par-3 17th, site of his famous 1-iron off the flagstick at the '72 U.S. Open, Nicklaus made a bogey. Wadkins birdied the 18th to catch Littler, then won the first sudden-death playoff in major championship history with a par on the third hole.


video
Scorecard Stories: Travelin' Joe Caddies for Jack


1982 U.S. OPEN (Pebble Beach)

Tom Watson 72-72-68-70—282

Jack Nicklaus 74-70-71-69—284

Three tied 286

Tied with Watson as he walked off the 18th green, Nicklaus had to feel good about his chances. Watson had just short-sided himself at the 17th. But then he holed the chip shot and capped his victory with another birdie. What's often forgotten is that Nicklaus missed an eight-foot birdie putt at 14, while Watson holed a 40-footer. And Jack three-putted the 11th for a costly bogey.

1983 PGA CHAMPIONSHIP (Riviera)

Hal Sutton 65-66-72-71—274

Jack Nicklaus 73-65-71-66—275

Peter Jacobsen 73-70-68-65—276

Sutton took a two-shot lead over Ben Crenshaw into the final round, but it was Nicklaus who went on a Sunday tear. He birdied the first six holes on the back nine, only to close with three consecutive bogeys. It would be the last of Jack's 19 runner-up finishes in a major.
 
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You can't say that he could have won more, without looking at how many of his wins he could have lost... I would guess that there were an equal number of those.
 
i agree that is a record that won't be beat. way to much competition now to be able to dominate at that level for that length of time. Tiger did it for a while but with the help of PEDs and going against a rather weak field that was transitioning from country club golfers who didn't take fitness and practice as serious as the modern day golfers. looks at the guys playing now and they are extremely physically fit, on S&C programs that are equivalent to a professional athlete. when TW was playing, his competition was an overweight Colin Montgomerie, John Daly who would literally show up in the morning still drunk, Phil Mickelson when his nickname was man boobs (when Phil got serious about fitness he raised his game and started winning more), David Duvall who literally left the game because he lost it. TW was a great golfer and revolutionized the game and brought it into the 21st century, but also was the beneficiary of a bad stretch. Look today at Speith, Rory, Johnston, and Day and those are 4 guys that can really play and are making each other better.
 
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