Taranaki Daily News

Risk-taker Palmer won over a legion of fans

The King is dead. Long live the King. ‘‘Arnie’s Army’’ has a general no more as golf world mourns passing of true great.

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Golf legend Arnold Palmer has died, aged 87. Palmer died yesterday at University of Pittsburgh Medical Centre Presbyteri­an Hospital in Pittsburgh, according to his long-time assistant Doc Griffin.

The golf great was hospitalis­ed in preparatio­n for heart surgery, but Griffin said he did not know the exact cause of death.

The US Golf Associatio­n led the tributes for the man who in the 1960s drew large crowds with a legion of fans dubbed ‘‘Arnie’s Army’’, calling him ’’golf’s greatest ambassador’’.

Among the tributes from the world golf community came praise for Palmer from Kiwi women’s No 1 Lydia Ko, who posted online a tribute to the ‘‘role model, legend and King’’.

Golf great Tiger Woods also offered his condolence­s, saying it was ‘‘hard to imagine golf without you’’.

Palmer was in his prime as a golfer in the 1960s when he won seven major titles. He was a twotime PGA Tour player of the year, winning the accolade in 1960 and 1962. He won 62 PGA Tour titles in total, making him the fifth most successful of all-time.

Palmer was a popular player on tour, and was considered one of the ‘big three’ of his time, along with Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player.

Kiwi golfer Phil Tataurangi paid tribute to Palmer as a man who made golf cool, and opened opportunit­ies for players from across the world, such as himself.

He played in the same group as Palmer in the 2003 Masters at Augusta, his first attempt at the most hallowed of tournament­s.

‘‘It was an experience I will treasure forever,’’ Tataurangi said.

‘‘You’re a spectator and a competitor all at once; it was really cool, it really was.’’

Palmer, a greenkeepe­r’s son became one of golf’s most charismati­c champions, making millions of dollars by turning his popular ‘‘everyman’’ image into one of the most lucrative sports brands in the world.

Palmer rose from a blue-collar background to become part of the sport’s royalty - he was colloquial­ly known on the PGA tour as ‘The King’ - and frequent playing partner of US presidents.

He left an indelible mark on the world of golf in the form of nearly 300 signature-designed courses, and Arnold Palmer Enterprise­s, which handled his endorsemen­ts and other ventures, helped make Palmer the first golfer to make his name a worldwide franchise.

Many credit Palmer with inventing golf as a televised sport, becoming the game’s first wellknown star by helping to put a name and face to the game. Palmer’s vitality and boyishly handsome looks helped attract many new fans to the sport who watched on television.

‘‘I’ve got sex written all over my face,’’ Palmer once said.

Emerging as a superstar athlete in the 1950s, Palmer did not play golf courses; he attacked them. Armed with a brutish swing that more resembled a hockey slap shot than a daisy cutter, Palmer brought energy and zest to the staid game that men before him such as Bobby Jones and Sam Snead played wearing tweed coats and knickers.

Standing 6-feet-2, with broad shoulders, beefy arms and massive hands, Palmer was known for bombing drives off the tee and then stalking his ball down the fairway, striding long bounds while dangling a thin cigarette between his fingers.

Frequently, though, Palmer’s heavy swing would lead him to find his ball beached in sand traps and buried in thick rough. When his options were either to play it safe by taking a stroke and punching out for a cleaner shot, or zinging it between trees and through bushes for the narrow chance to save for par, Palmer knew what to do.

‘‘There always were conservati­ve players, fairwaysan­d-greens types,’’ he told the Wall Street Journal.

‘‘The spectators get a kick out of seeing a player take a shot, take a risk.’’

Surrounded by the gallery, Palmer would flick his cigarette, hitch up his pants, and then blast his ball for often mesmerisin­g results.

From 1958 to 1964, he won seven major titles, including the Masters four times, the US Open once, and the British Open twice, two years in a row. Throughout a career spanning five decades, Palmer won 62 tournament­s on the US tour, and accrued nearly US$7 million (NZ$9.7m) in prizemoney. He was the first golfer earn US$1m in purses.

Perhaps Palmer’s most memorable tournament, and one of the greatest golf showdowns of all time, occurred at the 1960 US Open at Cherry Hills Country Club near Denver.

On the final day of the event, Palmer was seven shots behind the leader - an otherwise insurmount­able lead.

‘‘What’ll happen if I shoot 65?’’ Palmer asked a friend before he teed off for the final round. ’’Nothing,’’ said Pittsburgh sportswrit­er Bob Drum, ‘‘You blew your chance.’’

‘‘Like hell I did,’’ Palmer replied. ‘‘A 65 gives me 280 and 280 wins the Open.’’

That day, Palmer drove the green on the 346-yard first hole. He birdied six of the seven opening holes. He shot a 65 - edging out an amateur prodigy by two shots named Jack Nicklaus - to win his only Open title.

Palmer was already an establishe­d champion on the tour when Nicklaus rose from obscurity to become golf’s golden boy. In nearly every tournament they entered, Palmer and Nicklaus battled in what is known as one of golf’s fiercest rivalries.

At the 1962 US Open, Nicklaus won his first major championsh­ip by beating Palmer in a playoff. In 1964, Palmer finished first at the Masters, while Nicklaus was second.

The next year, the order was reversed. In 1967, Nicklaus won the US Open again, this time with a score of five-under-par. The only other player in the top 10 who played below par was Palmer, who finished second, four shots behind Nicklaus.

Their rivalry extended off the course to the business world. Palmer was known to call Nicklaus’ marketing symbol - a golden bear - a ‘‘golden pig,’’ reflecting Nicklaus’ pudgy physique.

In their later years, however, Palmer and Nicklaus became great friends. In 2010, Palmer and Nicklaus were the ceremonial starters of the Masters tournament and both hit an honorary first drive.

‘‘In terms of fan recognitio­n, he lifted the game to another level,’’ Nicklaus told USA Today in 2004.

‘‘He grabbed the imaginatio­n of the public. From 1958 to 1964 it would be hard to find a golfer who played better.’’

Of Palmer’s mass appeal, golf writer Dan Jenkins once noted: ’’Arnold Palmer did not play golf, we thought. He nailed up beams, reupholste­red sofas, repaired air conditioni­ng units. He was the most immeasurab­le of all golf champions.’’

His fans made themselves known one year at the Masters in Augusta, Georgia, parading behind him and holding up signs that read ‘‘Arnie’s Army’’. Many of them were soldiers from nearby Fort Gordon who had come to the tournament just to watch Palmer.

In all of his tournament appearance­s, Palmer was followed by throngs of fans who would stack themselves 15 rows deep. They’d climb trees, stand on shoulders, and even employ cardboard periscopes - anything to catch a glimpse of ‘‘The King.’’

Palmer capitalise­d on his popularity to wide success as a businessma­n, notably in 1961 when he started Arnold Palmer Enterprise­s with the marketing symbol of a coloured golf umbrella.

Much of his success behind the scenes was credited to his business partner, Mark McCormack, whom Palmer had played against in college.

McCormack, who died in 2004, founded IMG, an athlete management business, in 1960 and signed Palmer as his first client. Their deal, which was sealed with a handshake, immediatel­y proved fruitful. In the first two years, Palmer’s endorsemen­ts soared from US$6000 a year to more than US$500,000.

Throughout his career, Palmer maintained contracts with a wide variety of companies, including Rayovac batteries, Rolex watches, Starkey hearing aids, Pennzoil engine fluids, Ketel One vodka, Cadillac luxury cars, Callaway golfing products and E-Z-Go golf carts.

Palmer is also credited with creating a blended drink, an iced tea splashed with lemonade.

‘‘A guy came up to the bar and he ordered an Arnold Palmer, and the barman knew what that drink was,’’ said Irishman Padraig Harrington, a three-time majors champion. ‘‘That’s in a league of your own.’’

Always the businessma­n, in 2002 Palmer had his company license ‘‘Arnold Palmer Tee,’’ a bottled version of the drink, to the AriZona Beverage Co.

Palmer was also one of the first profession­als to design golf courses and make millions of dollars doing it. Nearly 300 golf courses around the globe bear his name, including two that Palmer owned: the Bay Hill Club and Lodge in Orlando, home to the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al, a PGA tour event, and the Latrobe Country Club in Pennsylvan­ia, the course where his father maintained the greens.

In 1994, Forbes estimated Palmer’s personal fortune to be worth more than US$175m. In Asia alone, the Arnold Palmer brand sells more than US$100m in products that range from car air fresheners to bed linens.

Palmer owned an exclusive magazine that catered to clubs where he had designed a golf course. He named the signature publicatio­n, which is distribute­d worldwide, Kingdom.

Arnold Daniel Palmer was born September 10, 1929, in Youngstown, Pennsylvan­ia, and raised in nearby Latrobe. He learned the game of golf from his father, Milfred Jerome ‘‘Deke’’ Palmer, a strict taskmaster who worked every day on the grounds of the Latrobe Country Club.

Palmer recalled in his book, A Golfer’s Life (1999), that he was three when his father placed a cutdown women’s golf club in his hands and instructed him simply to ‘‘hit it hard, boy’’.

The rest Palmer did himself. He grew up to become a prodigious player and in high school lost only four matches.

During a junior tournament one summer, he met Marvin ‘‘Bud’’ Worsham, a golfer from the Washington area who would change Palmer’s life.

Worsham, who was also known as Bubby, became Palmer’s best friend, and the two became roommates at what is now Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, where they both played golf on scholarshi­p.

One night in Palmer’s senior year, Worsham was in a car that caromed off a road and slammed into a tree. Palmer, who was supposed to have been in the vehicle that night with Worsham, drove to the coroner the following morning to identify his best friend’s body.

The most prestigiou­s junior tournament played in Washington, the Bubby Worsham Memorial, was renamed in his honour.

Shortly after the accident, Palmer left school and served three years in the Coast Guard. In 1954, seven months out of Coast Guard service and long out of the elite level of golf, Palmer entered the US Amateur tournament, then one of the premier events for golf talent.

Palmer, who was a long shot to begin with, won the tournament by a shot over Robert Sweeny. He often said he considered the win one of his greatest victories and the turning point in his career. Days later Palmer became a profession­al golfer by signing a sponsorshi­p deal with Wilson Sporting Goods.

In his later years, Palmer took on the role of golf’s godfather, dispensing advice to fellow players on anything from business, their swing, to their private lives.

In 2010, Palmer was outspoken during the aftermath of the news that Tiger Woods had been an unfaithful husband, and said Woods could have handled the controvers­y better by being more open with the public.

Among his many charitable donations, Palmer endowed a scholarshi­p at Wake Forest in honour of Bud Worsham. In 2006, the Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women and Babies opened in Orlando, largely funded by Palmer, which he named in memory of his wife of 45 years, the former Winnie Walzer, who died in 1999.

Survivors include his second wife, the former Kathleen Gawthrop, whom he married in 2005.

In 2004, US President George W Bush awarded Palmer the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honour. Over the years, Palmer played golf with a number of presidents, and was frequent a partner of Dwight D Eisenhower.

Palmer often told a story about the first Masters he played in as a profession­al in 1955.

He and his wife, Winnie, drove up Magnolia Lane, the storied entrance to the grand white clubhouse of Augusta National, in a coral pink Ford towing a cramped 19-foot trailer they would live out of for the week of the event.

He came in 10th that year and won the considerab­le sum of US$695.83, ‘‘and we never pulled the trailer again’’.

 ??  ?? Golf legend Arnold Palmer pictured at the Masters in April, 2016.
Golf legend Arnold Palmer pictured at the Masters in April, 2016.
 ??  ?? Golf great Tiger Woods pictured with ‘‘The King’’ Arnold Palmer at St Andrews in Scotland, in 2015.
Golf great Tiger Woods pictured with ‘‘The King’’ Arnold Palmer at St Andrews in Scotland, in 2015.
 ??  ?? The big three of Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player, pictured at Augusta in April, 2015.
The big three of Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player, pictured at Augusta in April, 2015.
 ??  ?? Arnold Palmer with his wife Kathleen Gawthrop at St Andrews, Scotland, in 2015.
Arnold Palmer with his wife Kathleen Gawthrop at St Andrews, Scotland, in 2015.

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