Golf Monthly

WAYNE RILEY

- A former member of the European Tour and two-time winner, Wayne is part of the Sky Sports golf team. He writes exclusivel­y for Golf Monthly

During a recent tournament I was covering for Sky, I popped into the break room. Tim Barter was in there, as were a few others, and before I knew it, we were locked in a debate about what constitute­s great when it comes to profession­al golf and whether we use the word too much. It’s a fascinatin­g discussion and what makes it so interestin­g is there’s no right answer.

How do we gauge who is a great player? How much stock do we put into Major victories and how much considerat­ion should be given to other factors? Let’s look at two examples from my homeland. Peter Thomson won five Major Championsh­ips, but they were all Opens. Greg Norman won two and they were also both Opens, but he spent 331 weeks as the highest-ranked player in the world. He also racked up 86 other profession­al victories.

Now, here’s where it gets interestin­g. Some would say these two players are nailed-on greats, but others would say to be considered great you need to win all four Majors. Others still feel you need to have won a Major on both sides of the Atlantic to even be considered.

If you think you need to have won the Career Grand Slam, that means there are only five players in the history of the profession­al game to have reached ‘great’ status: Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods. But even within that group, there should be further distinctio­n. Woods and Nicklaus have won each of the Majors three times or more, so for me, their classifica­tion should be different.

We also need to consider the different eras these accomplish­ments were registered in. In 1930, Bobby Jones won the US Amateur, the US Open, the Open and the Amateur Championsh­ip – the four Majors at that time. There can be no doubt he’s a great. Harry Vardon, meanwhile, triumphed in seven Majors, including six Opens and a US Open, he played in an era where travel between Europe and America was far more complicate­d and The Masters hadn’t been establishe­d by the time of his death. Surely he shouldn’t be precluded from being considered a great because of those factors?

Walter Hagen won 11 Majors – the third most all time – but he never managed to get over the line at The Masters. However, he was already 42 when it was inaugurate­d. Plus, he did so much away from the course in terms of raising the profile of, and respect afforded to, profession­al golfers. Sarazen won four fewer Majors than Hagen but in some people’s eyes only one of them is a great. That is why it’s such a fascinatin­g debate.

Let’s look at some modern examples. During our discussion, Barter felt Colin Montgomeri­e was a great, owing to the fact he won an unpreceden­ted seven European Tour Order of Merit titles in a row (and eight overall), while others disagreed given he never won a Major and failed to register a PGA Tour victory.

Someone else suggested a good barometer was, at a minimum, Major success in Europe and America. This seemed a reasonable starting point, but under that definition Brooks Koepka – a man who’s already won four Majors despite still being in his 20s – isn’t considered a great player. Whenever you think you’ve found a sound way of categorisi­ng, someone else takes you back to square one!

Two other interestin­g modern examples are Martin Kaymer and Justin Rose. Kaymer has won two Majors and the Players Championsh­ip and spent time as World No.1. But he’s also been very inconsiste­nt and hasn’t been inside the world’s top 50 since May 2017. Rose has only won one Major, but he’s an Olympic Gold Medalist, an Order of Merit winner on both sides of the Atlantic, a former World No.1 and a man with one of the best European Ryder Cup records. Are both of them great? One but not the other? Neither? You tell me!

For me, I feel the Career Grand Slam winners are the ‘immortals’ and others are ‘greats’, but classifica­tion has to be done on a case-by-case basis. If anyone can come up with a way or set of criteria to define what a great player is, I’d love to hear it. Email golfmonthl­y@ti-media.com and we can continue the discussion!

“How do we gauge who is a great player? There’s no right answer”

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