The Oklahoman

Palmer’s impact in golf continues

- BY DOUG FERGUSON [AP PHOTO]

CHASKA, Minn. — Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Jordan Spieth all chased the Grand Slam, golf’s holy grail of winning all four majors in one year.

Arnold Palmer is the one who created it.

When he turned 50, it was Palmer who brought enthusiasm and credibilit­y in 1980 to a fledgling circuit known then as the Senior PGA Tour. And it flourished because no one got tired of watching Arnie. Today, nine players who probably should be retired already have made at least $1 million.

The Golf Channel interrupte­d coverage of the PGA Tour Champions event Sunday night when Palmer died at age 87, and the network provided continuous reports on his legacy, highlights of his greatest victories and images of the countless relationsh­ips Palmer developed. One of those legacies was the Golf Channel itself, which he co-founded in 1995.

“It is not an exaggerati­on to say there would be no modern day PGA Tour without Arnold Palmer. There would be no PGA Tour Champions without Arnold Palmer. There would be no Golf Channel without Arnold Palmer,” PGA Tour Commission­er Tim Finchem said.

Some of Palmer’s greatest influences on the game:

GRAND SLAM

It was rare for Americans to play in the British Open in the decade after World War II, mainly because the prize money wasn’t enough to cover travel expenses. Palmer helped return golf’s oldest championsh­ip to its glory in 1960, and he gave the sport a new standard to chase.

He won the Masters and U.S. Open in 1960 when he traveled over to St. Andrews for the British Open. On the journey across, he raised the notion of the modern Grand Slam — the four profession­al majors — to sports writer Bob Drum. Palmer was runner-up to Kel Nagle that year. He won the British Open at Royal Birkdale in 1961, and he defended his title the following year at Royal Troon.

Americans followed his lead soon thereafter.

TELEVISION

Palmer came along about the time television began to take an interest in golf, and he quickly became a star. Two years after CBS Sports first televised the Masters, Palmer won the first of his four green jackets. The marriage of Palmer and TV sent golf to an unpreceden­ted level of popularity.

Frank Chirkinian, the late golf producer for CBS Sports, once said Palmer “had more charisma than any 10 guys I ever met. Maybe more than any 100. You just had to know to keep the camera on him.”

ENDORSEMEN­TS

One of the more pivotal moments in the history of modern golf — all sports, for that matter — was the handshake agreement between Palmer and IMG founder Mark McCormack to represent him in contract negotiatio­ns.

Palmer’s earnings went from $6,000 a year to more than $500,000 in the first two years of his agreement. He had deals with Pennzoil and Rolex, Cadillac and United Airlines, Callaway and Heinz Ketchup.

GOLF CHANNEL

Palmer and Joe Gibbs founded a new network in 1995 called the Golf Channel, which immediatel­y was panned as a waste of air time. Tennis magazine described it as “24 hours of chubby guys in bad clothes speaking in jargon that only they understand.”

In the early days, even Palmer had his doubts, and the question arose whether investors should cut their losses. They asked Palmer what he thought, and his answer is now on a wall at Golf Channel headquarte­rs in Orlando, Florida.

Now, every golf fan knows about the European team at the Ryder Cup because Golf Channel televises the European Tour, along with the LPGA Tour, the PGA Tour Champions and the weekday rounds of all PGA Tour events.

 ??  ?? This 2004 file photo shows former Masters champion Arnold Palmer as he sits on clubhouse railing at the Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga.
This 2004 file photo shows former Masters champion Arnold Palmer as he sits on clubhouse railing at the Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga.

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