USA TODAY International Edition

Palmer’s figure still towers over golf

- Steve DiMeglio Columnist

ORLANDO, Fla. – The day after Webb Simpson won the 2012 U. S. Open at Olympic, it was logical to call up Arnold Palmer for a follow- up story.

The two are fellow Wake Forest Deacons, after all, and Simpson played his college golf on the Arnold Palmer scholarshi­p.

Digits were punched and Doc Giffin, Palmer’s longtime righthand man, picked up on first ring. There was a 15second pause.

“Arnie’s on speakerpho­ne.” Think about that. In less than half a minute, Palmer, one of the most popular players the game has ever seen, a man who influenced golf so much and the lives of so many, who would become a King and lead his own army, took the call immediatel­y without appointmen­t and jubilantly talked about Simpson and how proud he was of the young man’s victory.

That was Arnie.

He often spoke to how much the game gave to him and in turn his responsibi­lity to give back. He gave back. And gave and gave and gave.

We’re coming up on five years now since Palmer died on the eve of Ryder Cup week in 2016 at age 87. At this week’s Arnold Palmer Invitation­al at the Bay Hill Club & Lodge, where a 13foot bronze statue of Palmer in full swing stands tall by the first tee, his legacy will be remembered and celebrated as it is every year.

Arnie should be celebrated every week of the year.

“We still very much feel his spirit and his presence here at his own event, but also in the game of golf in general,” Henrik Stenson said. “So much work for charity. He’s a huge figure in the sport, and big thanks for everything he did throughout his career and after.”

Arnie was there for one and all, from kids to the blue- collar worker to captains of industry to presidents of the United States. He was the accessible common man, a philanthro­pist who raised millions for charities.

He was an experience­d aviator who took flight on golf courses around the world as one of the game’s best to ever play. He was the bold, telegenic golfer with thick forearms and a thin waist, a whirlybird follow- through and pigeontoed putting stance who burst out of black- and- white TV sets and took the game to the masses while winning 62 titles on the PGA Tour, including seven majors.

He was a trailblazi­ng marketing giant, a top- notch golf designer. Was awarded the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 2004 and Congressio­nal Gold Medal in 2012, helped found the Golf Channel, helped usher in the Champions Tour.

He was Arnie, a folk hero with a driver in hand and a handshake after the round, who signed as many autographs, posed for as many pictures, chatted with as many fans in the galleries as any golfer who hit a golf ball.

“Arnold Palmer was the everyday man’s hero,” Jack Nicklaus once said. “From the modest upbringing, Arnold embodied the hardworkin­g strength of America.”

Tiger Woods, a record eight- time winner of Arnie’s tournament whose two children were born at the Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women & Babies in Orlando, which is near the Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children, said Palmer meant everything to golf.

“There was no one more important to the game than Arnold,” Woods once said. “He was a friend, we shared a lot of laughs, he was a legend.”

Palmer was a prolific writer, too. For decades, he sent thousands of letters to all winners on the PGA Tour, Champions Tour, LPGA tour and Web. com Tour. Some winners of collegiate events, too, as some winners of overseas events. Whether handwritte­n or typed, each was personaliz­ed.

Of the many letters Rory McIlroy received, the one that arrived after he won the first of his four major championsh­ips in the 2011 U. S. Open meant the most.

“You are now in a position where you have the opportunit­y to give back to the game that is making you famous, and I hope, and certainly feel sure, that you will live up to that obligation in the months and years ahead. Just continue to be yourself. Don’t change. Sincerely, Arnold Palmer”

“Those were good words of wisdom and words to live by,” said McIlroy, who won the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al in 2018.

Palmer meant so much to Rickie Fowler that he drove some three hours in 2016 to tell him he couldn’t play in the tournament that year.

“It was obviously a tough decision. It was all schedule related,” Fowler said. “Just thought it would mean a lot if I at least made that announceme­nt or discussed it and shared it with Arnold in person. One of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do.

“It was like I was breaking up with a longtime girlfriend or something.

“He was a little bit in shock, but he understood.”

That was Arnie.

 ?? EILEEN BLASS/ USA TODAY ?? Arnold Palmer tinkered around with golf clubs and had a wall full of them in his workshop in Latrobe, Pennsylvan­ia, in 2009.
EILEEN BLASS/ USA TODAY Arnold Palmer tinkered around with golf clubs and had a wall full of them in his workshop in Latrobe, Pennsylvan­ia, in 2009.
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