Cape Breton Post

Palmer made mark on Canadian golf

Including first PGA Tour win in 1955

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The outpouring of warmth for Arnold Palmer extended north of the border the day after his death, even if the King of golf almost thwarted Canadian Sandra Post’s bid to win the 1978 Dinah Shore championsh­ip.

Post was tied for the lead in the final round when she suddenly had to stop for 35 minutes because organizers had Palmer in a promotion, hitting 35 shots on the par-3 17th with a chance for someone to win a cash prize if he got a hole-inone.

“It started when I was on the 16th!” Post said on Monday. “I had to wait, and then there were all those pitch marks on the green. And the player I was tied with (Penny Pulz) was in the clubhouse.”

She won the tournament and laughs about it now. She even adds that she and Palmer were on the same plane afterwards — he in first class and she one row behind in coach.

“This is a day of sadness but I’m so grateful he was in my era,” Post said. “I was fortunate to play several rounds with him.

“He was always generous with the women’s game, playing in mixed events.”

Palmer, who died Sunday at age 87 in a Pittsburgh hospital, went from being a caddie to one of the greatest names in the sport but never seemed to forget where he came from. His humility and graciousne­ss are remembered as much as his golf achievemen­ts.

Dave Barr of Kelowna, B.C., who won twice on the PGA Tour, played several times with Palmer and called him a role model.

“You tried to pattern your game after him and also how to treat people,” said Barr. “You tried to learn from him.

“He probably wasn’t the best player — you have to like Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods for that — but he was the one who made the game popular. All of us, as pros, appreciate what he did for the game and how he allowed us to make a decent living from it. It’s a sad day.”

Palmer certainly left his mark on Canada, and not only for the courses he helped design like the Whistler Golf Club or Northview in Surrey, B.C.

The Latrobe, Pa., native posted the first of his 62 PGA Tour victories in 1955 at the Weston Golf Club near Toronto. Palmer was a Tour rookie that year and travelled between tournament­s by car with his first wife Winnie. The couple camped in a field behind the superinten­dent’s shed.

Then he blew away the pack en route to a four-stroke win and the top prize of $2,400.

“Things came together pretty much for me in this Canadian Open and it got me started on the winning trail,” Palmer said of the win.

He also won the Canadian PGA championsh­ip at the Mayfair club in Edmonton in 1980. It was his last title before joining the seniors tour, where he had 10 wins to boost his career pro victories total to 95.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? This Jan. 28, 1962, file photo shows Arnold Palmer concentrat­ing on his next move during the Lucky Internatio­nal Open at San Francisco’s Harding Park.
AP PHOTO This Jan. 28, 1962, file photo shows Arnold Palmer concentrat­ing on his next move during the Lucky Internatio­nal Open at San Francisco’s Harding Park.

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