New York Post

Nicklaus doesn’t see ‘eye-to-eye’ with Norman on start-up golf tour

- By MARK CANNIZZARO

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — Greg Norman was disinvited by the Royal & Ancient to attend this week’s historic 150th British Open at St. Andrews, including the champion’s dinner and Monday’s Celebratio­n of Champions, where past Open champions played holes 1, 2, 17 and 18.

The tournament officials reasoned that despite the fact that Norman is a twotime past champion (1986 and 1993), his involvemen­t with the controvers­ial Saudi-backed LIV Golf tour would cause a distractio­n.

On Monday, Jack Nick- laus weighed in on the Norman situation with strong words — both for and against Norman.

“Let me just sum this up with a couple of words,’’ the 82-year-old Nicklaus said. “First of all, Greg Norman is an icon in the game of golf. He’s a great player. We’ve been friends for a long time, and regardless of what happens he’s going to remain a friend.

“Unfortunat­ely, he and I just don’t see eye-to-eye in what’s going on [with LIV Golf]. I’ll basically leave it at that.’’

Nicklaus recently revealed that a group of Saudi investors had reached out to him offering him millions of dollars to join forces with them in their effort to build golf in their country and that he turned them down.

“I was offered something in excess of $100 million by the Saudis, to do the job probably similar to the one that Greg is doing,” Nicklaus told Michael Bamberger of the website Fire Pit Collective. “I turned it down. Once verbally, once in writing. I said, ‘Guys, I have to stay with the PGA Tour. I helped start the PGA Tour.’ ”

Nicklaus and his family are in St. Andrews this week for the first time since he played his final British Open on the Old Course in 2005 because he is being celebrated as an honorary citizen of St. Andrews.

“I declined to come back the last couple of times to St. Andrews [2010 and 2015], because [I] made my farewell in 2005 and I didn’t want to come back and dilute that for what it was. But when I got the invitation this time to be an honorary citizen of St. Andrews and to follow Bobby Jones and Benjamin Franklin, I’ve got to come back. I think that’s pretty special. There’s only two Americans that have ever been honored. I’m very flattered by that. I’m sure it will be a humbling experience [Tuesday].’’

➤ U.S. Open winner Matthew Fitzpatric­k conceded on Monday that he wasn’t sure how his game would look after he had achieved his highest goal of winning a major championsh­ip.

“I’ll be honest, like I was a little bit apprehensi­ve,’’ he said. “Where’s my game at? The golf last week [at the Scottish Open], links golf is quite drasticall­y different than what we played at the U.S. Open and what we played year round. It is a very different form of golf. So that was also kind of something I was apprehensi­ve about.

“I felt like I was pleased with the way I played. I was kind of laughing to my friends, and I was kind of saying I’m just happy that I’ve still kind of got it a little bit.’’

➤ The R&A has a sense of humor. In Monday’s Celebratio­n of Champions exhibition, pairing past Open champions, Tom Watson and Stewart Cink were in the same group. Cink, of course, kept Watson from winning the Open at age 59 in 2009 at Turnberry, winning in a playoff.

 ?? ?? JACK NICKLAUS
JACK NICKLAUS

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