‘An American hero’: Nicklaus lauds honoree Larry Nelson
When Gayle Nelson got her husband golf clubs as a Christmas gift in 1969, she had no idea it would change their lives.
It wasn’t even a full set of clubs. Just 3-, 5-, 7- and 9-irons with a driver and 3-wood.
Larry Nelson had recently gotten back from serving as an infantry leader in Vietnam. He and Gayle had gotten married when he was 19 and she was 17.
Larry had been a three-sport athlete in high school. None of the three was golf. At 22, these were his first clubs. The idea that Larry Nelson might someday be the honoree at Nicklaus’ tournament, as he was Wednesday, was beyond preposterous.
“I didn’t know anything about golf,” Nelson said. “I played a lot of pool, so maybe she was trying to get me out of the pool hall.”
He was planning to finish his degree at Georgia Tech in Atlanta.
“I would have been a chemical engineer,” Nelson said.
Instead, he fell in love with golf. He got a job in a pro shop and took to the game.
He bought Ben Hogan’s book, “Five Lessons: The Modern Fundamentals of Golf.” Within months, he was breaking par.
He became a PGA tour player in 1973 after playing in only one 72-hole tournament and developed into top player. He won 10 PGA Tour events and won three major championships, all the while impressing his peers with his humility. He was also a standout Ryder Cup player.
Reflecting on Nelson’s Vietnam War service, Nicklaus said, “Larry Nelson is an American hero.”
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan praised Nelson and Nelson’s son Josh gave a touching introductory speech.
“It’s kind of hard when you hear things said about you from three or four different people,” the 75-year-old Nelson said. “It makes you think and you reflect, but it’s very emotional. I can’t look at my wife. I’ve known her since she was 3 years old, so it’s hard to look at her without getting emotional anyway.”
Little could Gayle Nelson have known that her gift would result in a day like Wednesday.
“It’s amazing,” she said. “It’s just God’s blessing, and a lot of hard work, certainly.”
There was also serendipity that those clubs she bought her husband more than 50 years ago weren’t just any clubs. They were Jack Nicklaus-brand clubs.
“It’s too much of a full circle,” Nelson said.
Snedeker back after rare surgery
Brandt Snedeker, a nine-time PGA Tour winner who hasn’t played a PGA Tour event since September, is at the Memorial after undergoing surgery in December to repair his sternum.
Snedeker had been diagnosed with the issue in 2016, and for much of the next six years had been traveling to South America to do stem cell treatments.
Even still, he was living with constant pain. A mixture of Tylenol, Advil and steroids could only do so much. It had limited his practice to the point that he couldn’t even hit driver when he was home.
There are only around a dozen known cases of Snedeker’s condition in the country, so there were limited surgical options.
“To say it’s a rare thing is an understatement,” he said.
Regardless, an operation, which left Snedeker with a six-inch scar was performed Dec. 1, has it has been judged a success. Snedeker spent the next four weeks in a recliner – “I felt like someone hit me with a Mack truck,” he said – and didn’t hit a golf ball until April 1.
He took some trips he’d always wanted to do, including to the Bahamas where he bumped into Nicklaus and talked fishing for half an hour. But he also made an important realization: “I think I found out I’m too young to retire,” said Snedeker, 42.
With four starts remaining on a minor medical exemption, he had circled this week’s Memorial on his calendar to make his return to competition, and after playing every day for the last two weeks and experiencing no setbacks said he’s getting back to “the only job I’ve really ever had.”