Growling like a papa bear
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RICHARD DUNN
As Jack Nicklaus got up from his chair on stage in the interview room
at the Toshiba Senior Classic media center at Newport Beach Country
Club, he acted his age.
It was slow and careful. There was a grimace on his face. He
reached down with his right hand to grab his hip and lower back. It
was painful to watch.
Then he gracefully stood up. Like a bear growling in the forest.
Nicklaus, however, is fine physically.
“I’m OK,” he quipped. “I’m not looking down.”
But the big question on everybody’s mind this week has been --
will Nicklaus come back next year if he wins?
“Sure,” he answered matter-of-factly. “I’ve never not defended a
tournament [title]. I would be happy to come back.”
The Nicklaus who showed up this week still has an attitude. Still
wants to win. Still has something to prove. Still believes he can win
a golf tournament.
“I think I might have a good shot at playing well,” said Nicklaus,
the winner of 18 major championships.
Nicklaus shot his age at the Skins Game less than four months ago
and has played well thus far on the PGA Champions Tour at the
MasterCard Championship in Hawaii and ACE Group Classic in Naples,
Fla., but the Golden Bear, making his first appearance in the Toshiba
Senior Classic today, realizes that “reality will set in” and his age
will get the best of him.
In a press conference Thursday, Nicklaus, among other things,
continued to ridicule the United States Golf Association and its
position on allowing modern-day equipment and golf balls to travel
where no player has gone before. But then surprised many, including
longtime followers, when he talked about almost quitting some 20
years ago, only to remain in the game because of his four boys, who
inspired him to persevere and play with them as they grew in the
game.
“If I hadn’t had four boys who loved golf, I would’ve stopped
playing in my early 40s,” Nicklaus said. “You don’t expect, when you
have little kids, that they will have that kind of influence.”
A few years after rethinking his retirement plans, Nicklaus won
the 1986 Masters at age 46, becoming the oldest player in history to
win at Augusta National.
“As great as it felt to win the Master in 1986 at my age, sharing
something with my son [Jack, who caddied] was really special,”
Nicklaus said. “To share those things are really nice. My boys kept
me playing.”
Today’s Newport Beach gallery for the aging-gracefully Nicklaus
for a 10:55 a.m. tee time should rival that only of his greatest
challenger -- Arnold Palmer, whose first and only Toshiba Senior
Classic appearance came in 2000, the rain-shortened 36-hole affair
won by Allen Doyle.
Nicklaus enjoys the good life fishing for trout and playing tennis
with his wife, Barbara, while living in North Palm Beach, Fla. But
when Nicklaus tees it up, he’s all business, though he realizes
father time catches up with you.
“You try to play golf as long as you can,” Nicklaus said. “Am I
really going to get better next year [no matter how often I
practice]? No, I’m not going to get any better. I enjoy catching big
fish and playing a lot of tennis. When I play golf, my expectations
are different. If I’m not walking down the 18th fairway with a chance
to win the golf tournament, then I’m not being realistic. Why am I
here? Nobody really wants to admit their time is over.”
For golf fans and Toshiba Senior Classic organizers, the time for
Nicklaus is just beginning. Welcome to the first tee, Jack.
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