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Happy Birthday to the GOAT Golfer

  • ZWICK 4 PREZ
    Happy 70th birthday Jack.
  • Darkon
    Pure class.
    Wish him many more.
  • gerb131
    Keep on keepin on Jack. Happy Birthday.
  • I Wear Pants
    GOAT for a few more years.
  • ZWICK 4 PREZ
    if by a few more years you mean forever, then i agree.
  • ytownfootball
    Jack...dotting the i



    Very fortunate to have seen him play in person, definately a hi-lite.
  • I Wear Pants
    ZWICK 4 PREZ wrote: if by a few more years you mean forever, then i agree.
    How do we define the greatest golfer? If it's by domination on the course via win percentage, majors won, etc then he likely won't be the best ever for very much longer.

    Unless you consider things outside of golf it's hard to argue that Tiger won't (in all likelihood) go down as the best to play the game.
  • ZWICK 4 PREZ
    Well.. they don't exactly hand those majors away.. he still has to win them. Jacks the definition of golf. Tigers a piss poor example.
  • Speedofsand
    I remember reading a good article in S.I. a couple years ago. It was about the first time Jack played golf with Arnold Palmer. It was in Athens, and mentioned some guys my dad grew up with that organized the exhibition.

    Jack's grandson Nick O'Leary is a stud athlete. Plays football for Palm Beach Dwyer, state champs this year. 3 of his teammates are going to play for Florida. Nick will have dozens of offers next year.
  • I Wear Pants
    You really think that if/when Tiger goes back to golf he won't get at least four more majors?
  • Darkon
    As a golfer Tiger will get the title.
    As an ICON Jack will be at the top for a long time.
  • ohiotiger33
    Happy B-day to Jack.
  • darbypitcher22
    Jack's the man. Happy Birthday
  • The Giss
    Absolute class. Got to carry his bags for four holes of a practice round in the PGA at Canterbury in '73 at age 14. I am watching a couple Club Pros my dad knew and Nicklaus shows up at 14 on Tuesday carrying hi sown bag and ask these guys if he can play a few holes with them. They ask me if I want to carry his bag. Ummm, yea.
    We finish and he asks what he owes me. I stuttered and stammered, I mean it was Nicklaus and it was just four holes, so he hands me a $20. I had him autograph the bill and I still have it.
    The best there ever was.
  • UA5straightin2008
    UA pride!! Jack went to Upper Arlington where he was given the nickname "The Golden Bear" after UA's mascot!
  • Speedofsand
    http://www.news-journalonline.com/NewsJournalOnline/Sports/Headlines/sptGLF01012110.htm

    18 surprising facts as Nicklaus turns 70

    NO. 1
    When Jack was growing up in Columbus, Ohio, he excelled at a variety of sports, and if not for an astounding golf skill that landed him a scholarship at Ohio State, he likely would've played college basketball.

    NO. 2
    Jack's father, Charlie, played football at Ohio State. Charlie became a pharmacist after graduation but continued in sports, playing semi-pro football and winning local tennis championships. Charlie also became close friends with legendary Ohio State coach Woody Hayes, who, upon watching Jack play golf, convinced Charlie to keep the boy far away from a football field.

    NO. 3
    Jack's grandson, Nick O'Leary, just completed his junior season at Palm Beach Dwyer High School. He's considered Florida's top tight-end prospect for the class of 2011. Jack's son, Steve, played football at Florida State in the early '80s.

    NO. 4
    Jack said he reported to Ohio State in 1958 at 175 pounds, but fraternity fun added nearly 50 pounds in his first semester. "I tried to drink all the beer in Columbus, then I found out they just kept making more," he once told Golf Digest magazine.

    NO. 5
    In 1978, Jack, an avid fisherman inshore and off, caught a 1,358-pound black marlin off the coast of Australia. Later that week, he won the Australian Open by six shots.

    NO. 6
    During the 1970s, when Jack was in his 30s, he won eight of his 18 professional major titles. In 40 majors played during the decade, he finished outside the top 10 just five times (never worse than fifth in the British Opens of the '70s).

    NO. 7
    When Jack turned 50 in 1990, he suggested he wouldn't play many Senior Tour events. For each week he stayed away, Lee Trevino sent Jack's wife Barbara a bouquet of flowers.

    NO. 8
    Trevino's desire to keep Jack away was well founded. In the first eight Senior Tour majors Jack played, in 1990-91, he won five of them. Overall, he won eight Senior majors. Throw in his two U.S. Amateurs, and that's 28 total majors.

    NO. 9
    An Australian golf writer named Don Lawrence first referred to Nicklaus as the "Golden Bear" in a 1963 article. Jack certainly liked that better than the "Fat Jack" label many put on him -- he was also self-conscious about his high-pitched voice, so he liked the manly imagery. It also fit because in high school Jack played for the Upper Arlington Golden Bears.

    NO. 10
    Charlie Nicklaus died of pancreatic cancer in 1970. Near the end, while being wheeled into the operating room on a gurney, Charlie looked at Jack and said, "Don't think it ain't been charming." Thirty-five years later, after Jack completed his final round at the Masters Tournament, he repeated that line to his son and caddy, Jackie.

    NO. 11
    Charlie Nicklaus once followed Bobby Jones during one of Jones' major championships, and had hoped Jack would follow in Jones' footsteps as a career amateur. Jack had planned to do that, and figured he'd follow Charlie's career path as a pharmacist, but by age 20 it became obvious there'd be more competition (and money) in the pro ranks.

    NO. 12
    If Ben Hogan's book, "Five Lessons: The Modern Fundamentals of Golf," is considered the bible of golf instruction, Jack's "Golf My Way" is probably a close second. The 1974 book is still selling (well over 2 million copies), and many modern stars -- including Ernie Els and Greg Norman -- credit the book for building their games as youngsters.

    NO. 13
    During halftime of the Ohio State-Minnesota football game in 2006, Jack became just the fifth non-band member ever to "Dot the I" for the Buckeye band.

    NO. 14
    Jack, a father of five, was always a regular at his kids' sporting events, and does the same now with the grandkids. During his prime golf years, he made a point of never playing more than two tournaments in a row in order to be home as often as possible.

    NO. 15
    Jack and Barbara built a home near their native Columbus in 1964. During construction, they spent the winter in South Florida. Jack's love for warm-weather activities (mostly tennis and fishing) won out, and by 1970, they moved to North Palm Beach, into a home where they still live.

    NO. 16
    Due to contractual obligations, Jack played MacGregor golf balls during his professional career. The balls were considered to be very weak, especially when compared to Titleist balls. "It shows how good he really was," said former USGA technical director Frank Thomas.

    NO. 17
    The most famous quote about Jack's game came at the 1965 Masters, where Bobby Jones said, "Nicklaus played a game with which I'm not familiar." But Tom Weiskopf may have best summed up Jack's competitive nature: "Jack knew he was going to beat you. You knew Jack was going to beat you. And Jack knew that you knew that he was going to beat you."

    NO. 18
    Jack and Barbara Nicklaus are celebrating Jack's 70th birthday on Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean. After a three-day fishing vacation, Jack will return to work with his course-design company.
  • ZWICK 4 PREZ
    Speedofsand wrote:

    NO. 14
    Jack, a father of five, was always a regular at his kids' sporting events, and does the same now with the grandkids. During his prime golf years, he made a point of never playing more than two tournaments in a row in order to be home as often as possible.
    Perhaps if Tiger followed the same approach, he would not be in the predicament that he is.
  • Skyhook79
    The Giss wrote: Absolute class. Got to carry his bags for four holes of a practice round in the PGA at Canterbury in '73 at age 14. I am watching a couple Club Pros my dad knew and Nicklaus shows up at 14 on Tuesday carrying hi sown bag and ask these guys if he can play a few holes with them. They ask me if I want to carry his bag. Ummm, yea.
    We finish and he asks what he owes me. I stuttered and stammered, I mean it was Nicklaus and it was just four holes, so he hands me a $20. I had him autograph the bill and I still have it.
    The best there ever was.
    A little off topic but I remember reading a story about a celebrity (can't remember who) that used to write checks for a lot of things that he purchased at Ma and Pa type stores because he knew they wouldn't cash them and keep the check as a souvenir because it had his signature on it.
    Anyway Jack IS what Bret, the hit man, Hart claims to be. The best there is,was and ever will be.