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Nicklaus-Palmer still the standard in golf rivalries

Updated: 2018-11-21 09:30
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Jack Nicklaus presents Bryson DeChambeau The Memorial golf tournament trophy at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, USA, on June 3, 2018. [Photo/Agencies]

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Jack Nicklaus says if he were in a high-stakes match in Las Vegas in his prime, the most compelling opponent would be Arnold Palmer. Never mind that he considers his toughest rival to be Tom Watson. Or that he finished runner-up to Lee Trevino in majors four times in seven years.

With apologies to the super-hyped exhibition between Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson on pay-per-view, any talk of rivalries in golf starts with Nicklaus and Palmer.

"I rarely lost to Arnold," Nicklaus said last week before an American Cancer Society benefit. "We never ended up coming down the stretch every much." Nicklaus was a runner-up to him six times, including the 1960 US Open at Cherry Hills as a 20-year-old amateur.

But unlike Woods-Mickelson, who never really squared off in a major until Woods' fifth year on the tour, Nicklaus famously beat Palmer in a playoff to win the 1962 US Open at Oakmont in Palmer's backyard.

"Arnold and my rivalry became more from the two us," Nicklaus said. "We would play together a lot. We were paired a lot. And usually we beat each other up and we ended up giving the tournament away. That's why they talk about the rivalry. Everyone was interested in who won that day, not who won the tournament."

Nicklaus was reminded of the 1970 US Open at Hazeltine, where the tournament scoreboard had the names Palmer, Nicklaus and Gary Player at the bottom the entire week. None of them finished in the top 40.

"I've never seen a tournament ever do anything like that," Nicklaus said.

Nicklaus also finished runner-up in the majors four times to Watson, all coming down to the final few holes, none more dramatic than Turnberry in 1977.

"Watson was the toughest," Nicklaus said. "He was a kid with blinders on. I love the way Tom played." Trevino won by four shots at Oak Hill in the 1968 US Open, then beat Nicklaus in a playoff at Merion in 1971 and denied Nicklaus the third leg of the Grand Slam a year later by beating him at Muirfield. And in 1974, Trevino got him by one shot at Tanglewood in the PGA Championship.

"He thrived on competitive moments," Nicklaus said.

But Palmer? That was different.

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