Monday, September 10, 2007

Golden Oldies Back World Cup

Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and Gary Player – the legendary “Big Three” – are inextricably linked to one of golf’s most prestigious Championships – The World Cup. So when the 2007 OMEGA Mission Hills World Cup unfolds at Mission Hills Golf Club in China from November 22-25, the role Nicklaus, Palmer and Player undertook to drive the event centre-stage will be vividly recounted. For Nicklaus, Palmer and Player embraced The World Cup as an event of stately significance. Nicklaus and Palmer played seven and six times respectively – they were unbeaten on the four occasions they were partners – and Player made a remarkable 15 appearances following his first at the age of 20 in 1956 at Wentworth Club, England. Palmer’s first association with The World Cup came in 1960 during a whistle-stop three weeks when he captured the US Open at Cherry Hills, won the World Cup for the United States with the great Sam Snead and played in his first Open Championship at St Andrews where he finished runner-up. “The World Cup played a very important role in the early years of international golf,” said Palmer. “What eventually came out of the World Cup was the series of important international events that we have today. It is an outstanding event. I enjoyed the World Cup, and I enjoyed playing with Sam and then with Jack.” Nicklaus and Palmer were the untouchables in the early 1960s. They won the World Cup for the United States in 1963 in France, in 1964 in Hawaii, in 1966 in Japan and in 1967 in Mexico. Nicklaus recalled: “I guess you could say we made a pretty good team. Too much has been made over the years of our rivalry when we actually spent a lot of wonderful times playing and travelling together including, of course, the World Cup. “I consider Arnold one of my closest friends in the game. Our wives were very good friends and he was always a good companion and a good playing partner. Arnold was always the competitor, but also always the gentleman and friend. “My first taste of the World Cup, or the Canada Cup as it was known then, came with Arnold at St Nom-la-Bretche in Paris. That’s where the Prince of Wales fell off his shooting stick when I holed a long putt! He fell straight over backwards. “Arnold and I won and then again the next year, and I was also fortunate to win the individual title, which we also played for then, in 1963 and 1964. Then after winning twice more with Arnold, I had the opportunity in Florida in 1971 to team with another good friend, Lee Trevino, in what was essentially my back yard in Palm Beach Gardens. We won the team title and it capped a strong three week stretch for me. Lee and I won the team event by 12 shots, I was fortunate to win the individual title again by seven shots and it followed directly after I had won the Australian Open by eight shots and the Dunlop International also in Australia by seven shots. “The interesting tie-in with all three victories is they came with the small ball. That was fun, and the World Cup was fun. Good fun. It was always an enjoyable event. “It was always an honour to be selected for the United States in the World Cup and to represent your country. I liken it to the thrill and honour of representing your country in a Ryder Cup or a Presidents Cup. The competition was always strong but, more importantly, I felt the World Cup brought goodwill to the game and to the countries in which they were played. And because they were played in the right spirit, they were a wonderful showcase for international golf and team golf. I was delighted to be part of it for so many years.” In fact Nicklaus teed up again in the World Cup in 1973 in Spain when he won the title with Johnny Miller and therefore in seven appearances he was responsible for six of the record-breaking 23 wins by the United States. Indeed Nicklaus lost only one World Cup in which he played – in 1965 when Harold Henning and the incomparable Player won for South Africa. Player said: “I remember winning so well with Harold at Club de Campo in Madrid. It was a huge thrill because when you are chosen for the World Cup it is such an honour to represent your country, to travel and meet all the world’s leading players. You played in different countries where golf was starting to grow and become popular and you made lifetime friends of great guys from so many countries. I loved it. “This year everyone should be excited about going to China. What Arnold, Jack and I tried to do all our lives was to promote the game of golf everywhere. The World Cup does that. We must always be thinking about getting more and more people to play golf and there are millions in China who can be encouraged to play. What will that do for the industry.” South Africa, winners also in 1974, 1996, 2001 and 2003, will be bidding for a sixth win when in 2007 a total of 28 two-man teams, each one of a different nationality, compete in the Omega Mission Hills World Cup on the Olazábal Course Course at Mission Hills. This 7,400 yard lay-out was designed by double Masters Tournament champion José Maria Olazábal of Spain. The tournament is a 72-hole stroke play team event. The first and third days are fourball (best ball) play and the second and final days are foursomes play. The defending champions will be Germany who claimed their second World Cup crown in Barbados in December, 2006, when Bernhard Langer and Marcel Siem defeated Scotland’s Colin Montgomerie and Marc Warren in a play-off.

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