@@PawPawGreg people complain now if something is not in 4K versus 1080p. I don't personally care but there is a threshold now where some things become tough to watch
I was there and even though these GOAT's were past their prime, it was Jack V Arnie and there was definitely still a competitive fire burning in each of them . The late 80's and the 90's was a great time in Phurst. This was only a couple years or so after both Mr Palmer and Mr Nicklaus had built 2 great additions to golf in Phurst, Pinehurst Plantation and Pinehurst National. The Deuce was a different course then but back on the radar after having hosted the 91 and 92 Tour Championship as well as the 94 Senior Open - followed 5 years later with the 99 US Open. And now this week we have the 4th US Open to be played on Course 2 in the last 25 years. I think it is safe for us to continue to say that Pinehurst is the Golf Capital of the World.
2 of the Greatest that could really putt thanks for alot inspiration and memories over the year's gentleman I've learned alot from y'all you played the greatest game on earth with great respect from me now that I'm 69 still playing too thank God for the great sport of golf
You can watch these matches time and again and never get tired of them ,back to a time when they’re were nice people playing and nice people watching , the gallery’s now are booze and loud such a shame for a great game .
@@RipSizzla sad but true. Used to be amateur players would dress respectably, now with the sleeveless shirts guys are wearing we’ve been overrun by hillbillies.
Thank you for uploading this and sharing it with us all jack! Please tell SHELL they need to start a 3rd edition of SHELLS Wonderful World of Golf! 1st match I'd love to see is any of today's players squared up at Pine Valley....that place was a beast back when they had Byron vs. Gene Littler there! Both the 1st you vs. Snead & 2nd edition of you vs tom watson at Pebble were both great matches I just watched the other night!
Fantastic and amazing Jack! You've always been my number one golf hero ever since I was a youngster in Florida. I saw you play a tournament there probably around the time this Pinehurst match happened. I got your autograph. I also met you with my dad when you were playing a practice round at Bink's Forest with your son caddying. I was only 9 but I'll always remember you said "What's your handicap, 3?" I didn't know what a handicap was, but was in awe of the time you took to have a picture with me. I also wrote a letter to you back then and was shocked to get a response and a signed picture of you hitting out of a bunker. Since my earliest days in golf I tried to emulate you in every aspect of the game. I watched 'Golf My Way' hundreds of times as a kid and practiced the swing in the house trying to copy every detail of your swing. It served me well. I won a lot of tournaments in Florida as a junior but tapered off after that. Those fundamentals have stuck with me though and it's astounding how much of the game goes back to the very basics. The difference between a bad shot and a great shot for me is usually proper alignment and head still and making sure my grip is sound. The golden bear still remains the greatest of all time in golf and in many other aspects of life, especially family. Well done Jack! You are an ideal example of the greatness of a western man, as is Mr. Palmer, a hero of mine right along side you 👏🤝🏻
Back when class and respect were valued... Man I quit golf before youtube... I come back, I can watch every shot of the greats as asmr falling asleep...
These two guys should have had their own sitcom. Their personalities compliment each other well. Very classy and a great example of good sportsmanship for young people to witness.
I was born less than a mile from No.2. My father was a security guard at the old World Golf Hall of Fame. The 4th green was the first upon which I ever putted a golf ball at age 4. I went home and played the course after many years away from Pinehurst in 2014. I shot 88 from the blue tees. Old No.2 has teeth!
Good to see two gentlemen respecting each other. If Rory had the first 8 holes Arnold had he would have walked off the course and deleted his Facebook account.
Jack has always had that keeping par focus. That's why he took his time putting. What incredible decisive pars he's done in so many games?! Beautiful birdie at the end👍
I have a couple anecdotes I'd like to share about Mr. Palmer. I'm now retired but in the early 90's I was still working at Martin Marietta's (later Lockheed Martin) Missile Systems in Orlando as an Aerospace Engineer. Our "Main Plant" was right around the corner from BayHill, and I was starting to get serious about golf and had been taking lessons from a well known local golf coach in Orlando (Mike Keymont). I then read a Golf Digest mag article about the top 5 golf instructors in America and number 4 was Mr. Dick Tidy, the director of golf instruction and the golf school at Bay Hill. Mr. Tidy had been #2 behind Arnie at Wake Forest and a lifelong friend. Bay Hill is a private club so i didn't even know if i could get lessons from Mr. Tidy but I picked up the phone and called and next thing I know I have six lessons scheduled. Mr. Tidy was great, and he taught me to hit the Palmer Draw. One day I am hitting driver on the range and I hit a bullet...Mr. Tidy growls..."We'll Take 18 and those and pitch back to the par 3's!!!" Anyway after my driver practice Mr. tidy said okay let's go up to Mr. Palmer's office to watch your video...I went, Wait, What? We are going to Mr. Palmer's office, is he going to be there? Mr. Tidy says nonchalantly, I don't know but that's where the video recorder is. So we walk up the stairs to the 2nd floor above the clubhouse and walk in and there is Mr. Palmer at his desk. I'm a grown man with two Engineering degrees working on some of America's blackest defense programs but I felt as nervous as a school girl. Dick asks Arnie if we can borrow his desk to use the video machine/monitor and Arnie gets up and says sure. then he comes around the desk and extend his hand and says, "So how is you game coming along?" like I was some tour player...what a great man and great human being he was! My second anecdote is shorter. It was about the same time, the early nineties and the Bay Hill Invitational was in play. Arnie had said before the tourney that he wasn't happy with where his game was and was really not interested in just being out there if he wasn't competitive but he relented and said he would play. It's Friday and Arnie is playing well and has a chance to make the cut. He has drawn a huge gallery and I am one of them and I'm watching Arnie and he has a very serious look on his face (you could tell he really wanted to make the cut). He leaves the 8th green and is walking to the 9th tee and he is eyes down and working...a crowd forms around him and one poor dope blocks his path on the cart path to the 9th tee...lol, without skipping a step Arnie gives him a perfect forearm shiver with those popeye like forearms and knocks the guy right off the cart path and almost puts him on his ass...it was great to see!!! Mr. Palmer ended up missing the cut but it was nice to see him playing with the bit in his mouth for the last time in a PGA Tournament.
Both of these men helped to shape my love for this game. Both are consummate gentlemen, both have left a mark on this sport that no one could ever diminish and both were ambassadors who spread this game to all corners of the globe. I feel lucky just to have played a course with Arnold's name on it and Jack will always be #1 in my books, no matter who passes him in the record books. Only Tiger gets to breathe the same rare air as these two men, and that's talking strictly about the game...
Over here in Australia it Was Player and Thomson in the 50s /60s. Player won 7 or 8 Australian Opens and Thomson won 5 Opens with 3 in a row. American players started to come in the 70s
That was a putting clinic by the Golden Bear! Crazy that on a 6700 course, at 55, still goes round in -4....wonder what his handicap would have been in his prime (if he had one). +6, +7?
1994 wasn’t that long ago. Why does this seem like ancient history? 😅 Things were so much more simple. Everyone is just watching, not a cell phone in sight.
There is a course not far from me which has an Arnold Palmer plaque on the 16th hole. It marked his 3 consecutive eagles on the hole during a Senior Tour event. Mr Palmer was 57 or 58 years old at the time. The hole is a par 5 around 486 yards.
Mr.Nicklaus thank you for the paperback books on how to play golf at first i didn't get it but u were absolutely right I've found out the hard way lol 😂❤
Jack, like Byron Nelson, didn't work all that hard on his game once he got on tour. Palmer did at first, but then let his business interests overwhelm him.
@adrian tunei Speaking of technology, i noticed that Arnold Palmer was using a persimmon driver while Jack Nicklaus drove with a metal driver. Despite being 11 years older, Arnold Palmer was still an awesome driver of the ball.
Jack finished T6 in the 1998 Masters, two strokes better than defending champion Tiger Woods. Trevino never finished better than T10 in his career there.
@@sidecar7714 Trevino let the Masters get in his head. He actually claimed it didn't favor faders of the golf ball in spite of Jack being the greatest fader of the golf ball and winning 6 times.
@@jonburrows8602 It was more that Trevino couldn't hit the ball high. Augusta doesn't favour low ball hitters like him. Same reason Azinger always struggled there. Nicklaus could hit towering fades with his irons, which was perfect for Augusta.
@@sidecar7714 Trevino boycotted it a few of the years in the early 70's complaining the course wasnt for him, not really the mindset of the champion golfer he was, Augusta had his number
Different lofts on irons in those days you couldn't hit an eight iron 155, it had too much loft on it plus jack hiy everything high. Seven iron today can be low as 30° forty years ago a seven might be 40. Today 160 eight irons is normal. You wouldn't believe what eight irons looked like forty years ago, looked like a pitching wedge.
Let's get this going again! Pine Valley as the first course course would be awesome. Augusta National would be a cool and different perspective. But I think the crown jewel would be Cypress Point Club or Seminole... I like the threesome versions but even a foursome would be a crowd pleaser.
This is what golf was all about. Normally a driver and long irons or woods for the 2nd shot on par 4s. Not driver then wedges like today. Required real skill and extreme precision on ballstriking!
You dont think today's player have skill and extreme precision ballstriking? They have long irons in because they are old men here, when they were young they did exactly what todays young players are doing, overpowering golf courses because they were both the longest hitters of their time. Its not a coincidence a lot of the great players of their time was one of the longest hitters. Snead, Palmer, Nicklaus, Norman, Tiger, all absolutely pummeled the ball, its a massive advantage and takes a lot of skill to harness that power
@@Jeebizz101 Hold up there Tonto - relatively speaking they were long but not nearly as long as the players are today, it's not even close. In AP's day a good drive was 250, now it's 330. If you don't believe me look at the old golf films from the 60's. They were hitting mid and long irons to par 4's on average, not lob wedges. And I'm talking about the very best players of that era.
Today's lofts on irons are at least two clubs longer than yesteryear and drivers are much longer , irons are made with a lower cog than long ago. So 144 p iron isn't a big deal, not even counting better shafts and golf balls. Before the PGA championship in 1964 jack hit his steel shaft persimmon head driver 345 yards with very little roll as it was flat. In 2017, 2019. Jacks 345 would've beat the winners in the Long drive tournament for players of the PGA. At age 58 he had a swing speed with driver at 118 mph. His 22 yr old swing would have b
Today's iron loft is at least two clubs longer so a 145 pitching wedge is not exceptional. Jack in the PGA long drive before championship was 345 yds. In 2017 and 2019 jacks 345 would win in those years. It was flat ground very little roll. Jacks swing mph at 58 yrs old was 118, 22 yr old jack would have been crazy fast
How does a match between these two not have millions of views? Glad I found this gem.
because it is in 380p and practically unwatchable?
@@PawPawGreg people complain now if something is not in 4K versus 1080p. I don't personally care but there is a threshold now where some things become tough to watch
@@philo_beddoe4367you guys must be young bucks, I don’t find this unwatchable at all. Christ it’s only been 15 years, since this was standard.
👍👍🌹🌹
I remember my dad watching these on the weekends when I was little as I headed outside to play on the weekends, that guys voice is so memorable.
I was there and even though these GOAT's were past their prime, it was Jack V Arnie and there was definitely still a competitive fire burning in each of them . The late 80's and the 90's was a great time in Phurst. This was only a couple years or so after both Mr Palmer and Mr Nicklaus had built 2 great additions to golf in Phurst, Pinehurst Plantation and Pinehurst National. The Deuce was a different course then but back on the radar after having hosted the 91 and 92 Tour Championship as well as the 94 Senior Open - followed 5 years later with the 99 US Open. And now this week we have the 4th US Open to be played on Course 2 in the last 25 years. I think it is safe for us to continue to say that Pinehurst is the Golf Capital of the World.
This is an absolute treasure, not just of golf but of America.
2 of the Greatest that could really putt thanks for alot inspiration and memories over the year's gentleman I've learned alot from y'all you played the greatest game on earth with great respect from me now that I'm 69 still playing too thank God for the great sport of golf
You can watch these matches time and again and never get tired of them ,back to a time when they’re were nice people playing and nice people watching , the gallery’s now are booze and loud such a shame for a great game .
Such a sad take. 😂
In Mother Russia trollbots comment you!
@@RipSizzla sad but true. Used to be amateur players would dress respectably, now with the sleeveless shirts guys are wearing we’ve been overrun by hillbillies.
And with the wonderfully therapeutic voice of Jack Whitaker!
Billdodger4723
You mean all rich and white ?
The sound of the persimmon driver is great.
oh wow I thought they had metal woods by this time in '94.
@@Somerled_1Most had. It looks like Jack had switched. I think Davis Love III was the last tour pro to switch, in 96 or 97.
Just Awesome!! Thank you.
Thank you for uploading this and sharing it with us all jack! Please tell SHELL they need to start a 3rd edition of SHELLS Wonderful World of Golf! 1st match I'd love to see is any of today's players squared up at Pine Valley....that place was a beast back when they had Byron vs. Gene Littler there! Both the 1st you vs. Snead & 2nd edition of you vs tom watson at Pebble were both great matches I just watched the other night!
Pine Valley is my ultimate dream site for the US Open.
@@seanscott7070 that would be the ultimate U.S. Open for sure!!
Two of the GOATs 🐐
Amazing footage!
“Two of the goats”…how many were there?
Fantastic and amazing Jack! You've always been my number one golf hero ever since I was a youngster in Florida. I saw you play a tournament there probably around the time this Pinehurst match happened. I got your autograph. I also met you with my dad when you were playing a practice round at Bink's Forest with your son caddying. I was only 9 but I'll always remember you said "What's your handicap, 3?" I didn't know what a handicap was, but was in awe of the time you took to have a picture with me. I also wrote a letter to you back then and was shocked to get a response and a signed picture of you hitting out of a bunker. Since my earliest days in golf I tried to emulate you in every aspect of the game. I watched 'Golf My Way' hundreds of times as a kid and practiced the swing in the house trying to copy every detail of your swing. It served me well. I won a lot of tournaments in Florida as a junior but tapered off after that. Those fundamentals have stuck with me though and it's astounding how much of the game goes back to the very basics. The difference between a bad shot and a great shot for me is usually proper alignment and head still and making sure my grip is sound. The golden bear still remains the greatest of all time in golf and in many other aspects of life, especially family. Well done Jack! You are an ideal example of the greatness of a western man, as is Mr. Palmer, a hero of mine right along side you 👏🤝🏻
Incredible final putt. That's why he's the greatest.
Wow didn't know about this one. What a classic. The magic certainly lingered in these two.
Fantastic match !! Bring back the Shell world of golf please !
Back when class and respect were valued... Man I quit golf before youtube... I come back, I can watch every shot of the greats as asmr falling asleep...
These two guys should have had their own sitcom. Their personalities compliment each other well. Very classy and a great example of good sportsmanship for young people to witness.
I now live in Pinehurst, coming from Columbus Ohio, what a wonderful thing this match was. My home town hero playing at my club, what could be better!
I was born less than a mile from No.2. My father was a security guard at the old World Golf Hall of Fame. The 4th green was the first upon which I ever putted a golf ball at age 4. I went home and played the course after many years away from Pinehurst in 2014. I shot 88 from the blue tees. Old No.2 has teeth!
Just played Jack Nicklaus’s own Legacy Golf Links just 5 minutes away from Pinehurst about a month and a half ago. Absolutely phenomenal course!
I'm fairly certain The Legacy was designed by Jack Nicklaus, II. It is a really great course though. Played it several times.
You wanna play it some time? I'm ready !!
@@quantumpotential7639 I’m not from that area I just played it on a trip down there
Good to see two gentlemen respecting each other. If Rory had the first 8 holes Arnold had he would have walked off the course and deleted his Facebook account.
30 years ago. Hard to believe. Where has the time gone?
Named my first son after my dad, my second son after Jack Nicklaus. Long live the golden age of The King and The Bear!
Jack has always had that keeping par focus. That's why he took his time putting. What incredible decisive pars he's done in so many games?! Beautiful birdie at the end👍
Amazing round by Jack. Arnold at 64 years old still has it.
The good ole boy'z, we miss u2, these days will never be forgotten. ⛳🇺🇲🗽🇺🇲⛳
I have a couple anecdotes I'd like to share about Mr. Palmer. I'm now retired but in the early 90's I was still working at Martin Marietta's (later Lockheed Martin) Missile Systems in Orlando as an Aerospace Engineer. Our "Main Plant" was right around the corner from BayHill, and I was starting to get serious about golf and had been taking lessons from a well known local golf coach in Orlando (Mike Keymont). I then read a Golf Digest mag article about the top 5 golf instructors in America and number 4 was Mr. Dick Tidy, the director of golf instruction and the golf school at Bay Hill. Mr. Tidy had been #2 behind Arnie at Wake Forest and a lifelong friend. Bay Hill is a private club so i didn't even know if i could get lessons from Mr. Tidy but I picked up the phone and called and next thing I know I have six lessons scheduled. Mr. Tidy was great, and he taught me to hit the Palmer Draw. One day I am hitting driver on the range and I hit a bullet...Mr. Tidy growls..."We'll Take 18 and those and pitch back to the par 3's!!!" Anyway after my driver practice Mr. tidy said okay let's go up to Mr. Palmer's office to watch your video...I went, Wait, What? We are going to Mr. Palmer's office, is he going to be there? Mr. Tidy says nonchalantly, I don't know but that's where the video recorder is. So we walk up the stairs to the 2nd floor above the clubhouse and walk in and there is Mr. Palmer at his desk. I'm a grown man with two Engineering degrees working on some of America's blackest defense programs but I felt as nervous as a school girl. Dick asks Arnie if we can borrow his desk to use the video machine/monitor and Arnie gets up and says sure. then he comes around the desk and extend his hand and says, "So how is you game coming along?" like I was some tour player...what a great man and great human being he was! My second anecdote is shorter. It was about the same time, the early nineties and the Bay Hill Invitational was in play. Arnie had said before the tourney that he wasn't happy with where his game was and was really not interested in just being out there if he wasn't competitive but he relented and said he would play. It's Friday and Arnie is playing well and has a chance to make the cut. He has drawn a huge gallery and I am one of them and I'm watching Arnie and he has a very serious look on his face (you could tell he really wanted to make the cut). He leaves the 8th green and is walking to the 9th tee and he is eyes down and working...a crowd forms around him and one poor dope blocks his path on the cart path to the 9th tee...lol, without skipping a step Arnie gives him a perfect forearm shiver with those popeye like forearms and knocks the guy right off the cart path and almost puts him on his ass...it was great to see!!! Mr. Palmer ended up missing the cut but it was nice to see him playing with the bit in his mouth for the last time in a PGA Tournament.
Boring to read.
Thanks for sharing your wisdom
Both of these men helped to shape my love for this game. Both are consummate gentlemen, both have left a mark on this sport that no one could ever diminish and both were ambassadors who spread this game to all corners of the globe. I feel lucky just to have played a course with Arnold's name on it and Jack will always be #1 in my books, no matter who passes him in the record books. Only Tiger gets to breathe the same rare air as these two men, and that's talking strictly about the game...
Good match between 2 players who grew the game I love so much can't thank them enough ~
Over here in Australia it Was Player and Thomson in the 50s /60s. Player won 7 or 8 Australian Opens and Thomson won 5 Opens with 3 in a row. American players started to come in the 70s
Absolutely great! Thank you……..👍
I wish there could have been this matchup on the Original series when both were in their prime!
God bless you, Mr. Palmer. I'll always be a Five-Star General in your Army of countless admirers.
Legends !!! This was so much fun to watch
True class acts. Something Tiger never had.
What a treat to watch these great men , including Bob Rosburg. These were our heroes growing up and in many ways, still are.
Shut up
@@seanmurphy137 Are you on drugs?
@@Araconox shave your bush
@@Araconox did you shave your bush yet
Until jack did the stupidest thing in 2020
Nice comeback, Jack. Great match. Great sportsmanship.
Jack, you did something similar at the Fred Meyer Challenge in Portland, OR one year. I've never heard or been a part of a roar that loud. Thank You.
My favourites growing up was our own Peter Thomson and Sam Snead I have a set of Sams and Jacks clubs in the shed and a Thomson 5 Iron
27:51 the best way to design golf courses - Mr. Donald Ross true genius
That was a putting clinic by the Golden Bear! Crazy that on a 6700 course, at 55, still goes round in -4....wonder what his handicap would have been in his prime (if he had one). +6, +7?
1994 wasn’t that long ago. Why does this seem like ancient history? 😅 Things were so much more simple. Everyone is just watching, not a cell phone in sight.
These guys were competitive to the end !
What would you expect?
Love AP, such a class act
This is a trip to watch. Arnold's swing looks like a 20 handicaper that's about to fall over every time, then somehow it's a perfect shot
It is interesting how "bad" it looks. But whatever works.
Loved Mr. Palmer but my all time favorite was Jack. A day late but Happy Birthday Mr. Nicklaus.
In 1994 Arnie was already 64 years old and showed it, however still played Pinehurst 2 at what 2 over. Incredible.
All in their prime. A match between Arnie,Jack, and Tiger with today's equipment .Would be something of the ages.
It would be so amazing to watch, dont think Jack's short game would stand up to Tiger's but the long game battle would be unreal!!
There is a course not far from me which has an Arnold Palmer plaque on the 16th hole. It marked his 3 consecutive eagles on the hole during a Senior Tour event. Mr Palmer was 57 or 58 years old at the time. The hole is a par 5 around 486 yards.
Jack Nicklaus - the greatest!
Damn, Jack's putting was spectacular.
Jack=Goat.
Love Bryson and thrilled he won but that last putt Rory had was tough. He played it outside left and it ripped to the right quickly
such a better time in America. Loved watching these legends thru the years. You can't top "The King" and "The Golden Bear."
Awesome!
Arnold, a gentleman competitor
I would LOVE for them to start doing these again. The dream would be Tiger vs Phil. Those Matches between the two of them were always fantastic!
If these ever get remastered into clear videos, they'll be absolute beauts. Hard to watch atm, though.
Mr.Nicklaus thank you for the paperback books on how to play golf at first i didn't get it but u were absolutely right I've found out the hard way lol 😂❤
What a gem.
The fact that David B Fay refereed this shows you what a big deal it was
Arnold always was the perfect gentlemen, Jack always tells you how good he is most of the time. R.I.P. Arnold.
Seeing these greats miss fairways and fat some shots really helps with me setting realistic expectations.
Hard to believe Arnie has been gone 7 years now.
Miss that guy
There’s so much to learn from this gem; yes, technology matters, but hard work and talent matters most.
Jack, like Byron Nelson, didn't work all that hard on his game once he got on tour. Palmer did at first, but then let his business interests overwhelm him.
@adrian tunei
Speaking of technology, i noticed that Arnold Palmer was using a persimmon driver while Jack Nicklaus drove with a metal driver. Despite being 11 years older, Arnold Palmer was still an awesome driver of the ball.
I like that Arnold is still using a persimmon driver in 1994.
Amazing how much technology has changed the game in 30 years.
Two of the GOATs
Stupid word
Jack got super old in just two years. From 1994 to 1996. I saw the one against Lee Trevino.
Jack finished T6 in the 1998 Masters, two strokes better than defending champion Tiger Woods. Trevino never finished better than T10 in his career there.
@@sidecar7714 Trevino let the Masters get in his head. He actually claimed it didn't favor faders of the golf ball in spite of Jack being the greatest fader of the golf ball and winning 6 times.
@@jonburrows8602 It was more that Trevino couldn't hit the ball high. Augusta doesn't favour low ball hitters like him. Same reason Azinger always struggled there. Nicklaus could hit towering fades with his irons, which was perfect for Augusta.
But Palmer was a low ball hitter and won the Masters 4x.
@@sidecar7714 Trevino boycotted it a few of the years in the early 70's complaining the course wasnt for him, not really the mindset of the champion golfer he was, Augusta had his number
158 yard 6 iron. 👏👏 i hit my 8 iron that far.
Different lofts on irons in those days you couldn't hit an eight iron 155, it had too much loft on it plus jack hiy everything high. Seven iron today can be low as 30° forty years ago a seven might be 40. Today 160 eight irons is normal. You wouldn't believe what eight irons looked like forty years ago, looked like a pitching wedge.
always a pleasure to see my man - arnie\
The 2 Goats!!!
Miss those days
Let's get this going again! Pine Valley as the first course course would be awesome. Augusta National would be a cool and different perspective. But I think the crown jewel would be Cypress Point Club or Seminole... I like the threesome versions but even a foursome would be a crowd pleaser.
11:41 "Oh, fuck!"
G.O.A.T. vs the KING !
The fact that Jack said "shank" off the first tee but was still in the first cut is laughable. Id be happy as hell with that
I really wish they wouldn’t skip shots
What woods were these 2 using?
If my life was on the line within a 10 ft. putt no one I'd rather take the shot than Jack Nicklaus. 👍
Amazing jack putting
The golden bear is the best putter! Shown here wow
jack was the greatest putter of all time.
I'll never go to North Carolina after what their lawmakers did in May 2023.
O G ARNOLD PALMER AND O G JACK NICKLAUS
Gary Player was my favorite. Gutsy underdog.
Arnie w the Bay Hill visor.
Jack hit some great putts that day
15,000 yard golf courses....in 50 years....30 years later we are half way there.....
So much better than the golf “influencer” garbage on now
-4 on that course is pretty dang salty.
This is what golf was all about. Normally a driver and long irons or woods for the 2nd shot on par 4s. Not driver then wedges like today. Required real skill and extreme precision on ballstriking!
You dont think today's player have skill and extreme precision ballstriking? They have long irons in because they are old men here, when they were young they did exactly what todays young players are doing, overpowering golf courses because they were both the longest hitters of their time.
Its not a coincidence a lot of the great players of their time was one of the longest hitters. Snead, Palmer, Nicklaus, Norman, Tiger, all absolutely pummeled the ball, its a massive advantage and takes a lot of skill to harness that power
@@Jeebizz101 Hold up there Tonto - relatively speaking they were long but not nearly as long as the players are today, it's not even close. In AP's day a good drive was 250, now it's 330. If you don't believe me look at the old golf films from the 60's. They were hitting mid and long irons to par 4's on average, not lob wedges. And I'm talking about the very best players of that era.
Arnold was 64 here!!!
That 16th hole would be an average par 4 today and not a par 5
You do realize that Jack is 54 and Arnold is 64, and that the very first titanium driver is a year away at the time it was filmed?
@@marklittlejohn5740 Obviously! That's my point! WTF
Because of huge drivers which look stupid and are like the training wheels of golf clubs.
Jack loved the game so much he just wooped your ass
Jack should ask for money back for that shirt.
Can Jack putt, or what? Wow. The old bear was something else.
8 iron from 144. Now it's an PW. Those bunkers on #7 aren't even in play anymore!
Today's lofts on irons are at least two clubs longer than yesteryear and drivers are much longer , irons are made with a lower cog than long ago. So 144 p iron isn't a big deal, not even counting better shafts and golf balls. Before the PGA championship in 1964 jack hit his steel shaft persimmon head driver 345 yards with very little roll as it was flat. In 2017, 2019. Jacks 345 would've beat the winners in the Long drive tournament for players of the PGA. At age 58 he had a swing speed with driver at 118 mph. His 22 yr old swing would have b
Today's iron loft is at least two clubs longer so a 145 pitching wedge is not exceptional. Jack in the PGA long drive before championship was 345 yds. In 2017 and 2019 jacks 345 would win in those years. It was flat ground very little roll. Jacks swing mph at 58 yrs old was 118, 22 yr old jack would have been crazy fast
Hitting the persimmon
Pinehurst doesn’t look like this anymore. Lots of sand and native grass on the sides of the fairways.
Jack changed his shirt at 6th.