Golden Archer
Oh, those golden years. To retire. To live off the hog, so to speak.
It’s not for everyone, because not everyone gets an opportunity to
cash in their chips at the end.
But professional golfers, if any good, can live differently, or,
as in the case of George Archer, prepare to give up work. If you can
call playing golf work.
At 6-foot-6, perhaps Archer has always seen retirement, but with
the myriad surgeries on his body under which Archer has endured, it’s
amazing he’s still here as a competitive player to talk about it.
Archer, you see, is the original Toshiba Senior Classic champion.
The guy who won first, in 1995, at Mesa Verde Country Club. In the
media tent on that Sunday, Archer was there with his wife, Donna,
insisting he was contemplating retirement at that time because of a
bad hip. It was so painful, he could barely swing a golf club, let
alone compete on the PGA Champions Tour.
Before he was diagnosed with a degenerative hip, Archer, now 63,
feared he might have cancer because of the area that was smarting.
Further, only one other player on the tour at that time (Bobby
Nichols) had ever undergone hip replacement surgery and he “wasn’t
doing very well” afterward on the golf course.
“So I figured, if they did the hip job, that would be the end of
me,” Archer said Tuesday afternoon.
Archer, however, went out and won the first Toshiba Classic,
carding a final-round 64 and winning by one stroke, then added the
Cadillac NFL Golf Classic, then underwent surgery for the umpteenth
time in his career.
These days, as Archer gears up for another Toshiba Senior Classic,
it isn’t so much about the scores and swings as it is the experience.
“I’ve had tons of surgeries,” said Archer, who has undergone seven
major surgeries, including his left wrist (1975), back (1979), left
shoulder (1987) and right hip replacement (1996).
“I’m looking at quality of life. I don’t want to have to reach
over for something in bed and cry out in pain.”
On Tuesday, Archer found out he needed surgery again. This time on
his right shoulder, where he has a partial torn rotator cuff. Last
fall, a health-food diet was tried to cure the shoulder pain, but it
didn’t go away and Archer will now have shoulder surgery at the same
hospital, Eisenhower in Palm Springs, where he had his hip
replacement surgery.
“I watch Jack Nicklaus on TV, he’s my age, and his swing is
nothing like it once was, so I knew I’m not swinging the club very
far,” Archer said. “I’m at the end of the road here.”
Archer, who lives in Palm Springs and Incline Village, Nev.,
recently purchased his dream retirement home in Oceanside, Ore.,
south of touristy Seaside and about 90 minutes from Portland. “The
house is about a four-hour drive to my daughter’s house (in
Washington), and we’ll go up there on weekends,” Archer said. “We’ll
get to see our grandchildren. We’re just close enough and just far
enough away. We don’t have to get phone calls asking us to baby-sit.”
An avid fisherman, Archer plans to live in Oregon from August
through November, when the fishing’s good, then return to the desert.
“It’s an older house (built in 1976) with a fabulous view (of the
Pacific Ocean),” Archer said. “It sits on a cliff 500 feet up from
the ocean ... there are views all over. I didn’t want the sand of
Seaside. I wanted the rocks and trees, which is what (Oceanside) has.
It gives you the feeling of Carmel a long time ago.”
Archer, who loves his Lake Tahoe summers, competes in the Toshiba
Senior Classic and Georgia Pacific Grand Champions for players 60 and
older. He and his wife have two daughters, Elizabeth and Marilyn, and
five grandchildren. Elizabeth, the first female caddie at the Masters
Tournament, is a Presbyterian minister who has earned a doctorate in
theology; Lynne teaches special education.
To this day, Archer says his biggest golf thrill was meeting his
wife on the golf course over 40 years ago. Some say those are the
kind of answers that keep marriages long.
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