It’s Army, silly, not Arnie
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RICHARD DUNN
The question of whether Jack Nicklaus would return to the Toshiba
Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country Club if he won the tournament
was answered before he teed off in the first round Friday. Yes, he
would.
The question as to whether he reads, or is even remotely
interested, in the Daily Pilot was answered Saturday morning over
breakfast.
As Nicklaus sipped his orange juice and tasted his warm toast with
coffee nearby, he almost choked and “just about fell over in my
chair” when he read the infamous quote that he “played Arnie golf” in
the first round, when it should have read, “army golf.”
“You know, as in left, right, left, right,” the Golden Bear said
to me Saturday afternoon, with his left hand on my right shoulder, as
I apologized to him about Saturday’s misquote in the Pilot.
Yes, a misquote. Nobody likes to admit mistakes. Here I go and
assign myself the Nicklaus beat this week for the Toshiba Classic and
end up with one of the biggest pieces of humble pie in the history of
Daily Pilot sports journalism.
“Don’t worry about it. We all make mistakes,” Nicklaus said with a
gleam in his eye and a heart of forgiveness as we stood at the edge
of the scoring tent, while hundreds of fans were waiting behind the
ropes to get the Golden Bear’s autograph.
Yes, we could, as a newspaper, do nothing with the mistake, as one
Toshiba media official suggested. My feelings, however, were quite
the contrary. I wanted to face this head-on. Even write about it.
Hey, why not. I’m on the Nicklaus beat. But saying you’re sorry is
never easy, especially to the greatest golfer of all time.
“Did the Bear swipe at you or growl at you?” my wife asked when I
explained part of what my Saturday duties entailed.
Oh, sure, Saturday was just the usual -- prepare the next day’s
paper, edit sportswriters’ copy, go apologize to Jack Nicklaus. That
type of thing.
After Friday’s first round, you see, there was some confusion
among tournament media officials as to whether Nicklaus would be
brought into the interview room at the Toshiba Senior Classic media
center. I was told he was going to be brought there, so I waited
until he arrived. A few moments later, Nicklaus appears on the
television screens on The Golf Channel. The sound was down.
On the other side of the room, reporters began talking notes as
Nicklaus spoke on television (Nicklaus was actually sitting on a
couch near the 18th hole, a chip shot to the media center, during the
interview.)
Myself and Daily Pilot golf writer Bryce Alderton, along with
international media members at a table in front of us, could see the
television on our side of the media center, but there was no sound. I
raced over to turn the volume up. It seemed like an eternity before I
actually heard anything as I placed an index finger on the volume
button.
Just then, Nicklaus was talking about his round and how
disappointed he was after shooting even-par 71, and that he played
army golf. Unfortunately, I heard Arnie golf and thought it was a
clever angle, considering how adamant Nicklaus has been throughout
his career about not addressing his relationship with Arnold Palmer
as a rivalry. Nicklaus “plays the golf course, not Palmer or Lee
Trevino or Gary Player or Tom Watson,” he said earlier this week.
Even after waiting for Nicklaus to finish hitting balls at the
practice range Friday and talking to him for a brief moment, I walked
away feeling intrigued by the (phantom) Arnie quote and decided to go
with that angle.
It would be nice to be remembered by Nicklaus in other ways, but
the conversation we had in the scoring tent I’ll never forget, nor
will I forget the long, heart-pounding moments leading up to the big
admission of guilt. He smiled and treated me like a friend.
And, no, I told my wife. He didn’t growl at me.
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