Site Map





Cigar Videos
Cigar Insider
Cuba
Moments to Remember
Golf
Back Issues


Online Advertising Info


Cigar Aficionado Online    Cigar Aficionado Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  Golf    Nicklaus disparages the young, wealthy and lazy . . .
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
-star Rating Rate It!  Login/Join 
Member
Picture of Coriolanus
Posted
I think he has a point. Seem to be a lot of guys playing every week, getting TV time, who have not done anything of note. Strange that you don't have to win anything to get a good slate of endorsements. Rich Beem and Ben Curtis, anyone?

At Open, Nicklaus wonders if money has softened young golfers

Associated Press

SOUTHPORT, England -- Jack Nicklaus noticed some old faces atop the leaderboard during a brief visit to the British Open on Friday, making him wonder if younger players have too much money and not enough desire.

Jack Nicklaus said when he started on the PGA Tour, "maybe one or two guys might have made enough money to make a living."

Nicklaus' private jet arrived as 53-year-old Greg Norman was on his way to another round of even-par 70 to take a one-shot lead. Tom Watson, a 58-year-old with five claret jugs, opened with a 74 in the worst of the weather at Royal Birkdale, and 49-year-old Tom Lehman also had 74 in the first round.

As for the youth?

"If they don't win, they still walk home with a big check," Nicklaus said. "They don't have to do some of the things the Watsons had to do, the Normans, the Lehmans, and that's to gut it out. It doesn't mean the young guys will be out of it. It just makes it appear as though the guys who have had that experience are coming to the top."

Nicklaus was at the Open on behalf of the Royal Bank of Scotland, one of his endorsement deals. Those kinds of contracts weren't available to everyone when Nicklaus turned pro in 1962, and he said only a few of the top golfers could make money off the course.

"When we played golf, it wasn't to make a living," Nicklaus said. "It was to make a name for yourself so you could make a living."

The winner of the British Open will earn about $1.5 million, more than 25 percent of Nicklaus' career earnings on the PGA Tour. And just about everyone in the field has endorsements on his cap, bag or clothing. "When I started on tour, maybe one or two guys might have made enough money to make a living," Nicklaus said. "Then it got to five or 10. Now there's a couple of hundred guys who make a living playing golf. We had to really play well and scratch it out to be in a position to get endorsements. But we worked to try to build the tour so they didn't have to do that."

What worries him is whether easy money is making players work as hard as they should.

"Is that producing better golfers?" Nicklaus said, pausing and shrugging his shoulders. "I don't know. The question was asked because you see all the older guys, all guys who have had to gut it out in tough conditions. The kids today play perfect conditions every week. If they don't like what's going on, they're finishing 10th or 15th and still make a check.

"I don't think it makes them as tough."

Nicklaus said he didn't want to criticize any of the young players, and felt a good crop of them was on the verge of breaking through, especially with Tiger Woods on the sidelines with a rebuilt knee for the rest of the season.

He also conceded his intention was to make life easier for players who came after him.

"You try to create a system that allows a lot of people to be able to make a living doing something. And they're successful doing it," he said. "And then your system destroys the desire for guys to have to work."

Nicklaus mentioned Bill Rogers, the 1981 British Open champion who never was much of a factor after chasing appearance money through exhibitions around the world.

Asked when he felt financially secure, Nicklaus said he never worried about money and never played any golf tournament strictly for money except for the occasional Skins Game.

"I always took the attitude that the harder I worked at my golf game and the better I played, the money would take care of itself," he said. "If I had that trophy on the shelf, the money would come with it."


______________________________
"The word Fascism has now no meaning except insofar as it signifies 'something not desirable'." -- George Orwell, "Politics and the English Language," 1946

High Post Count = Manliness and Importance

#2 Most Friendly Guy, Connoisseur of All Things Fine, Elitist Ass, and One of the Two Biggest Douchebags in the Forums
 
Posts: 7829 | Registered: May 02, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
TSF
Member
Picture of TSF
Posted Hide Post
Kind of reminds me of the "walking to school in the snow uphill both ways" kind of reminiscing.

Sure the game and money was different then. Tiger revolutionized the game and the money that is associated with it.

But for Jack to say they don't have to work as hard is hard to believe. They may not have to work as hard for the money once they get their card, but I think its probably much harder to get a Tour card now than it was during Jack's era.


"The more a feller’s got on his mind, the less time he's got to think on any one thing." - Festus Haggen
 
Posts: 940 | Location: Georgia, USA | Registered: January 18, 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Member
Picture of Bones
Posted Hide Post
I guess he has forgotten about all the rumors, about him and many of the other older timers splitting the prize money and then playing for the cup.
Confused

This message has been edited. Last edited by: Bones,


Bones

If you bitch, some politcian will hear you, and God help the rest of us..
 
Posts: 312 | Location: Back in Califorina | Registered: March 26, 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
 Previous Topic | Next Topic powered by eve community  
 

Cigar Aficionado Online    Cigar Aficionado Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  Golf    Nicklaus disparages the young, wealthy and lazy . . .

© Cigar Aficionado Online 2005