Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 09, 1963, Image 55

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KUITCNCOwea MOT IW-jWw, K.T.
lack
Nicklaus
Golf's
Boy Wonder
1
The Nicklausee Barbara, Jackie, pet
Nappy, and Jack. Steve's a newcomer.
At 23, he's 1963's top
money winner and aiming for a
second U.S. Open championship
next week with a close-knit
family as his cheering section
By JACK RYAN
AT 23, JACK nicklaus has won enough ama
k. teur and pro golf tournaments to appear
almost blase about taking the coveted Masters
in Augusta, Ga., this spring.
And he is blast! about the professional aspects of it
About the personal ones well, that's different. When he
recalls striding toward the clubhouse after clinching Au
gusta's symbolic green jacket, emotion jars his usually
even voice. .-
"I saw Dad in the crowd," he says. "He had followed me
the whole round and looked just fine. I guess I got as big a
kick out of that as I did out of winning."
It wasn't evident to the gallery or the television audience
that day, but more than just tournament pressure had
weighed on young Nicklaus as he went after the first leg
of every pro golfer's dream, the grand slam victories in
the Masters, the U. S. Open ( in which Jack is an odds-on
favorite next week), the British Open, and the PGA.
For one thing, in a modest two-bedroom home in the
Arlington section of Columbus, Ohio, Jack's attractive
blonde wife, Barbara, (was expecting their second child
any day.
"We had to have the doctor help me plan my golf sched
ule this spring," Jack says. "There was a spot right after
the Masters when he figured Barbara could deliver, so I
planned to take off from the circuit then to be with her.
. When I left for Augusta, the doctor told me not to worry
but, of course, you can never tell." With that afterthought,
Nicklaus concedes that even his renowned powers of fair
way concentration can be haunted by personal problems.
Added to this doubt was the insistence of Jack's father,
L. Charles Nicklaus, on following his son's fortunes over
the Augusta links, although only a few months before he
had suffered a serious illness. In the late rounds of the
Masters, however, Charley Nicklaus came on as strong as
his bull-like son and finished beside Jack at the awards
presentation. "Dad always has been at the big ones with
me," Jack says, "but I had wondered if he ought to try
to make this one."
To make the ending a thoroughly happy one, both re
turned to Columbus in time for the on-dot delivery of the
14 Family Weakly, Jun 9, 1SS3
newest Nicklaus, Steve, who joins Jackie, a 19-month-old
mirror of his father's vivid blue eyes and rusty red com
. plexion, in the close-knit Nicklaus clan.
From the beginning, the Nicklaus story has been a
family one, and, appropriately, it is best told by senior
member Charley Nicklaus, tennis champ, seven-handicap
golfer, and college and pro football player. He usually picks
it up by referring to another bad time he experienced more
than 10 years ago.
. "I broke a bone in my ankle, and the doctors told me to
walk on soft ground at first I missed playing sports, so I
decided to do my walking on a golf course. I took Jack
along. He had played a lot of sports and was good at them
all, but this was his first exposure to golf. The pro at Scioto
Country Club, Jack Grout, took a look at Jack's swing and
said to me, 'I'd like to teach that boy before anybody else
gets hold of him.' "
On the first nine holes he played, Jack shot a 51. The
following year he was shooting in the low 80s, and at 13
had broken 70 over Scioto's 7,000-yard layout. Nicklaus
acknowledges Grout's training as a decisive factor in his
play ("The only thing I picked up from my dad," he says,
"was my overlapping grip."), and when in Miami, where
Grout is now a pro, he still consults him.
"XJOBODY practiced more than Jack," Charley Nicklaus
IN says. "He'd play 36 holes a day, then hit 500 or 600
balls. He was always calling up Grout, asking him ques
tions." Nicklaus, proprietor of a chain of Columbus drug
stores, built a driving range in the basement for Jack's
winter practice and soon had to start a trophy room as
the boy piled up amateur championships, including the
National Amateur twice.
Even as a youngster, Nicklaus displayed the deliberate
coolness that distinguishes his play today. Only once does
his father recall his being rattled. That was in 1955 when
Jack was the youngest player in the U.S. Amateur. His
boyhood hero, Bobby Jones, golfdom's only grand slammer,
was so impressed by Jack's drives that he decided to follow
the youth.
"When Jack learned this," says Charley, "he tossed
and turned all night The next day Jones came up on