ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt owes debt to Justin Thomas for Alabama basketball beating Maryland

ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt owes debt to Justin Thomas after Alabama basketball defeated Maryland in the NCAA Tournament.

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ESPN broadcaster Scott Van Pelt went to Maryland.

Professional golfer Justin Thomas went to Alabama.

So when Thomas appeared on “SportsCenter” with Van Pelt the night that the NCAA Tournament bracket was chosen, Van Pelt noted that Maryland and Alabama could play in the second round. The two joked about a wager on the potential game that involved Thomas’ $2.7 million purse for winning The Players Championship.

Alabama and Maryland ended up meeting Monday night in the round of 32. Alabama won comfortably, 96-77.

Van Pelt tweeted Monday night during the game, “I’m going to owe @JustinThomas34 2.7”

They settled on something more reasonable — lunch at The Masters.

Thomas replied to Van Pelt on Tuesday, “:) it’s ok. The win was enough for me. Buy me lunch at @TheMasters we’ll call it even.”

The Masters is scheduled to take place April 8-11.

Van Pelt discussed the wager on his podcast “SVPod” on Tuesday.

“I appreciate him allowing me to wiggle off the hook there,” Van Pelt said. “I sent him a text that said, ‘Hey man, do you take checks?’ And he said, ‘I just hope we can keep it going.'”

Van Pelt then compared Alabama’s dominating win against Maryland to professional golf and the tough task of following up a great performance with another one.

“You see somebody shoot 64 in a round on Thursday, one of the hardest things on the PGA Tour to do is shoot another great score the next day,” Van Pelt said. “Same person, same course. Why don’t you, why can’t you go shoot a great score the next day. Nobody has a really great explanation for it.

“Now in basketball, clearly, playing Maryland and playing UCLA, it’s a different team,” Van Pelt added. “But you’re the same team, and so, why would you maybe not shoot it as well the next game. Well, because sports are odd. This tournament is a one-off. You get 40 minutes on the clock. What can you do with those 40 minutes?”

Alabama is scheduled to face UCLA in the Sweet 16 on Sunday, March 28 at 7:15 p.m. ET.

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Masters Memories: Jack Nicklaus and the 1986 Masters

Jack Nicklaus recounts to broadcaster Charlie Rymer how he rallied to shoot 65 and win the 1986 Masters.

It doesn’t get much better than Jack Nicklaus winning the 1986 Masters at age 46. Unless that is if you get to listen to Nicklaus relive the moment in almost forensic detail.

This week, former PGA Tour pro Charlie Rymer did just that via video with Nicklaus and posted the nearly 20-minute chat as the latest episode of the Charlie Rymer Show sponsored by PlayGolfMyrtleBeach.com.

Nicklaus wasn’t even on the first page of the leaderboard when the CBS broadcast began that fateful day, but birdies at Nos. 9-11 had him lurking behind the likes of leader Seve Ballesteros, Tom Kite and Greg Norman. Not even a bogey at 12 after his par putt hit a ball mark could deflate Nicklaus. In fact, he suggested it did just the opposite.

“It turned out it was the best thing that happened to me because it brought me back down to earth,” Nicklaus explained.

He continued his charge with a birdie at 13. After a perfect drive at the par-5 15th, Nicklaus said to son, Jackie Jr., who was on the bag, “How far do you think a 3 would go, and I don’t mean a 3-iron?”

He was referring, of course, to an eagle 3 and he did just that with Jackie leaping for joy as his dear old dad drained the 12-footer.

Nicklaus knew his tee shot at the par-3 16th was magic. In flight, Jackie said, “Be good,” to which Nicklaus reached down to fetch his tee and without even looking up responded, “It is.”

“Pretty cocky statement to be making,” Nicklaus tells Rymer.

Still, the Golden Bear needed help from his closest competitors and Ballesteros did his part, snap-hooking a 4-iron into the water on 15.

Nicklaus provides some telling insight on the great Seve’s fatal mistake: “I remember talking to Seve early in the week and I said, ‘How are you doing, Seve?’ He said, ‘I haven’t played a lot of golf this spring. My game hasn’t been too good. I don’t know how I will hold up under pressure.’ I remembered that when he said that to me. He was halfway between a 4- and a 5-iron to the green. When you haven’t played, you don’t play into the 15th green a soft 4-iron. If you remember the swing, he quit on it horribly and it went about halfway across the water. It was a 5-iron for him and hit it.”

Jack Nicklaus and his caddie-son Jackie line up a putt during the Masters. Nicklaus won the tournament by one stroke. (Photo: Phil Sheldon/Popperfoto/Getty Images)

Nicklaus tapped in for birdie at 16 and wedged 12 feet left of the hole at 17. He and Jackie Jr., surveyed the birdie putt, which broke left to right and Nicklaus determined it would break back left at the end toward Rae’s Creek. It did just that and for the first time all week Nicklaus held sole possession of the lead.

“Incidentally, Charlie, I have hit that putt a thousand times and it’s never broken left again,” Nicklaus said.

He parred 18, hugged Jackie and signed for 65. Then the waiting game began as Kite, who barely missed a 10-foot birdie putt at 18, and Norman still had legitimate chances to force a playoff.

Nicklaus sat on a couch in Butler’s Cabin and watched Norman go on a birdie streak. So Nicklaus rose from the couch.

“Not that I’m superstitious or anything,” Nicklaus said.

Norman’s bogey at the last clinched the record sixth green jacket and 18th major title for Nicklaus and first since 1980. In fact, an article by Tom McCallister in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution before the tournament called Nicklaus washed up and labeled him “the Olden Bear.” A Nicklaus friend tacked it to the refrigerator to make sure he’d see it.

“I think the article was very justified,” Nicklaus said to Rymer. “I was getting old and I was playing not very well.”

Jack Nicklaus receives the Green Jacket from 1985 winner Bernhard Langer.

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