Tom Watson joins Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player as Masters Honorary Starters, says he’ll do it again: ‘The good Lord willing the creek don’t rise’

Who could ever forget a moment like this.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Three men hit a tee shot and then embraced on the first tee.

But when those three men happen to be Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player and Tom Watson and the setting is Augusta National Golf Club and the start of the 86thedition of the Masters, it is a moment washed in nostalgia.

Nicklaus, the 18-time major winner and winner of six Green Jackets here, wearing a yellow sweater and hat, was the eighth person to become an honorary starter, a tradition at the Masters dating to 1963.

“I personally just felt lucky to be out there. Period,” said the 82-year-old Nicklaus, who bowed out of the Par 3 Contest this year.

Player, 86, in his trademark black, joined him two years later and posted to social media his training regimen with an eye on outdriving Nicklaus.

“I get quite choked when I get on that tee in the morning,” Player said. “I’m not embarrassed to say that.”

Watson, 72, looking resplendent in a light purple quarter-zip jacket, became the 11th honorary starter, one year after Lee Elder’s one-year stint.

“When Chairman Ridley called my office and said, ‘We’d like to speak with Tom at 10 in the morning on Monday,’ I was kind of expecting maybe that he might ask me to be an Honorary Starter, but I was overjoyed and actually humbled because the way I look at these old goats right here, I can’t carry their shoes. I don’t kind of belong in the same realm as these two players here,” Watson recalled. “I said, ‘I’m more than happy to do it.’ Then he followed up very quickly and he said, ‘Tom, you can do it for as long as you’d like,’ which I – wow. That meant a great deal to me. The good Lord willing the creek don’t rise.”

Overnight rain slowed to a steady mist but pushed tee times back half an hour. The first sign that the Hall of Fame trio would soon be approaching occurred eight minutes before their scheduled 8:15 tee time as patrons applauded Barbara Nicklaus’s as if Queen Elizabeth II had arrived on the tee. Player and Nicklaus stood under umbrellas with the Masters logo while Watson didn’t seem to mind the rain drops. He said he had attended the ceremonial start to the season’s first men’s major many times since he first played in the tournament as an amateur in 1970.

When Player stepped to the tee to get the festivities started, Watson cracked, “Aren’t you going to do a pushup?”

“I did them while you were asleep this morning,” Player crowed.

Laughter ensued. “I was up at 4 o’clock this morning,” Watson replied.

2022 Masters
Masters Honorary Starter Tom Watson tees off from the first hole during the first round of the 2022 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. (Photo: Adam Cairns-Augusta Chronicle/USA TODAY Sports)

Player smacked his drive and showed he can still kick his leg high in the air. Then Nicklaus waddled to the tee. “If I can do this without falling over,” he said. “Yes, success!”

“That a boy,” Watson said as Nicklaus’s drive flew off to the right. He waved and smiled widely and gave way to Watson, a two-time Masters champion (1977, 1981).

“Now on the tee for the first time, it is my privilege to introduce our newest honorary starter,” said Augusta National Golf Club Chairman Fred Ridley.

The 72-year-old Watson stepped to the tee, but first he had a request. “May I say something?” he asked as if anyone would ever think of stopping him.

“I would like to say how honored I am to be with Gary and Jack. I’ve watched this ceremony many times in the past with Arnie, Gene Sarazen, Byron Nelson and to be a part of this thing I’m truly humbled,” he said.

More applause. Watson readied to hit and paused.

“How far did you hit it, Gary?” he teased.

“I could hear it land,” Player said. “Not very far.”

And when Watson connected, he received the largest round of applause.

“I was definitely the shortest,” Nicklaus would later say. “Gary was close to Tom. Gary and Tom were pretty close probably.”

Competitive to the very end, Watson couldn’t resist piping in. “Oh, I got him by 50,” he said.

But where the drives flew was immaterial. Before they left the tee box, these three fierce competitors and legends at their craft grabbed hold of each other as if in a football huddle and embraced.

As one photographer who captured the image put it, there was nothing posed about it. “That was genuine,” he said.

For the rest of us, it was a patron giving fatherly advice to his son who may have said it best, “Take a mental picture.”

Who could ever forget a moment like this.

How to watch the Masters | ESPN+ | Paramount+ | Golf Channel free on Fubo TVWe recommend interesting sports viewing and streaming opportunities. If you sign up to a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.

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Masters: Ranking every champion by number of titles

A finite list of humans throughout history have put on the green jacket in celebration.

Hello friends.

It’s that time of year again. The weather is slowly thawing the northeast, flowers are blooming down south, and the sun is beginning to stay in the sky a bit longer. For golf fans, all of this means one thing.

It’s time for the Masters.

The annual migration to Augusta, Georgia, is the highlight of the year for not only fans but most of the players driving down Magnolia Lane this week. Augusta National Golf Club, over time, has become the game’s holy land, a place that many dream of going to but a mere few actually reach.

A finite list of humans throughout history have put on the green jacket in celebration, and several have done it on more than one occasion.

Here’s a list of every player who’s conquered ANGC, ranked by number of titles.

Masters complete history: Tiger Woods | Rory McIlroy | Jordan Spieth

Tom Watson to join Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player as honorary starter for Masters

“Augusta National in April is one of my favorite places to be.”

Forty-five years ago, Tom Watson held off Jack Nicklaus by two shots to win his first green jacket.

Forty-one years ago, Watson again held off Nicklaus, as well as Johnny Miller, to win his second green jacket.

Come April, Watson and Nicklaus will hook up again at Augusta National.

Watson will join Nicklaus and Gary Player as an honorary starter ahead the first round of the Masters. The three combined to win the Masters 11 times.

In addition to his Masters wins in 1977 and 1981, Watson finished runner-up in 1978, 1979 and 1984 and had 15 top-10s in all in 42 starts. He is one of 17 players to win multiple Masters. His 72.74 scoring average ranks fifth in the tournament’s history. Watson’s 58 subpar rounds are second all-time behind Nicklaus (71). Watson holds the record for most consecutive years with at least one subpar round (21, 1975-1995).

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Watson, 72, was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1988. He won 39 PGA Tour titles (tied for 10th all time). Eight of those victories were in major championships, including wins in the Open Championship in 1975, 1977, 1980, 1982 and 1983.

“Augusta National in April is one of my favorite places to be,” Watson said in a release on Tuesday from Augusta National Golf Club. “With the many fond memories of both watching the Masters as a youngster and then competing in the tournament for so many years, I am greatly honored to join my friends and fellow competitors, Jack and Gary, as an honorary starter in this upcoming Masters.

“In both of my victories, Jack was on my heels. And when Gary won his third tournament in 1978, I was there to help him put on the green jacket. Moments like those stand out in my career, and the opportunity to share the honorary starter tradition with Jack, Gary and the Masters patrons will be very special.”

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Watson will become the 11th honorary starter in the tournament’s history. The tradition began in 1963 with Jock Hutchison and Fred McLeod. Other honorary starters include Byron Nelson, Gene Sarazen, Ken Venturi, Sam Snead, Arnold Palmer, Nicklaus, Player and Lee Elder.

The 86th Masters is April 7-10.

“I am honored that Tom has accepted our invitation,” said Fred Ridley, chairman of Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters. “I look forward to commemorating his love for the game and impact on the Masters with his millions of fans across the globe as he hits a tee shot alongside two of the tournament’s other all-time greats, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player.”

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Bubba Claus, HV3 again lead our favorite Christmas and holiday social media posts from the golf world

From Tiger Woods to Bryson DeChambeau to Gary Player, the golf world is celebrating this season.

Clearly, 2021 was an interesting year in golf.

We saw COVID wreak havoc, forcing Jon Rahm to withdraw from the Memorial tournament with it all but wrapped up heading into the final round. Then, just a few weeks later, the World No. 1 captured his first major championship at Torrey Pines.

Back in February, Tiger Woods was involved in a single-car crash resulting in serious injuries to his lower body, and nearly lost his right leg. Just 10 months later, he played with his son Charlie in the PNC Championship. Team Woods nearly won, falling just two shots short of a team comprised of John Daly and his son.

This holiday season, we hope you’re relaxing and enjoying a little quality time. Here are a few of our favorite social media messages from the world of golf.

Gary Player

Pinehurst Resort

Tiger Woods

Bryson DeChambeau

Harold Varner III

Rory McIlroy

Bubba Watson

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CX3pFqYBsIF/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Lee Westwood

https://www.instagram.com/tv/CX3Utfqvtyk/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Blair O’Neal

https://www.instagram.com/p/CX2KLcgJE7O/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Anna Nordqvist

https://www.instagram.com/p/CX34n5GptNo/?utm_medium=copy_link

Trevor Immelman

https://www.instagram.com/p/CX4GUqplY6C/

Ian Poulter

https://www.instagram.com/p/CX4KOgmIOUr/

The Travelers Championship

https://www.instagram.com/tv/CX3yVMdquBo/

Jimmy Walker

https://www.instagram.com/jimmywalkerpga/p/CX4IJ64vVTE/

The U.S. Women’s Open

https://www.instagram.com/uswomensopen/p/CX31SBCrfgC/

The Phoenix Open

https://www.instagram.com/p/CX4EmsvBHdR/

Brooks Koepka and Jena Sims

https://www.instagram.com/p/CXl4u1_rxRy/

Tiger Woods, Justin Thomas highlight a stacked 2021 PNC Championship field

Thanks to Tiger Woods’ commitment last week, the field at this week’s PNC Championship is now 20 teams.

On December 8th, Tiger Woods announced that he, and son Charlie, committed to play in this week’s PNC Championship, just 10 months after his car accident.

Incredible.

The last time we saw Woods play golf on television was at this event back in 2020. Time really is a flat circle.

However, the Woods-duo isn’t the only big-name partnership headed to Florida. Defending champions Justin and his father Mike Thomas will look to triumph again. Bubba Watson will be playing with his father-in-law, while Nelly Korda will be playing with her dad, Petr.


HOW TO WATCH: Tiger, Charlie and the PNC Championship


Here’s a look at the 20 partnerships at this year’s PNC Championship, which requires that each team have a major champion. The Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, Orlando, Grande Lakes is the host venue.

Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player form course design alliance as Black Knight seeks to start building again

The Golden Bear and Black Knight have been friends for decades, with this design alliance further proof of that.

The course design firms of Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player announced Wednesday they have formed a strategic alliance to help Player relaunch his business building golf courses.

Player has designed more than 135 courses worldwide since starting in the 1980s, but his design business was on hold for several years during a legal dispute with his son Marc Player that was resolved in 2020. Now his marketing firm, Gary Player Enterprises, is ready to start building again.

A page announcing the two Hall of Fame players’ partnership on nicklausdesign.com said the alliance will allow Player to draw on the talents and infrastructure developed by Nicklaus Design, which has built more than 425 course in 46 countries.

“When I approached Jack, my goal was to create a relationship that would elevate my design business, and I am thrilled to have my design work supported by the most talented and thorough design firm in the world,” Player said in the release on the Nicklaus site. “… I love working with the land to develop a truly memorable, challenging and enjoyable golf experience, and working with the support of Nicklaus Design will allow me to concentrate on the unique, creative opportunities that each site presents to me.”

Nicklaus and Player were rivals on the course for decades starting in the 1960s. Nicklaus went on to win 18 professional majors among his 73 PGA tour titles, while Player won nine majors among 24 titles on the PGA Tour and more than a hundred more around the world. The Golden Bear and the Black Knight have been friends for decades, with this design alliance further example.

“When I partnered with Howard Milstein (executive chairman of the Nicklaus Companies) in June 2007, one of the goals was to institutionalize and strengthen the Nicklaus Companies to continue my personal legacy in the golf business and ensure the expertise and resources needed to develop and support the people who will design the golf courses of the future,” Nicklaus said in the announcement on his site. “Now, we’re happy to be in a position to facilitate the next phase of my dear friend Gary’s career.”

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Watch: Paige Spiranac makes hole-in-one, gets celebratory hug from Gary Player

Making an ace is cool, but to do it in front of Gary Player?!

Paige Spiranac made a hole-in-one. That’s cool in itself. But to do it in front of World Golf Hall of Famer Gary Player? Well, that’s just next level.

It happened on Monday at the 148-yard, 14th hole at Glen Arbor Golf Club in Bedford Hills, New York at a charity-golf event sponsored by Berenberg to raise money for Pancreatic cancer research. Player’s wife Vivienne succumbed to the disease earlier this year.

Spiranac, 28, is a former professional golfer and better known these days as a social media personality.

In her first tweet on her ace, she simply said, “Made a hole in one in front of Gary Player.”

She let that humble-brag sit there for four hours before flexing with the video proof.

In the video, Player is heard discussing his club choice with his caddie as the ball is in the air. Someone says, “Go in…GO IN!”

It did and it led to an eruption of cheers and the aforementioned hug from The Black Knight. As for Spiranac’s reaction: “Oh my God,” she said. “Did you get that?”

They did, Paige. That’s a keeper.

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Vivienne Player, wife of Gary Player, dies after cancer battle

While Gary Player won tournaments around the world, his wife of 64 years, Vivienne, managed the family at home.

Vivienne Player, wife of Hall of Fame golfer Gary Player, died Wednesday after a battle with pancreatic cancer. The couple’s 64-year marriage produced six children, 22 grandchildren and two great grandchildren.

Vivienne was diagnosed with cancer in June of 2020.

“Your whole life has got to be a honeymoon if you want it to be successful,” Gary recently told Golfweek contributor Averee Dovsek on her podcast, Why You Suck at Golf!, in mentioning Vivienne’s cancer battle. “Work at it. Love is the greatest word in the world.”

Gary, now 85, first proposed to Vivienne when he was 15 years old, and they married in 1957 in their native South Africa. Gary’s globe-trotting career went on to produce nine major championship titles among his 167 international victories, with 24 PGA Tour wins. Gary has spoke often about how his family sometimes traveled with children, and how Vivienne ran the family while he was away.

International team captain Gary Player talks with his wife, Viviene, as they watch foursomes matches at the 2005 Presidents Cup at Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Virginia. (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

“She is the best wife that any man could ever wish for,” he told Tennis World in 2020 after her diagnosis. “You know, no other woman would have stayed with me. I spent more time on airplanes than anyone in this planet. And she stayed home with the kids.”

Gary and Vivienne founded the Player Foundation and the Gary Player Invitational series tournaments, which has raised tens of millions of dollars to provide educational opportunities for underprivileged children.

“With the travel my profession and wins have afforded my wife Vivienne and I, we have seen the poverty and enormous needs around the world,” Gary said on the foundation website. “We have gained great satisfaction from giving something back to the world in moments of success.”

Vivienne played golf and once recorded two holes-in-one in one round in Johannesburg.

Tributes poured in on social media, including the following.

Tony Jacklin

Louis Oosthuizen

Thomas Bjorn

The Open

South African golf

Sunshine Tour

Did you know one Masters golf champion was buried in his green jacket? Here are 6 facts

How it all started, who makes them, what it means. Those questions are more are answered here.

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AUGUSTA, Ga. — The green jacket is the ultimate symbol of success in golf.

A golfer wearing the single-breasted, single-vent garment has achieved something special: a victory at the Masters Tournament.

Augusta National Golf Club members began wearing the jackets in 1937. The idea was to have them be easily identifiable so they could answer questions from patrons.

Brooks Uniform Co. in New York made the original jackets, which featured heavy wool material. Those soon gave way to a lightweight version that could be custom-ordered from the club’s pro shop.

Masters: Leaderboard | Photos | TV info | Sunday tee times

Here’s what to know about the Masters green jacket:

Do Masters champions keep the green jacket?

The green jacket is reserved for Augusta National members and golfers who win the Masters. Jackets are kept on club grounds, and taking them off the premises is forbidden.

The exception is for the winner, who can take it home and return it to the club the following year.

Gary Player reportedly got into a heated exchange in 1962 with Cliff Roberts after he mistakenly took his jacket home to South Africa.

“I didn’t know you were supposed to leave it there,” Player said. “Next thing you know, there was a call from Mr. Roberts.”

According to Player, here’s how the exchange went:

“‘Gary, have you got the jacket?’

“I said, ‘Yes, I do.’

“He said, ‘Well, no one ever takes the jacket away from here.’

“And I said, ‘Well, Mr. Roberts, if you want it, why don’t you come and fetch it?’”

Roberts, who didn’t lose many arguments, agreed to a compromise.

“He kind of chuckled and said don’t wear it in public,” Player said.

So, you can’t take it with you?

Champions can for a year – and some jackets from former members have come up for auction in recent years. And the Augusta National has filed suit to keep jackets off the auction block.

1970 Masters champion Billy Casper receives his green jacket from defending champion winner George Archer at Augusta National Golf Club. (Photo: The Augusta Chronicle)

But the ultimate taking it with you story belongs to the 1970 Masters champion. Billy Casper never lost his appreciation for the Masters Tournament and Augusta National Golf Club.

The 1970 champion was buried in his green jacket. His wife, Shirley, asked for and received permission from Augusta National.

How it started

Augusta National members began wearing the jackets in 1937.

The original purpose of the green jacket, as envisioned by Cliff Roberts, was to identify club members as “reliable sources of information” to visiting non-members – and to let waiters know who got the check at dinner.

What it means

A golfer wearing the three-button style, single-breasted and center-vented garment has achieved something special: a victory at Augusta National Golf Club.

The first green jacket was awarded to a winner when Sam Snead won the tournament for the first time in 1949, to make him an honorary member. It was then awarded to all past champions retroactively.

Who presents the green jacket to the winner?

Traditionally, the previous year’s winner presents the jacket to the new champion at the tournament’s end. In case of a repeat winner, the Masters chairman presents the jacket to the winner.

Masters Tournament 2020
2019 Masters champion Tiger Woods presents Dustin Johnson with the green jacket after winning the 20202 Masters Tournament at Augusta National GC. (Photo: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports)

This has happened three times, first in 1966 when Jack Nicklaus became the first repeat champion, then in 1990 when Nick Faldo repeated the feat. The last time was when Tiger Woods repeated as Masters champion in 2002.

Who makes it

For three decades, Cincinnati-based Hamilton Tailoring Co. has made the traditional blazer worn by Masters Tournament winners. It uses wool fabric produced at the Victor Forstmann Inc. mill in the central Georgia town of Dublin. The company takes about a month to produce each blazer, which is fitted with custom brass buttons inscribed with the Augusta National logo. The owner’s name is stitched on a label inside.

What color is the Masters green jacket?

That brilliant rye green is Pantone 342.

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Elder statesmen: Lee Elder has his day in the sun at the Masters

Lee Elder broke the color barrier at the 1975 Masters and was an honorary starter alongside Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player this week.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – The ovation began as Lee Elder approached the first tee at Augusta National Golf Club in a golf cart and reached a crescendo as he stood with the help of a cane and waved his right hand.

“Today Lee Elder will inspire us and make history once more,” Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley said. “Lee, you have the honors.”

Elder, 86, who uses oxygen to assist his breathing, had a full set of golf clubs at his disposal and used a driver for balance, but he was unfit to hit a shot. When he took a seat to another round of applause, he said, “That feels good.”

“I was so afraid that was going to happen,” his wife, Sharon said. “He just didn’t feel well at all this morning.”

None of that mattered. This moment – long overdue – belonged to Elder, a trailblazer in every sense of the word, and he soaked it all in.

“I think it was one of the most emotional experiences that I have ever witnessed or been involved in,” Elder said. “It is certainly something that I will cherish for the rest of my life because I have loved coming to Augusta National.”

They all came to see Elder in his mint-green shirt on the first tee at Augusta National Golf Club one more time. Masters champions Phil Mickelson, Bubba Watson, Charles Coody and Nick Faldo and fellow contestants Corey Conners and Cameron Champ, one of the few minorities on the PGA Tour and lone Black representative in the 88-man field.

“It’s been a very long time since I’ve come to this,” Faldo said of the honorary starter ceremony. “But I didn’t want to miss this one.”

Neither did Melvin, a worker at the Augusta National clubhouse with his uniform and nameplate intact, as did NFL Hall of Famer Lynn Swann and his fellow Augusta National member Condoleezza Rice, both looking resplendent in their green jackets. Rice, for one, begged out of a potential conflict to be there.

“I texted that I’d like to be on the tee,” Rice said.

Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus were there, too, in their traditional roles as First Tee Starters, but they were overshadowed by Elder, who learned to play the game crosshanded as a caddie in rural Dallas. Ted Rhodes, another black pioneer who served as a mentor, changed him to a traditional grip and he’d go on to dominate the United Golf Association, the tour for blacks in the era of the PGA’s Caucasian-only rule, before earning his PGA Tour card in 1967, winning four times and qualifying for the 1979 U.S. Ryder Cup team.

Masters
Honorary starter Gary Player greets Jack Nicklaus at the 1st tee during the first round of The Masters. (Photo: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports)

“I wanted it so badly,” Elder once told Golfweek. “When I first qualified for the Tour, in 1967, I said I wanted to get that one thing that had not been accomplished out of the way. The Masters was the one tournament that hadn’t been integrated.”

Two years before Elder qualified, a group of politicians urged Augusta National to invite Elder, but their request was rebuffed.

“We are a little surprised as well as being flattered that 18 Congressmen should be able to take time out to help us operate a golf tournament,” Augusta National co-founder Clifford Roberts wrote. “…We feel certain someone has misinformed the distinguished lawmakers, because there is not and never has been player discrimination, subtle or otherwise.”

Elder earned his way to the Masters holing an 18-foot birdie putt on the fourth playoff to beat Peter Oosterhuis in the 1974 Monsanto Open at Pensacola Country Club in Florida, at the same course where a few years earlier he had been refused entrance into the clubhouse and changed his shoes in the parking lot. To understand the world at the time it is important to remember that Elder was whisked away to the clubhouse, and for good reason.

“I didn’t know why until we got in the car and they said they had received calls that if I won they were going to kill me,” Elder said. “We got so many calls like that.”

More: Lee Elder’s honors shine spotlight on quest for more Black representation in golf

During the week of the 1975 Masters, he bounced between two rental houses just to be safe, and stayed up late with friends playing cards and trying to wrap his head around what it meant to break the color barrier at the Masters.

“My friend said to me, ‘Do you really know how much you’ve done?’ I said, ‘I feel like I do. I feel like I made a contribution to society.’ They said, ‘No, my man, you’re breaking the barrier that had been in existence for a long time,’ ” Elder recalled.

On a misty morning, 36 years ago Elder wore green pants, a green shirt and a green sweater. He was asked if he’d like a rainsuit. “And mess up this pretty green?” Elder said.

What he remembered most from that fateful day when he shot 74 during his Masters debut wasn’t all that different from the response he experienced one more time today.

“Every tee and every green that I walked on, I got tremendous ovations,” he said. “I think when you receive something like that, it helps to settle down, because I’ll tell you, I was so nervous as we began play that it took me a few holes to kind of calm down.”

All these years later, Nicklaus remembers being “astonished” that a Black player hadn’t played in the Masters yet, given the talent of the likes of Rhodes, Pete Brown and Charlie Sifford, and that Elder would be the first.

“I thought it was long overdue when he finally got invited,” Nicklaus.

So was this celebration of Elder.

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