Remember this? How Bobby Orr went from hockey legend to golf lover

Boston Bruins’ Bobby Orr flies through the air after scoring the winning goal past St. Louis Blues’ goalie Glenn Hall during overtime of the Stanley Cup finals in Boston on May 10, 1970. [Ray Lussier/Boston Herald American via AP] The most memorable …

Boston Bruins’ Bobby Orr flies through the air after scoring the winning goal past St. Louis Blues’ goalie Glenn Hall during overtime of the Stanley Cup finals in Boston on May 10, 1970. [Ray Lussier/Boston Herald American via AP]
The most memorable goal in NHL history was scored 50 years ago Sunday.

And the man captured flying through the air, stick firmly in his right hand and raised to the sky, while screaming in celebration, is one of Palm Beach County’s most legendary figures.

Bobby Orr, a longtime resident of Jupiter, once said of the area: “It’s heaven down here.” And as the area has become home to a long list of sports icons and Hall of Famers, few are as accomplished and revered as No. 4.

Orr’s goal – scored on May 10, 1970, which also was Mother’s Day – came 40 seconds into overtime of Game 4 of the 1970 Stanley Cup Finals, giving the Boston Bruins their first title in 29 years. Orr was in his fourth season and had established himself as the best player in the game, winning the first of his three consecutive Hart Trophies as the league’s MVP.

Now, he remains a member of Jupiter Hills Club and at one time carried at 7-handicap.

Still, Orr had not had what college football now calls a “Heisman Moment,” one frozen in time that forever preserves greatness. A moment that defined a generation and produced statues and one of the most iconic photos in sports history.

Orr, whose style as an attacking defenseman revolutionized the game, picked up the puck along the boards and passed it to Derek Sanderson, who was stationed behind St. Louis Blues goalie Glenn Hall. Orr raced to the net, Sanderson spotted him, and Orr fired the puck to the Hall’s far side. What distinguished the photo, taken by Ray Lussier of the Boston Record American, was the stick of Blues defenseman Noel Picard hooking Orr’s left ankle and Picard picking up the stick, allowing Orr to fly through the air.

Orr, 72, recently spoke to several media members via video conferencing. He was asked if his going airborne was the result of Picard’s stick or him celebrating.

“Both,” he said. “I did see the puck go in and I was jumping. Noel Picard … did lift me. But I saw it go in and I was also jumping with joy.”

Heaven can’t wait

The title, “greatest ever,” is subjective in most professions. Even if you want to start a water cooler argument (while social distancing off course), those lists are short: Jack Nicklaus (golf), Michael Jordan (basketball), Serena Williams (women’s tennis) and Bobby Orr (hockey) certainly are near, if not at, the top of their sports.

All are either full- or part-time residents of Palm Beach County.

Although bad knees cut Orr’s career to nine full years – he played just 36 games his final three years, including his final two in Chicago – he’s at the least on the NHL’s Mount Rushmore and undoubtedly the greatest defenseman of all-time. When it comes to the royalty of his sport, he’s in the top 3 along with Wayne Gretzky and Gordie Howe.

“I don’t think a lot about being the greatest,” Orr said.

In 1979, at the age of 31, Orr became the youngest player in NHL history to be selected for the Hockey Hall of Fame, which waived its usual three-year waiting period to induct him in the hall that sits in Toronto, just outside his hometown of Parry Sound. A seven-time All-Star, he remains the last defenseman to lead the NHL in scoring.

In the late 1980s, about 10 years after retiring, Orr and his wife, Peggy, wound up in Jupiter, splitting their time between South Florida and their home in the Boston area. This gave Orr an opportunity to take up another sport, golf.

Now, he remains a member of Jupiter Hills Club and at one time carried at 7-handicap.

“I didn’t play much golf when I was playing hockey,” Orr once said at a charity event he played along with Nicklaus. “I wasn’t really into it.”

Orr is paying the price for his aggressive, hard-nosed style of hockey with two knee surgeries, shoulder surgery and a hip replacement in the last 18 months. He says he’s feeling good but has “some aches” and will “creak” a little bit.

“I played a tough game,” he said. “I played a different style. Surgeons, they put me back together.”

Besides golf, Orr added walking four to five times a week, fishing and playing with his grandkids as activities he enjoys even though the coronavirus pandemic has curtailed some of those. The Orrs have two sons. Brent lives in Jupiter, while Darren lives in the Boston area and is an agent working at Orr Hockey Group.

Jack Nicklaus giving Bobby Orr tips at the Bobby Orr Invitational Golf Tournament outside of Toronto in 1987. [Courtesy of Toronto Public Library]
“When this all started, we decided to stay in Florida,” Orr said. “There isn’t a lot going on. We get outside, hit a couple golf balls, walk around the neighborhood. It’s going to be a pretty quiet Mother’s Day.”

Unlike that Mother’s Day 50 years ago.

Last month, Orr sent a moving message to the healthcare workers who are treating coronavirus patients at Mass General Hospital, calling them “true heroes,” telling them he looks up to them and they are constantly in his mind.

“We’re celebrating a sporting event,” he said during his video call. “But with everything that’s going on I think it’s a good time to celebrate and thank all the front-line workers, first responders … all the different organizations that are assisting in health care, health-care providers. These people go to work every day making huge sacrifices. They’re saving lives and comforting so many people.

“I played a game. They call us heroes … I don’t think so. It’s not a game for these health care workers, these front liners. It’s real life. We do owe them so much. I say thank you. It’s a time we should be celebrating and thanking them.”

Bobby Orr takes a group photo during the 2012 Larry Laoretti and Tico Torres Celebrities Fore Kids Golf Classic at the Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound on Monday, November 26, 2012. (Richard Graulich/The Palm Beach Post)

The Boston Bruins Foundation is raffling off a replica of the 800-pound, bronze statue of ‘The Goal’ that was unveiled May 10, 2010, outside the TD Garden to raise money for those involved in fighting COVID-19. Orr will call the winner Sunday.

Who let the cat in the bag?

Bobby Orr still has the puck and stick from that Stanley Cup-winning goal. As far as his gloves, skates and other equipment he was wearing that day … blame the cat.

After retiring in 1978, Orr stuck all his equipment in a duffel bag and stored it in the basement of his home. The Orrs had a babysitter who owned a cat.

One day, Orr decided to play in an old-timers game and asked Peggy if she could air out the bag. She found the bag, and a smell far worse than any hockey locker room.

“The cat had been using it as a litter box,” Orr said. “The equipment … all gone.”

An imperfect ending to some of the greatest artifacts in hockey history.

Tom D’Angelo is a staffer for the Palm Bech Post, part of the USA Today Network. Contact him at tom_dangelo@pbpost.com and follow him on Twitter @tomdangelo44.

Remember this? Nancy Lopez won while pregnant — for the second time

Nancy Lopez won the Sara Lee Classic for her 44th of 46 LPGA titles. She did so while five months pregnant with her third child.

(Editor’s note: This is part of our Remember This series, looking back at memorable moments in golf history.)

By the time the Sara Lee Classic rolled around in 1991, Nancy Lopez had seen just about everything the golf world could throw at her.

She already had 43 LPGA Tour victories under her belt, including three majors. She already two children with her then-husband and former Major League Baseball star Ray Knight.

She’d been the LPGA player of the year four times and she’d already been inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame.

But winning a golf tournament while pregnant? Wouldn’t that be a first? Well, no —yet it’s still a pretty amazing feat.

Lopez marched out to a substantial lead in the 1991 event at Hermitage Golf Course in Old Hickory, Tennessee, tying the course record with a scintillating seven-under 65 in Friday’s first-round action

Pro golfer Nancy Lopez gets a hug from her 20-month-old daughter, Ashley Marie, after winning the LPGA Mazda Hall of Fame Championship at Sweetwater Country Club in Sugarland, Texas, on July 7, 1985. Lopez won by three strokes, finishing 7-under-par 281 for the 72 hole event.

In the final round on Sunday, however, she started to fade. It’s not surprising, especially when you consider she was more than five months pregnant with her third child.

Kris Monaghan took the lead on Sunday when she birdied No. 7, and then extended her lead to three strokes with eight holes to play.

That’s when Lopez’s experience took hold.

Lopez matched par on the back nine until reaching the par-four 15th, where she rolled in a 30-foot putt. She added a 10-foot putt on No. 16 and on this day — May 5, 1991 — Lopez captured the Sara Lee Classic for her 44th of what would be 46 LPGA titles, taking home a $63,750 winner’s check.

“I know myself,” Lopez told the Associated Press. “I’m convinced that if I play my own game, I can win. I felt if I let myself get involved in what everybody else is doing, I’ll fail.”

Later that year, she gave birth to her third daughter, Torri Heather.

Incredibly, it’s not the only time she pulled off a tournament win while pregnant. She was two months pregnant with first child Ashley in 1983 when she won the J&B Scotch Pro-Am. Second daughter Erinn was born in 1986, but as soon as Lopez recuperated, she played in four tournaments at the end of that year and finished in the top 5 in three of those.

(The Associated Press contributed to this article.)

[jwplayer VF5W2xKm-vgFm21H3]

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451189553]

 

 

Remember this? Jack Nicklaus-Arnold Palmer clashed at 1970 Byron Nelson Open

Two golf icons, 37 holes. The final round of the 1970 Byron Nelson Open pitted two of the game’s greats at Dallas’ Preston Trail Golf Club. Rains came early in the week, forcing the postponement of the opening round. That meant the superstars would …

Two golf icons, 37 holes. The final round of the 1970 Byron Nelson Open pitted two of the game’s greats at Dallas’ Preston Trail Golf Club.

Rains came early in the week, forcing the postponement of the opening round. That meant the superstars would be forced to play 36 holes on Sunday as adoring fans followed.

Both players opened Sunday with a round of 68, meaning Nicklaus held a slight edge heading into the final 18.

The Golden Bear found trouble on the final hole of regulation, however, as he hit the ball well off-line, but it was determined it had come to rest behind a TV tower. Officials indicated Nicklaus should be awarded a free drop.

He needed an up-and-down for victory, but couldn’t manage, and the two went to a playoff hole.

After giving away his edge, Nicklaus made up for it during the first extra hole, sticking his approach to inside two feet.

[vertical-gallery id=778042589]

Palmer, then 40, couldn’t manage birdie and Nicklaus took the title, a feat he a repeated the following year,

According to the Dallas Morning News, a call from the White House came just after the tournament ended. When Nicklaus picked up the phone, expecting to hear then-President Richard Nixon, an operator was on the line.

“What do you want with Mr. Palmer?” Nicklaus asked the operator, who was unaware who had won the playoff.

Nicklaus joked afterward, “I found out it was for Palmer, so I went out and got the trophy.”

Nicklaus won $20,000 by virtue of the victory while Palmer took home $11,400 for his second-place finish. Lee Trevino and John Schroeder tied for third, and each received $5,900.

Palmer never won the event, although he finished as the runner-up twice. The first time came in 1961, when he finished a stroke behind Earl Stewart.

Remember this? Jim McGovern-‘Ziggy’ Zyons spat led to Houston Open win

On this day — May 2, 1993 — Jim McGovern went on to capture his only PGA Tour victory at the Houston Open, beating John Huston in a playoff.

Jim McGovern was fuming. As he walked off the 14th green during Sunday’s final round of the 1993 Houston Open, McGovern’s chances for winning his first-ever PGA Tour title seemed to be slipping away after an ugly three-putt.

McGovern knew it. His caddie, Mark “Ziggy” Zyons, knew it, too, and mumbled to himself as the two exited the green, or at least that’s how McGovern remembers it.

The next 80 yards were contentious, to say the least.

“I snapped,” McGovern told Golfweek. “We were jawing at each other and it was more me than him. I was angry with myself and he mumbled a little and I just snapped. I told him, ‘I didn’t want to three-putt and I don’t want to hear it from you.’ We kept walking and I just vented over the whole walk to the next tee.”

As they arrived at the 15th tee box, Zyons showed why caddies can be as instrumental as the clubs they carry.

“He dropped the bag and said, ‘It’s over. Let’s restart this and play.’ So we did,” McGovern remembered.

Indeed, the reboot worked.

Jim McGovern finished in the top 10 on 14 times, but his only PGA Tour victory came at the 1993 Houston Open.

McGovern hit driver off the tee, then hit another driver off the fairway to just a few feet away from the cup. He buried a short eagle putt and on this day in history — May 2, 1993 — McGovern went on to capture his only PGA Tour victory.

Even after the eagle on 15, though, there was plenty of work to do.

McGovern, who grew up in a home next to Hackensack (N.J.) Golf Club, went to a playoff with John Huston. On the first hole, Huston had a short putt to win the event, but missed.

On the second hole, both players had lengthy birdie putts — McGovern remembers his was around 35 feet.

When McGovern drained his, he assumed he’d won the tournament.

Huston’s putt of about the same length came in on a perfect line, but finished just a half-rotation short of dropping in the cup.

“I’ll be honest, I never thought he’d miss the first putt and I never thought he’d make the second one,” McGovern said. “I was almost wrong on both counts.”

McGovern never won again on Tour, although in his 386 starts he did crack the top 10 on 14 occasions.

The University of Arkansas grad is now the head pro at White Beeches Golf & Country Club in Haworth, New Jersey, which sits just a few miles from downtown Manhattan. On the anniversary of his big win, McGovern was back in the pro shop, as New Jersey reopened golf courses for business on Saturday.

He’s been working at White Beeches for a decade and says he’s thrilled to be there.

“The greatest thing about it is I get to drive home every night,” he said. “The travel started to wear on me, living in hotel rooms.”

McGovern has four kids and although he and his wife thought they might be empty nesters soon, the pandemic has forced the family to stay together a bit longer. One daughter, Melanie, commutes into New York City each day to work as a nurse, and that’s been weighing on McGovern, but overall his post-Tour experience has been a pleasant one.

“I have a lot of great friends here at the club, and one of them came up to me yesterday and said, ‘Happy anniversary. It’s almost the anniversary of the day you won.’ It’s special to look back on,” he said.

“I have a lot of friends at the club. I couldn’t be any happier.”

Remember this? Babe Zaharias’ final win came at Peach Blossom Open

Zaharias won the tournament with a final round 76, giving her a two-stroke win over Marilyn Smith in what proved to be her final LPGA event.

(Editor’s note: This is part of our Remember This series, looking back at memorable moments in golf history.)

To properly emphasize through the impact that Mildred Ella “Babe” Didrikson Zaharias had on golf — or sports, in general — would take hours. Maybe days.

But May 1 marks the anniversary of her final LPGA Tour victory — an illustration of her dominance, desire and determination.

It happened in Spartanburg, South Carolina, at the 1955 Peach Blossom Open. Zaharias had already won 40 LPGA titles, including 10 majors, and sparked a tour that today gives female athletes the world over a chance to inspire.

But she was diagnosed with colon cancer in 1954 and her career appeared in jeopardy, even after she won the U.S. Women’s Open by 12 strokes while wearing a colostomy bag.

After more physical setbacks, she returned in 1955 and in the opening rounds of the Peach Blossom Open at Spartanburg Country Club, Zaharias posted scores of 72 and 70, even though as she later wrote in her autobiography, “I still wasn’t ready to admit that I wasn’t in condition to play. I was more determined than ever to win one.”

Her stamina clearly sapped, Zaharias struggled through a 75 on Saturday and then won the tournament — on May 1, 1955 — with a final round 76, giving her a two-stroke victory over Marilyn Smith.

But as she said in “This Life I’ve Led My Autobiography,” the event left Zaharias weakened.

Babe Didrikson driving off the tee in a golf tournament, c. 1948. (Photo by Underwood Archives/Getty Images)

“That tournament was an ordeal for me toward the end. My back was really hurting. I came home to Tampa and practically collapsed. I was in bed for several days. I figured some rest was all I needed. Each week I kept expecting to get back on the circuit. But I was having pains in my right leg and numbness in my right foot,” she wrote.

“My condition got worse instead of better. Finally, I went down to Galveston in late May to the John Sealy Hospital to see Doctor Robert Moore, the man who did my 1953 cancer operation. He called in some of the other specialists there for consultation, and my back trouble was diagnosed as a slipped disc.”

It was the last time Zaharias would ever grace an LPGA field, She died on September 27, 1956, in Galveston, Texas. Between the amateur and pro ranks, she won a total of 82 tournaments.

The early LPGA was built to showcase Zaharias, one of the greatest athletes in American history, as Beth Ann Nichols wrote in Golfweek last year. A woman who qualified for the 1932 Olympics by competing – and winning – as a one-woman team at the AAU Championships. Zaharias entered eight competitions, won five outright and tied for the lead in the sixth.

Zaharias is memorialized at the Babe Didrikson Zaharias Museum in Beaumont, Texas.

Remember this? Mike Reasor thrown from horse, shot 93-over at PGA event

After being thrown off a horse, the journeyman golfer swung a 5-iron with one hand, keeping the other hand tucked inside his belt.

(Editor’s note: This is part of our Remember This series, looking back at memorable moments in golf history.)

Mike Reasor’s path to professional golf fame was certainly a peculiar one.

He played collegiately at BYU, where he called Johnny Miller a teammate.

In 1966, he was drawn from a pool to carry Arnold Palmer’s clubs in the U.S. Open at the Olympic Club in San Francisco. Palmer blew a seven-stroke lead over the final nine holes on Sunday and lost to Billy Casper in an 18-hole playoff the next day.

But the stat that really boggles the mind concerning Reasor’s career was his showing at the Tallahassee Open, where he finished an unthinkable 93-over par — what many think was the highest tournament total ever posted at a professional event.

As you might expect, the tale has a backstory.

At a time when exemptions were few and most pro tournaments filled their tee sheets through qualifiers, Reason was a journeyman, and if he could succeed in making the cut and finishing at the Tallahassee Open — an event that was played from 1969 to 1989 — he’d qualify for the following week’s Byron Nelson Classic.

Mike Reasor swings during the 1975 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. (Photo by Augusta National/Getty Images)

The Seattle native made the cut, shooting an even-par 144 through the first two rounds at Killearn Country Club. But making the cut was only half of the task — he had to finish the event to earn the qualification.

Between rounds, however, Reasor was thrown from a friend’s horse into a tree, which separated his left shoulder, tore rib cartilage and damaged knee ligaments.

Despite the injuries, Reasor insisted on playing the closing rounds to remain eligible for the Nelson Classic.

Swinging a 5-iron with one hand and keeping the other hand tucked inside his belt, he shot a round of 123 on Saturday. Then, on Sunday — April 28, 1974 — Reasor followed with a 114 to finish at 93-over par, which is among the highest tournament scores recorded on tour, though no official accounting is kept.

“On the last three holes on Saturday, word had gotten around the course what this crazy fool was doing,” Reasor recalled last year in an interview with the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. “We had more people watching us than the leaders.”

Reasor finished in the top five three times, but never won a PGA Tour event. He competed on the Tour from 1969 to ’79.

He died in 2002, just hours after shooting a 3-over 75 Thursday at Bend Golf and Country Club, in Bend, Oregon.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

Remember this? Fred Couples broke drought with 2003 Houston Open win

On this day in 2003, Fred Couples fired a 67 to capture a four-stroke win. He became the first University of Houston alum to win the event.

(Editor’s note: This is part of a series, looking back at great moments in golf history.)

It had been five painstakingly difficult years for Fred Couples on the PGA Tour without a victory when he returned to his second home of Houston, Texas, for the 2003 Shell Houston Open.

Couples had played collegiately at the University of Houston, and although he’s originally from the Northwest, he felt right at home in the Lone Star state.

After an opening-round 65, and subsequent rounds of 67 and 68, it was on this day in 2003 — April 27 — that Couples fired a 67 to capture a four-stroke victory over the likes of Stuart Appleby, Mark Calcavecchia and Hank Kuehne.

The victory left Couples emotional, as he broke down in a post-round interview.

The victory was Couples’ last on the PGA Tour, although he’s added 13 wins since joining the PGA Tour Champions.

In the process, he became the first University of Houston alum to win the event, which had just moved that year from the TPC at the Woodlands to the Golf Club of Houston.