Gary Player has had a remarkable career as a professional golfer. He joined the paid ranks in 1953 and is still playing exhibitions and giving clinics 70 years later.
In his prime he was renowned as a steely competitor and a habitual winner. During his career he has claimed an astonishing 159 victories. Those wins include nine Major championships. He was the first non-American player to complete the career Grand Slam, a feat he accomplished in 1965 when he took the US Open title.
Player’s game has always been one of great consistency and repeatability and his short game, in particular his bunker play, is famously brilliant. He has also always been known for his exceptional physical fitness, a trait he prides himself on even now into his late 80s. But, despite his impressive physical strength he never hit a particularly long ball. He kept the ball in play, gave himself a chance to score and to use his competitive prowess to get the job done – which he very often did.
In fact, in the early 1960s, he was known for using a 4-wood from the tee. He explained to Sports Illustrated during a 1963 interview that he was happy to sacrifice a little yardage to guarantee being on the fairway. He didn’t mind hitting a five-iron when others were hitting a six or seven as he still backed himself to get it close.
Also in that interview, he talked of his hitting power in comparison to his rivals in the “big three” Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer:
“You have to remember that I expect to be outdriven by Arnold and Jack, so it doesn’t bother me. Arnold weighs 25 pounds more than I do and Jack 50 pounds more,” he said.
Arnold Palmer drove the ball on average somewhere around the 265-270 mark with Jack Nicklaus hitting it around 10 yards more than that. So it’s fair to say, by his own admission, Player averaged a little less than those numbers.
But, the diminutive South African recognised that at some tournaments he needed to be able to shift the ball a little further. With his work ethic, he found a way to do that when required.
Talking to Golf Digest in 1961, Player spoke of making a series…
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