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  1. Jack Nicklaus. Jack William Nicklaus (/ ˈnɪkləsˌ ˈnɪkəl -/; born January 21, 1940), nicknamed " the Golden Bear ", is an American retired professional golfer and golf course designer. [2] He is widely considered to be one of the greatest golfers of all time. [3][4][5] He won 117 professional tournaments in his career.

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  2. Nicklaus won at least one major championship in four consecutive years (1970–1973). Nicklaus is one of five players (along with Gene Sarazen , Ben Hogan , Gary Player , and Tiger Woods ) to have won all four professional major championships in his career, known as the Career Grand Slam, and the second-youngest to do so in his fifth year as a professional at age 26 (Tiger Woods, fourth year ...

    Year
    Championship
    54 Holes
    Winning Score
    2 shot deficit
    −1 (72-70-72-69=283)
    1 shot lead
    −2 (74-66-74-72=286)
    3 shot deficit
    −5 (69-73-69-68=279)
    5 shot lead
    −17 (67-71-64-69=271)
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  3. Apr 7, 2015 · In fact, Nicklaus says the 1975 Masters Tournament is probably the most fun he’s ever had in a major— which says a lot coming from a man whose career includes 18 victories, 19 runner-up finishes, nine third-place finishes, and 73 top-10s in the majors.

  4. Jul 19, 2020 · In Nicklaus’ incredible career, he finished as the runner-up in 19 major championships in addition to his 18 wins, including seven second-place positions in golf’s original major. Nicklaus was 44 when The Open next returned to The Old Course in 1984, finishing T31, and impressively made the cut in 1990 and 1995, despite being 55 in the latter appearance.

    • Of course, Nicklaus has the most wins in men’s professional major golf history, with 18. But he also has 19 runner-up finishes, most all-time.
    • Nicklaus and Woods will be linked in golf history forever for a litany of reasons. This one statistic, though, might be the most surreal. In each of Nicklaus’ last starts in the four majors, Tiger Woods won: the 2000 U.S. Open, 2000 PGA, 2005 Masters and 2005 Open Championship.
    • From 1966 through 1980 – a run of 15 years – Nicklaus never finished worse than tied for sixth at The Open Championship. In the 42 years since Jack’s streak ended, no player has done that for more than three Opens in a row.
    • Here are a few of the notable Masters statistics in which Nicklaus is the all-time leader: wins, birdies, eagles, top-five finishes, top-10 finishes, top-25 finishes, times playing all 72 holes of the tournament and cuts made.
  5. In the history of men's tennis, only two players have won the calendar Grand Slam, Don Budge (1938) and Rod Laver (1962 and 1969). [13] Budge remains the sole player to have won six majors in a row (1937–1938). In the Open Era, only one player has achieved the non-calendar year Grand Slam, Novak Djokovic (2015–2016).

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  7. Jan 21, 2021 · Nicklaus once said: “If you’re going to be a player people will remember, you have to win The Open at St Andrews,” but in this case, both winner and loser will always have a place in history. The 18-time major champion will forever be remembered as one of the game’s greatest, although this one may not have been so much him winning as Sanders losing.

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