Arnold Daniel Palmer (born September 10, 1929) is an American
professional golfer, who is generally regarded as one of the greatest players in the history of men's
professional golf. He has won numerous events on both the
PGA Tour and
Champions Tour, dating back to 1955. Nicknamed
"The King," he is one of golf's most popular stars and its most important trailblazer, because he was the first superstar of the sport's
television age, which began in the 1950s. He is part of "The Big Three" in golf, along with
Jack Nicklaus and
Gary Player, who are widely credited with popularizing and commercialising the sport around the world.
Palmer won the
PGA Tour Lifetime Achievement Award in 1998, and in 1974 was inducted into the
World Golf Hall of Fame.
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Palmer was born in
Latrobe, Pennsylvania.
He learned golf from his father, Milford (Deacon) Palmer, who was head
professional and greenskeeper at Latrobe Country Club, allowing young
Arnold to accompany his father as he maintained the course.
[1] He attended
Wake Forest University, on a golf scholarship. He left upon the death of close friend Bud Worsham and enlisted in the
United States Coast Guard,
where he served for three years and had some time to continue to hone
his golf skills. Palmer returned to college and competitive golf. His
win in the 1954
U.S. Amateur
made him decide to try the pro tour for a while, and he and new bride
Winifred Walzer (whom he had met at a Pennsylvania tournament) traveled
the circuit for 1955.
Rise to superstardom
Palmer won the 1955
Canadian Open
in his rookie season, and raised his game status for the next several
seasons. Palmer's charisma was a major factor in establishing golf as a
compelling television event in the 1950s and 1960s, setting the stage
for the popularity it enjoys today. His first major championship win at
the
1958 Masters Tournament cemented his position as one of the leading stars in golf, and by 1960 he had signed up as pioneering sports agent
Mark McCormack's
first client. In later interviews, McCormack listed five attributes
that made Palmer especially marketable: his good looks; his relatively
modest background (his father was a greenskeeper before rising to be
club professional and Latrobe was a humble club); the way he played
golf, taking risks and wearing his emotions on his sleeve; his
involvement in a string of exciting finishes in early televised
tournaments; and his affability.
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Palmer is also credited by many for securing the status of
The Open Championship (British Open) among U.S. players. After
Ben Hogan
won that championship in 1953, few American professionals had travelled
to play in The Open, due to its travel requirements, relatively small
prize purses, and the style of its
links courses (radically different from most American courses). Palmer was convinced by his business partner
Mark McCormack that success in the Open -– to emulate the feats of
Bobby Jones,
Walter Hagen,
Sam Snead
and Hogan before him –- would truly make him a global sporting star,
not simply a leading American golfer. In particular, Palmer travelled to
Scotland
in 1960, having already won both the Masters and U.S. Open, to try to
emulate Hogan's feat of 1953, of winning all three in a single year. He
failed, losing out to
Kel Nagle
by a single shot, but his subsequent Open wins in the early 1960s
convinced many American pros that a trip to Britain would be worth the
effort, and certainly secured Palmer's popularity among British and
European fans, not just American ones.
Palmer won seven
major championships:
Palmer's most prolific years were 1960–1963, when he won 29 PGA Tour
events, including five major tournament victories, in four seasons. In
1960, he won the
Hickok Belt as the top professional athlete of the year and
Sports Illustrated magazine's "
Sportsman of the Year"
award. He built up a wide fan base, often referred to as "Arnie's
Army", and in 1967 he became the first man to reach one million dollars
in career earnings on the PGA Tour. By the late 1960s
Jack Nicklaus
and Gary Player had both acquired clear ascendancy in their rivalry,
but Palmer won a PGA Tour event every year from 1955 to 1971 inclusive,
and in 1971 he enjoyed a revival, winning four events.
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Palmer won the
Vardon Trophy for lowest scoring average four times: 1961, 1962, 1964, and 1967. He played on six
Ryder Cup teams: 1961, 1963, 1965, 1967, 1971, and 1973. He was the last playing captain in 1963, and captained the team again in 1975.
Palmer was eligible for the Senior PGA Tour (now the
Champions Tour)
from its first season in 1980, and he was one of the marquee names who
helped it to become successful. He won ten events on the tour, including
five
senior majors.
Palmer won the first
World Match Play Championship
in England, an event which was originally organized by McCormack to
showcase his stable of players. Their partnership was one of the most
significant in the history of sports marketing. Long after he ceased to
win tournaments, Palmer remained one of the highest earners in golf due
to his appeal to sponsors and the public.
In 2004, he competed in
The Masters for the last time, marking his 50th consecutive appearance in that event. After missing the cut at the 2005
U.S. Senior Open
by 21 shots, he announced that he would not enter any more senior
majors. Since 2007, Palmer has served as the honorary starter for the
Masters.
He retired from tournament golf on October 13, 2006, when he withdrew from the Champions Tours'
Administaff Small Business Classic after four holes due to dissatisfaction with his own play. He played the remaining holes but did not keep score.
Palmer's legacy was reaffirmed by an electrifying moment during the
2004 Bay Hill Invitational. Standing over 200 yards from the
water-guarded 18th green, Palmer, who is known for his aggressive play,
lashed his second shot onto the green with a driver. The shot thrilled
his loyal gallery and energized the excitable Palmer. He turned to his
grandson and caddie,
Sam Saunders, and gave him a prolonged shimmy and playful jeering in celebration of the moment.
Golf businesses
Palmer has had a diverse golf-related business career, including owning the
Bay Hill Club and Lodge, which is the venue for the PGA Tour's
Arnold Palmer Invitational (renamed from the Bay Hill Invitational in 2007), helping to found
The Golf Channel,
and negotiating the deal to build the first golf course in the
People's Republic of China.
This led to the formation of Palmer Course Design in 1972, which was
renamed Arnold Palmer Design Company when the company moved to Orlando
Florida in 2006. Palmer's design partner was Ed Seay. The Palmer-Seay
team has designed over 200 courses around the world. Since 1971 he has
owned Latrobe Country Club, where his father used to be the club
professional. The licensing, endorsements, spokesman associations and
commercial partnerships built by Palmer and McCormack are managed by
Arnold Palmer Enterprises.
One of Arnold Palmer's most recent products is a branded use of the beverage which combines sweet iced tea with lemonade.
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