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Arnold Daniel Palmer
1929 -

Arnold Palmer (born 1929) amassed 92 golf championships in
professional competition of national or international stature by
the end of 1994. Sixty-one of the victories came on the U.S. PGA
Tour. He was the first person to make $1 million playing golf.
Golf
legend Arnold Palmer displayed unquestionable skill on the
course, but even more importantly, he had much charisma. He
almost singlehandedly brought golf out of the elite country
clubs and into the consciousness of mainstream America.
Throughout his career, Palmer attracted legions of fans - known
collectively as "Arnie's Army" - who hung on his every shot,
celebrating his successes along with him, and suffering his
failures. Even in the twilight of his career, with failures on
the links far outnumbering successes, Arnie's Army remained as
loyal as ever.
Arnold Palmer was born in Youngstown, Pennsylvania, and grew up
in nearby Latrobe, an industrial town not far from Pittsburgh.
His family had lived in the area since the early 1800s. Palmer's
father, Milfred "Deacon" Palmer, worked at the Latrobe Country
Club for more than 40 years, working his way up from grounds
keeper to teaching pro. "Deac," as he was called, gave Arnold
his first set of golf clubs when he was three years old. Arnold
learned the fundamentals of the game on Latrobe's nine-hole
course, which he would sneak onto at every opportunity. By the
time he was eight, he was playing regularly with the older boys
who worked as caddies at the course, and he became a caddie
himself at the age of 11.
Attended Wake Forest
Palmer starting winning tournaments while he was still in high
school. While starring for the Latrobe High School golf team, he
lost only one match in four years. He also won three Western
Pennsylvania Junior championships and three Western Pennsylvania
Amateur titles during his high school days. During his senior
year, Palmer met Bud Worsham, whose brother Lew was a
professional golfer. At Worsham's urging, Palmer accepted a golf
scholarship to Wake Forest College in North Carolina. He
enrolled at Wake Forest in 1947, and quickly began winning, or
coming close to winning, every amateur and intercollegiate
tournament in sight.
During Palmer's senior year in college, his best friend and
roommate, Bud Worsham, was killed in a car accident. Shaken by
Worsham's death, Palmer left school and joined the Coast Guard,
where he served for three years. In 1954 Palmer began selling
painting supplies for a Cleveland company to support his
participation in amateur golf. His victory in the National
Amateur championship that year prompted Palmer to begin
contemplating the idea of turning professional, making golf a
job rather than an expensive and time-consuming hobby. In
November of 1954 he turned pro and signed a sponsorship contract
with the Wilson Sporting Goods Company. About a month later, he
married Winnie Walzer, whom he had met while playing in an
amateur tournament and proposed to three days later.
In 1955 Palmer won his first important professional tournament,
the Canadian Open, earning $2, 400, his first big golf paycheck.
He captured three tournaments the following year, and in 1957
took four more. He earned nearly $28, 000 that year, making him
the number five moneywinner on the tour. Palmer won three
tournaments during each of the next two seasons. One of his 1958
victories was the prestigious Masters, a tournament held
annually in Augusta, Georgia. 1960 was the pivotal year in
Palmer's golf career. Before the 1960 season was over, Arnold
Palmer would become a household name, and was well on his way to
becoming the most popular golfer ever to play on the
professional circuit.
1960 Victories Brought Fame
Two spectacular come-from-behind wins in major tournaments
cemented Palmer's reputation as a gambler who was never out of
contention. In the 1960 Masters, Palmer birdied the final two
holes to steal a certain victory from rival Ken Venturi. At the
time, golf was just beginning to receive regular television
coverage, and Palmer's good looks, combined with his dramatic
performance on the course, instantly made him a national hero.
Palmer mounted an even more astonishing comeback in the 1960
U.S. Open in Denver, where he scored a 65 in the final round to
win the tournament from seven strokes - and 14 players - out of
the lead. His fans began to believe that he was never too far
behind to win. Palmer's style was an aggressive one. He hit the
ball hard, with an awkward-looking swing that often left him
careening off-balance, much to the delight of the weekend hacks
in the audience whose own swings it resembled.
Those two stunning 1960 victories, along with seven other wins
that year, established Palmer as the golden boy of golf.
Tournament victories continued to come in droves over the next
few years. Wins in major tournaments included the British Open
in 1961 and 1962, and the Masters in 1962 and 1964. His
galleries became so big that they became an annoyance to fellow
players. His fans would stampede to the next fairway before the
other players in his group had finished out the hole. They
sometimes went so far as to heckle Palmer's opponents,
especially archrival Jack Nicklaus. Each of Palmer's trademark
mannerisms utterly mesmerized Arnie's Army - the way he hitched
up his sagging pants, pitched his half-smoked cigarettes onto
the grass, and grimaced at every missed putt.
Palmer quickly became not only the game's biggest star, but one
of the nation's biggest celebrities. Never in the past were
ordinary people drawn to a golf champion the way they were to
Palmer. He became the most sought after person in the world for
product endorsements. As his popularity grew, so did his
interests outside of golf. Palmer became an avid pilot, and flew
his own private jet to tournaments. He also dabbled in
television and movie acting, and produced his own golf show. He
became an author as well, churning out a new golf book every few
years. As money rolled in from both golf and endorsements,
Palmer became the richest athlete in the world, with a financial
empire that spanned the golf equipment, clothing, printing,
insurance, dry cleaning, and investment industries. His
companies had branches in Australia, Japan, and Europe.
Including earnings from his various businesses, Palmer's income
soared to more than $1 million a year.
Named Athlete of the Decade
Although he continued to win the occasional tournament through
the rest of the decade, the 1964 Masters was Palmer's last
victory in a major event. Dry periods became more frequent and
lasted longer. At times, it seemed as if his involvement in
business was distracting him from golf. He sold several of his
businesses off to the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in the
mid-1960s, but kept an active role in managing them. In 1969
Palmer was forced to withdraw from the PGA championship because
of a hip injury, leading many people to believe that his
brilliant career was at an end. After taking several months off
to recuperate, however, he came back to win the last two events
of the season. After another lengthy drought that lasted for
most of the 1970 season - during which the Associated Press
named him Athlete of the Decade - Palmer won the 1971 Bob Hope
Desert Classic and three other tournaments that year.
Palmer won a couple of minor PGA titles during the 1970s, but
overall his play was erratic. His Army, on the other hand,
remained huge and loyal. In 1980 Palmer entered the Senior PGA
tour, and enjoyed a bit of a career revival. He won the first
Senior tournament he ever entered, the 1980 PGA Seniors
championship. He also captured the 1981 United States Golf
Association (USGA) Senior Open, and took the PGA Seniors again
in 1984. In 1985 Palmer won the Senior Tournament Players
Championship by 11 strokes, the largest margin of victory ever
produced in that event. His last victory on the Senior tour was
the 1988 Crestar Classic.
Palmer continued to play regularly, though inconsistently, in
the 1990s. In 1994 he made his final appearance at the U.S.
Open, fittingly located in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, just a few
miles from his hometown. As Palmer finished his final round, the
thunderous ovation of his Army brought him to tears. A similarly
emotional scene accompanied his last appearance at the British
Open in 1995. Fellow players, who call Palmer "the King, "
realize that the great sums of money they are paid to play the
game they love exist largely because of the efforts and charisma
of Arnold Palmer. As current golf star Nick Faldo said during
Palmer's farewell performance at the British, "If there had been
no Arnold Palmer in 1960 … it might have been a little shed on
the beach instead of these salubrious surroundings. You cannot
say what the man has done for the game. It's everything."
Palmer has received countless honours, earning virtually every
national award in golf. After his great 1960 season, he won both
the Hickock Athlete of the Year and Sports Illustrated's
Sportsman of the Year trophies. He is a charter member of the
World Golf Hall of Fame, the American Golf Hall of Fame, and the
PGA Hall of Fame. He is chairman of the USGA Member Program and
served as Honorary National Chairman of the March of Dimes Birth
Defects Foundation for 20 years. He played a major role in the
fund-raising drive that created the Arnold Palmer Hospital for
Children and Women in Orlando. A long-time member of the Board
of Directors of Latrobe Area Hospital, he established an annual
fund-raising golf event for the institution in 1992.
Arnold Palmer underwent surgery for prostate cancer in January
of 1997.
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This web page was last updated on:
15 December, 2008
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