Arnie and Jack: Palmer, Nicklaus, and Golf's Greatest Rivalry

by Ian O'Connor

Paper Book, 2009

Status

Available

Call number

796.352092

Collection

Publication

Mariner Books (2009), Edition: Reprint, Paperback, 384 pages

Description

Their decades-long rivalry propelled each to the status of American icon and helped transform a gentleman's game into a major American sport with a dedicated following. Sportswriter Ian O'Connor explores the heated professional and personal battle between Palmer and Nicklaus in intimate and revelatory detail. Drawing on unique access to both players, and having conducted more than 200 new interviews with everyone from family to fellow players to business associates, right down to the caddies and clubhouse attendants, O'Connor illuminates their extreme differences and sprawling influences through mini-dramas such as the 1962 U.S. Open. By the end of this narrative, we see that in the end each wanted what the other had: Arnold had the adoring fans but wanted the trophies. Jack had the trophies but wanted the love. We also learn that, despite being bitter rivals, they were also dear friends.--From publisher description.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member gmillar
This is a good book especially if you are a golf nut. It is extremely well written and discusses all the points of real interest to us as hero-worshippers of two of the real "greats". I particularly liked the insights into their personality quirks and how they reacted to each other through their
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competing lives. I also enjoyed getting the snippets of Gary Player in the story and I would have liked it if it actually included him as the third of the second "great triumvirate" of golf. But that would have been a different book. The dust cover pictures are fabulous.
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Awards

British Sports Book Award (Shortlist — Biography — 2009)

Language

Physical description

384 p.; 7.9 inches

ISBN

0547237863 / 9780547237862

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