It’s Masters week and we take a deep dive on our journey through the past to the 1966 Masters where the action had so many players in and out of contention that it was like a hot potato being tossed around. Scroll down to learn how Jack Nicklaus was the last player with the hot potato and became the first player to successfully defend his title and slipped the green jacket on himself.
We’ve got a packed newsletter for you this week because, well, it’s a major!
What an absolutely wild finish to the Valero Texas Open in San Antonio. It was a storybook dream finish for one player while another was “bugged” by the result in the playoff. Scroll down for the Clips You Might Have Missed, a recap of the tournament and highlights from the week.
If you want more on the Masters, we wrote about the contradictory feelings that come with finishing second at the Masters HERE, and the 1973 event, where Tommy Aaron put his bridesmaid label to bed, HERE. We also wrote about Bert Yancey’s obsession with the Masters HERE.
We want to hear from you in the Tour Backspin Poll, and this week’s Music Clip features live music from 1966 featuring Wilson Pickett. Watch the swing of Tommy Jacobs, and take a stab at this week’s WHAT HOLE IS IT? Of course, we’ve got some links for you in the Check it Out section and our Vintage Ad features Tony Lema. Scroll down to view.
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In last week’s Tour Backspin Poll we asked you “who ya got?” in the Masters and we got quite the spread. There were 21% of respondents who are putting there money on Scottie Sheffler (+$500) and the same percentage are backing Rory McIlroy (+$1,000). Defending champion Jon Rahm (+$1,300) has 16% of respondents in his court, the same percentage that Brooks Koepka (+$2,100) has backing him. The field has the support of 26% of respondents even though it only pays even money. It will be fun to watch and good luck to everyone who made their picks.
Now, it’s time to do a little over/under for this week’s poll. The average winning score in the Masters, going back to 1934, is 279. That looks like a good starting point, so we ask, over or under winning score of 279? Let us know in this week’s Tour Backspin Poll.
Tour Backspin Poll
Speaking about the weather, here’s the official Masters forecast.
Do you know what happened today in golf history? Or which famous golfer has a birthday today? Me, neither. But I do know where to go to find out. Check out the Your Golfer’s Almanac podcast. Host Michael Duranko celebrates birthdays, milestones, and other accomplishments that occurred on this day in golf history. Listen HERE.
We’re playing Masters Trivia in this week’s Tour Backspin Quiz. Scroll down to play.
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Larry Baush
Nicklaus Captures a “Hot Potato” Masters in First Color Broadcast
It is late in the evening of April 11th, 1965, and Jack Nicklaus has just completed a dominating, record-breaking Masters performance. His score of 271 was 17-under-par and broke the previous record, set by Ben Hogan, by three strokes. After sinking his putt for a final round 69, Nicklaus turns and tosses his ball into the crowd that had run up to, and around the front of the final green. He then shakes hands with his playing partner, Mason Rudolph, before walking to the back of the green to shake his father, Charlie’s, hand. He is then taken to the Butler cabin for the televised interview on CBS by August National co-founder and chairman, Clifford Roberts.
Frank Chirkinian, executive producer of golf for CBS, hated these interviews with Roberts because he felt that Roberts didn’t come across well on television and the interviews became drawn-out with little or no entertainment value. Chirkinian grudgingly sat in the CBS broadcast trailer while Roberts completed the usual interview with Nicklaus. But then, Chirkinan’s chin hit the desk in front of him when he saw what happened next on his monitor. Staring straight into the television camera, Roberts made a declaration.
“Next year, you’ll be seeing the Masters in color,” Roberts declared.
Back in New York, CBS executives watching the events transpire on their television screens were also shocked. They almost dropped their celebratory cocktails.
“The network had no plan to use color at the Masters in 1966,” Chirkinian later told Sports Illustrated.
CBS had the technology to broadcast the Masters in color, but the costs were prohibitive. Since so few households, less than 4%, had color televisions, the benefits of broadcasting in color were far outweighed by the cost.
It is now the first week of April in 1966 and the CBS trucks are pulling into Augusta National to set up for the broadcast of the Masters. Emblazoned on the side of the trucks was the famous eye logo and the words “CBS Color.” The dawning of a new era was at hand. The accountants at CBS sharpened their pencils and with a little creative accounting, found the $600,000 needed to produce a color broadcast of the Masters.
The PGA Tour wrapped up the last tournament before the year’s first major at Greensboro at the Greater Greensboro Open with Doug Sanders winning on the second hole of a sudden death playoff against Tom Weiskopf. It was the third PGA TOUR title of the year for Sanders.
“That’s a lot of rot.”
As the players arrived on Monday, April 4th, a controversy was brewing. Some players, as well as members of the media, voiced their feelings that the course setup at Augusta for the Masters was “rigged” in favor of Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, and other big hitters on the tour. The feeling was that the wide fairways, lack of rough, and at that time, the lack of trees, along with an irrigation system that slowed down roll on the fairways, all gave the longer hitters an advantage. Palmer was having none of it
“That’s a lot of rot,” Palmer angrily replied to reporters upon his arrival at Augusta National. “Sure, Jack and I have been winners in the last few years. But look at the overall record. A lot of different people have won the Masters and the course hasn’t changed. There were 50 guys in the ’61 tournament who could outdrive Gary Player, but he was the winner.”
“They’ve already won their share and I still need that first big one.”
Coming off his victory at Greensboro, Sanders was pumped up about playing in front of what was essentially a home crowd, having been born in Cedartown, Georgia, a small town northwest of Atlanta.
“Winning the Masters means more to me than it would to Palmer or Nicklaus,” he said. “Winning a major tournament is worth a pile of dough. They’ve already won their share and I still need that first big one.”
Nicklaus, who was looking to become the first player to defend their title at the Masters, agreed that Sanders, with his recent success, was one of the hottest golfers on tour. But he then added that he didn’t think that Sanders had the type of game to win at Augusta.
“He’s never really done well here,” Nicklaus said. “He does well in Florida where the courses are flatter but the Augusta National calls for a different type of game.”
On Tuesday night, detectives in Augusta arrested four men for scalping Masters tickets, for as much as $250. This was far above the $15 price for tickets that were sold out, the first sell-out in the history of the Masters. Detectives used marked bills to nab the scalpers, who were not working in conjunction with one another, at a downtown hotel and motel.
Once CBS had set up their broadcasting infrastructure, Chirkinian had his first opportunity to view the colorized shots on his monitor in the production truck. What he saw blew him away. The vibrant green of the fairways and greens, the blinding-white bunkers, the explosion of bright pink from the azaleas, and the palette of colors of all the flora and fauna, made Chirkinian fully understand the vision of Roberts and the lords of Augusta. A Masters televised in color would change how the world looked upon the first major of the year.
The Wednesday of Masters week was highlighted by the par-three contest which was first introduced in 1960. Terry Dill got the proceedings under way in 1966 by shooting a five-under par 22 to capture the par-three trophy defeating Don Allen by two shots.
“I am perfectly satisfied with the way I am playing. My game has come around just as I wished. I have no complaints.”
Both Nicklaus and Palmer gave their final thoughts before Thursday’s opening round.
“I am ready,” Palmer, who was going off at 4-1 odds, declared.
Nicklaus, at 6-1 odds, the same odds as Gary Player and Bruce Devlin was also confident and ready to get going.
“I am perfectly satisfied with the way I am playing,” Nicklaus said. “My game has come around just as I wished. I have no complaints.”
Nicklaus would begin the defense of his title with a tee time at 1 pm while Palmer had the 12:30 tee time. The windy weather had dried out the course, but Nicklaus predicted that the course would not be baked hard and dry.
“They will water the fairways to cut down the roll and they’ll leave the greens like glass,” he predicted.
“It was a terrible shock. They were wonderful people and fine friends. I know what I have to do now.”
The field included 57 American pros, 21 foreign pros, and 25 amateurs and they all were ready to get this thing going.
Nicklaus was awakened in the middle of the night before Thursday’s first round with news that four of his friends from Columbus, OH, had been killed in a small plane crash on their way to Augusta. The friends were Robert and Linda Barton, and James and Jeretta Long. Nicklaus golfed, fished, and socialized with the friends and was especially close to Barton who accompanied him on fishing and hunting expeditions. Barton was an attorney in Columbus, OH, and was a law partner of former U.S. Senator, and Ohio Governor, John W. Bricker. Mr. Long was an executive of the David Davies Packing Company.
“It was a terrible shock,” Nicklaus told reporters on Thursday. “They were wonderful people and fine friends. I know what I have to do now.”
Nicklaus vowed to win the tournament in memory of his friends.
Opening Round
Play started on Thursday under overcast skies and the wind was whipping up gusts that reached 35 miles an hour that perplexed to the players.
“I lashed into it and the ball went into the hole for a birdie deuce.”
“The wind would change before you could get a club out of your bag,” Gary Player commented after shooting a lackluster 74. His round did include a shot that Player later identified as “the shot of my career” when he played from a muddy lie above the bunker behind the green.
“I could barely see the ball,” Player related later. “I only wanted to try to hit into the trap in front of me, knowing I had no chance to get on the green. I lashed into it and the ball went into the hole for a birdie deuce.”
Augusta National
Even though the day’s round ended under sunny skies, the winds contributed to a day where bogeys and double bogeys were the order of the day. Palmer birdied the second hole and seemed to be cruising as he came to the famed par-3 12th hole. His tee shot cleared Rae’s Creek, but not the bunker in front of the green. He flubbed his sand shot and wound up with a double bogey five. He then went birdie-bogey-birdie and wound up with a score of 74.
Nicklaus played like a machine, avoided making any bogeys, or worse, posting a 4-under-par 68. Despite duck-hooking his first tee shot into the rough because his left foot slipped, he was still able to birdie the hole. He enjoyed a three-stroke lead over veteran Don January, Mike Souchak, Billy Casper, and amateur Charles Coe. Raymond Floyd was another stroke back at 72 and was tied with Englishman Peter Butler, Jay Hebert, and Randy Glover. Tommy Aaron came in with a 74 tied with a very large group that included Tony Lema, Doug Sanders, Gay Brewer, and Ben Hogan. Paul Harney, who played the tour part-time, came in with a 75 and was tied with a large group that included Tommy Jacobs, Bruce Devlin, and the winner of the par-3 contest, Terry Dill.
“We haven’t named him yet. Would any of you like to make a suggestion?”
Jacobs received news late on Thursday that his wife gave birth to their second son who weighed seven pounds, four ounces.
“We haven’t named him yet,” Jacobs said to reporters. “Would any of you like to make a suggestion?”
Second Round
In Friday’s second round, Nicklaus had his putter go ice cold as he experienced five three-putt greens.
“One of my worst putting rounds in golf,” Nicklaus said after the nightmare round. He missed seven putts from two to five feet. His performance on the greens in the second round turned what could have been a runaway victory into an exciting hot potato free-for-all. There were 64 players within 10 shots of the lead.
Harney was the mirror-image of Nicklaus on the greens as he had eight one-putt greens on his way to a 68 and two round total of 143. He benefited from the sunny skies early in the day before the winds again kicked up. His round included two bogeys, a double bogey, and eight birdies. The Englishman Butler shot a steady 71 and matched Harney’s 143 total, tied for the lead. The group at 144 was a crowded affair with Nicklaus, Palmer, Sanders, January, and Bob Rosburg all at that number.
“I’m not putting as well as I could, but I haven’t had any three-putt greens.”
For his part, Butler was not affected by the wind saying, “I like the wind. I keep the ball lower than most and that gives me an advantage.”
The surprise of the day was Ben Hogan who shot a 71 to go with his first-round 74 and stood at 145, tied with Souchak, and Ray Floyd. Brewer and Jacobs were in a group of players at 146.
Hogan was proud of his putting which had been his Achilles heel.
“I’m not putting as well as I could, but I haven’t had any three-putt greens,” he said.
Third Round
The hot potato was going to be tossed again on Saturday in the third round.
“Nobody wants it,” Nicklaus joked after he toured Augusta in 71 strokes for a three-round total of 216. “I guess we’re all choking. It’s actually pretty silly. I’ve had two opportunities to run away from everybody and blew both of them. Then the field had two opportunities to run away from me and blew both of them. One of us—either me, or the field—is going to run away with it tomorrow.”
“This is the most unusual Masters I’ve ever played in. Have you ever seen scores like those posted on the board here?”
Nicklaus was 2-under-par at the turn, but bogeys at the 17th and 18th holes brought him back to the field.
Palmer agreed with Nicklaus that this was one weird Masters.
“This is the most unusual Masters I’ve ever played in,” Palmer said after recording a 74 for a total of 218. “Have you ever seen scores like those posted on the board here?”
Jacobs’ steady third-round 70 gave him a three-round total of 216 and a share of the lead with Nicklaus. He had an eagle, a birdie and a bogey and hit 14 greens.
“I think the main thing is that the greens are very slow. At least, that’s about the best excuse I can think of right now.”
January was another stroke back after a 73, and Hogan was still in the hunt with a third-round 73 and a total of 218, tied with Palmer and Brewer, who was playing steady shooting his second-straight 72. The group at 219 included Floyd, Jay Hebert, Doug Sanders, and second-round leader Harney. Butler, who shared the second-round lead with Harney, skied to a 79 and sat at 222.
Both Nicklaus and Palmer had explanations for the high scores, and the wind wasn’t one of the reasons as there were few gusts on Saturdays.
“I think the main thing is that the greens are very slow,” Nicklaus said. “At least, that’s about the best excuse I can think of right now. Too, the fairways here are very long and you have to play a flyer on just about every shot. The wind made it tough the first couple of days.”
Palmer weighed in saying, “I think most of the problem is the condition of the fairways and greens. They’re very hard and very fast. How’d they get that way? Well, there hasn’t been any rain here and they’ve had a lot of wind. I suppose they could have used more water out there.”
Final Round
Jesse Outlar, Sports Editor at the Atlanta Constitution opened his Monday, April 11th, column with this lede:
Visualize Gay Brewer scowling because he had failed to win, Jack Nicklaus beaming because he hadn’t lost, and Tommy Jacobs jubilant because he was still in the running, and you have a vivid picture of the 1966 Masters.
On Easter Sunday, the hot potato continued to be tossed from one contestant to the next in the final round of regulation, only to be put back in the oven to be used again in an 18-hole Monday playoff. It would be the third playoff in the 30-year history of the tournament, and the second one that featured three players.
Brewer grabbed the hot potato on the front nine shooting a 33 and a 1-shot lead. He then played eight holes securing a par on each before he tossed the hot potato away at the final hole. His approach to the 18th green wound up 60-feet above the hole. After studying the putt for a lengthy time, he finally hit it and left it 7-feet from the hole, a putt that if he made it, he would be the Masters champion. He missed the winning putt by a fraction of an inch.
With obvious disappointment displayed in his body language, Brewer went over to the scorer’s table, signed his card, and then watched Jacobs, the player who now held the hot potato, play the final hole. Jacobs needed a par to secure a playoff with Brewer, a birdie to take the lead. Jacobs hit a poor drive that got a lucky bounce off a tree, but he was still a long way from the green. He hit a 4-wood to 20-feet and then missed the putt that would have gotten him into the green jacket, but became the second player in the playoff.
Now the hot potato was delivered to Nicklaus who was on the 17th green. Sitting together at the scorer’s table, Brewer and Jacobs were told that Nicklaus faced an 18-inch putt for birdie and a one stroke lead. They listened intently for any noise from the 17th green fully expecting to hear one of the famous Augusta roars that would indicate that Nicklaus had sunk the putt. The roar never came as Nicklaus missed the putt and now needed a par at the final hole to join the playoff.
Nicklaus had his sights set on slipping on the green jacket. Damn the torpedoes, full steam ahead, get a birdie, be the first player to defend his title at the Masters and get this thing over with. He had to adjust his sights after his approach shot ended up 60-feet above the hole. Still, he nearly holed the impossible putt leaving him a tap-in and a spot in the playoff.
For a while, it looked like it might be a four-way playoff as Palmer had a chance with just five holes to play. If he could par in, he would post a score that would have been good enough to get into the playoff. Bogeys on the 14th and 18th holes derailed his comeback and he wound up two shots out of the playoff, at 288, tied with Sanders.
Though Brewer did not win the title on Sunday, he did win the respect of players and fans alike.
“I was a little depressed that I didn’t win, sure, I was.”
“But Gay took charge Sunday,” Nicklaus said after his round. “He took charge at number three and kept right on playing.”
“I was a little depressed that I didn’t win, sure, I was,” Brewer acknowledged after his round. “But I also feel fortunate being in a playoff. But I’m a little depressed.”
“I’m very happy to be in a playoff,” Nicklaus said. “I’m very fortunate to be sitting here.”
“I feel privileged to be here,” Jacobs said.
The playoff was scheduled to start at 2 pm on Monday and the television blackout in the southeast was lifted so all could watch, again in color.
The Playoff
It seemed that his Sunday performance sapped all the strength from Brewer who never got on track in the playoff, scored an early double bogey on the 2nd hole, and shot a 78. Jacobs took a grip on the hot potato with a birdie on the 1st hole but tossed it right away with a bogey at the next hole. Nicklaus bogeyed the 4th hole giving Jacobs a one stroke advantage, but he got it back with a birdie on the 6th hole. Nicklaus made the turn with a 33 while Jacobs could do no better than a 35.
On the back nine, Nicklaus was not going to give up the hot potato gaining two shots on the first two holes. That was all he needed as he coasted home with a 35 for a total of 70 while Jacobs finished with a back nine 37 and a total of 72.
Nicklaus successfully held on to the hot potato and slipped the same green jacket he won the year before on in near darkness. There was some confusion as to who should help him with the green jacket because there had never been a winner who had defended their title from the previous year.
It was a hot potato with a lot of miles on it, but Nicklaus was finally able to get a firm grip on it and in the process, he achieved the victory that he had dedicated to his lost friends at the start of the tournament. And golf fans everywhere were able to watch it on television, in living color, for the first time.
Watch the official film from Augusta National on the 1966 Masters.
As if you needed more to get you jacked up for the Masters, check out this video posted by Kyle Porter of Normal Sport and CBS. If you’re not subscribed to this fantastic newsletter of Kyle’s subscribe now. It’s free!
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BONUS STORY
The press corps that covered the 1966 Masters were up in arms and on the warpath. Clifford Roberts, the tournament chairman, announced near the start of the first round that the locker rooms were off limits to the press. Roberts claimed that players were complaining about the invasion of their privacy that reporters in the locker room created.
“It looked like they were getting up a lynch party.”
This did not sit well with the scribes as the directive created a furor in the press room where more than 500 newspaper, magazine, radio, and television representatives were working the tournament.
“It looked like they were getting up a lynch party,” one observer said about the newsmen.
A formal protest was entered by the Golf Writers Association of America, through their new president, Dana Mozley of the New York Daily News.
There were several reporters who said access to the locker rooms was the only way to interview players and threatened to leave the tournament. After about an hour the order was rescinded by Roberts.
The Tour Backspin Show with our guests Jim McLean and Craig Welty has been unlocked for all subscribers. Want to get podcasts two weeks early? Upgrade to a premium subscription today to listen early. We talk about Craig’s dad, Carl Welty, and about how he used video to study the golf swing. Listen HERE.
Listen to The Tour Backspin Show podcast on Substack with the above links, or on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or iHeart Radio.
WHAT HOLE IS IT?
Are you on the leader board?
Congratulations to Owen McClain who correctly identified #13 at Oak Hill Country Club, East Course, in Rochester, NY in last week’s WHAT HOLE IS IT? contest. Owen beat out six other correct answers in the random drawing and a prize pack is on its way to him. Submit your answer for this week and get yourself into the race for the Herbert C. Leeds Trophy, our new perpetual trophy for the annual winner.
PGA TOUR Wrap-Up | Valero Texas Open
What a wild finish in the Valero Texas Open. Akshay Bhatia led the tournament from Thursday and built up a six-stroke lead on the back nine Sunday only to watch it vanish as Denny McCarthy put on a blazing final kick. McCarthy birdied the last seven holes of regulation to force a sudden death playoff. But wait, there’s more.
Bhatia celebrated his putt on the final green of regulation that secured his spot in the playoff just a bit too enthusiastically and heard a pop in his shoulder. He headed to the playoff rubbing his shoulder. On the first hole of the playoff, Bhatia scrambled to get his trainer out to him to get some treatment on his shoulder.
McCarthy was away and hit his approach while Bhatia waited for his trainer. McCarthy backed away from his shot a couple of times before he chunked his shot into the water fronting the green.
“Wish I could have that wedge shot back there,” McCarthy said after the playoff. “I backed off a couple of times. There was a bug on my ball and some noise in the stands, and a bug jumped back on my ball. I probably should have backed away again, but I thought I could kind of not let it distract me, and maybe it did a little. Maybe a learning experience for me, but I handled myself really well today.”
After receiving some treatment and getting taped up, Bhatia put his approach shot close and sank the birdie putt for the win that got him the last spot into the Masters. He’ll be returning to Augusta National ten years after competing in the Drive, Chip, and Putt event. He is the first competitor in the youth event to qualify for the Masters. Crazy stuff.
And how cool was it watching both the competitors in the Drive, Chip, and Putt event and the ANWA? Now that is growing the game.
Read a full recap of the event, by Tim Schmitt in Golfweek HERE.
Check out the top ten shots from the week via the PGA TOUR:
Clips You Might Have Missed
Everybody could use some luck.
We’ve got some good Spieth . . .
and some bad Spieth.
Can you imagine driving down Magnolia Lane arriving at the Masters? I love the reply from Jessica Hadwin, who owns Xitter.
Wait for it.
UPS delivers!
Don’t miss our Masters Sale to upgrade to a premium subscription with the first year of the annual subscription 20% off. Get the deets HERE.
Tour Backspin Quiz | Masters Trivia
What year was the last time an 18-hole playoff was used to determine the winner at the Masters? Who won?
Scroll down for answer
Swing Like a Pro
Tommy Jacobs tees off in the 18-hole playoff at the 1966 Masters
Blind Shot
Click for something fun. 👀
What do you think a 15 handicap would shoot at Augusta. Jack Hirsh of Golf.com asked three former champions. Find out what they said.
A change is coming for sponsors of tour events with the PGA TOUR requiring more investment. Rex Hoggard has the details at NBCsports.com
Here is more on players who came close to putting on a green jacket from Joel Beall at Golf Digest.
There may be weather delays this week at the Masters. Disaster almost struck during some bad weather last year with some trees falling down. Alan Bastable writes about how close a couple of patron came to having a pine fall on them in Golf.com.
Sergio Garcia and Fred Couples have different views on the state of professional golf. Read the story by Adam Shupak in Golfweek.
Tour Backspin Music Clip
Live in 1966.
Uncorked, The Life and Times of Champagne Tony Lema tells the story of one of the tour’s biggest stars in the mid-1960s. A fascinating glimpse into the traveling caravan that was the PGA TOUR during an era where the fields were full of “Mad Men” era personalities. From a hardscrabble youth spent on the “wrong side of the tracks” in the Oakland suburb of San Leandro, to the temptations of Elko, Nevada, to the bright lights of the PGA TOUR, Uncorked tells a story of determination, redemption and, above all else, a love story that documents how Betty, Tony’s new wife, provided the direction and motivation for him to become a top star. Order on Amazon.
WHAT IS HIP?
There may be a rain delay or two this week in Augusta. Here’s how you would have dressed for it back in 1966. (Photos: Golf Digest/ Image: Tour Backspin)
WE GOT MAIL
Larry, loved the podcast about Carl Welty. I only met him once growing up at Broadmoor.
Blair K.
Send us your thoughts.
Tour Backspin Quiz Answer:
1970 was the last year that an 18-hole playoff was used to determine the winner of the Masters. Billy Casper defeated Gene Littler 69 to 74.
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Final Thoughts
How crazy was the scorer’s table setup at the Masters? Just a table you would find on the veranda and some chairs right there at the edge of the 18th green.
That’s quite the double-page spread from Jockey. Love the Tony Lema logo.
Someday I’ll tell you about my Masters tickets being delivered. Hurts too much right now.
How’d you hurt your shoulder? Doing a fist pump.