logo
Nicklaus and Miller reminisce about their US Open victories at Oakmont

Nicklaus and Miller reminisce about their US Open victories at Oakmont

Washington Post11 hours ago

OAKMONT, Pa. — Jack Nicklaus and Johnny Miller can look across the vast landscape of Oakmont where each won momentous U.S. Open titles and see in some respects how little has changed.
The course is longer than when Nicklaus defeated Arnold Palmer in a playoff in 1962, than when Miller set a U.S. Open record that still stands 52 years later as the only man with a 63 in the final round to win.
But it's still about putting. It's still those greens that feel like putting on a basketball court.
'I was talking to some of the guys in the locker room a few minutes ago,' Nicklaus said Saturday. 'And they're saying, 'What do you think?' I said, 'Well, obviously putting is the key out here.' I three-putted the 55th green. I had one three-putt that week, and I'm still ticked off I three-putted that one. That was sort of my mindset.'
'Basically you had to figure these greens out and not let them get to you,' he said. 'And be patient. One-under par won the tournament, and 1-under par doesn't win a lot of tournaments today. But it did then.'
And it might now.
Only three players were under par at the halfway point for the 125th edition of the U.S. Open , and the record 10th one at Oakmont. Only 27 players have finished a major championship at Oakmont under par, and the next 36 holes determine how much — or if — that list will grow.
Miller's win was epic, mainly because he thought he was out of it with a 76 in the third round of the 1973 U.S. Open, leaving him six shots behind. On a soft course, Miller delivered what he considers 'literally a perfect round of golf.'
Almost. His only bogey in that round was a three-putt on the long par-3 eighth hole.
Miller was a premier striker of the ball whose putting was streaky, and what he marvels about even today was missing only one fairway and hitting every green, every shot except one left below the cup on the lightning-fast greens.
'That's hard to do at Oakmont, to hit 18 greens and have no downhill putts,' Miller said.
Both also had to deal with Arnold Palmer, the King, particularly in his home country of western Pennsylvania. Palmer had won the Masters for the third time in 1962. Nicklaus was a powerful 22-year-old with a crew cut — 'Fat Jack,' he was called — who didn't care about anything but winning and didn't realize the crowd was against him.
'He was the guy you had to beat if you wanted to win, and particularly here,' Nicklaus said. 'It was really kind of funny because I never really heard the gallery. I was a 22-year-old kid with blinders on and not smart enough to figure out that people rooted for people. I just went out and played golf. That's what I did.'
If he could have donated one club to the USGA from his Open title — as players are asked to do now — Nicklaus didn't hesitate on the key to winning.
'I three-putted one time in 90 holes,' he said.
Miller never got around to answering what club he would have donated — driving was key to miss only one fairway, his iron play was sublime in hitting every green. He did what few others even consider at a U.S. Open. He attacked, because he had to.
'I was more of a guy that didn't like it to be close,' he said. 'If that ball is going in the hole, I'm going to fill it up until the round is over if I can. None of this fancy stuff about hitting away from the target. I wanted to have the thrill of going for knocking down pins out of the green. That was my fun. I liked to drive fast and hit hard with the driver and that kind of stuff.
'I don't know, everybody does it differently,' he said. 'But that's just the way I thought.'
Miller spoke how he thought, endearing him to U.S. viewers with his 29 years in the booth at NBC covering the U.S. Open, never afraid to use 'choke' when talking about pressure.
Among the many changes that have occurred since their glory days at Oakmont: money.
The prize fund is $21.5 million this week, with $4.3 million going to winner.
Nicklaus won $17,500 for his 1962 U.S. Open title. Eleven years later, Miller won $30,000. That's true in all sports and particularly now in golf as the PGA Tour is in a money race with the Saudi backing of LIV Golf.
'Would I have loved to have had what's going on here when we played? Yeah. Obviously all of us would,' Nicklaus said. 'But I also was really pleased that ... Johnny and myself both trail blazed the way for what's happening today. I think if you look back at (Ben) Hogan and (Sam) Snead and those guys, they trail blazed it for us.
'I don't think that would have made any difference, whether we were playing for what we played for or what they're playing here today,' he said. 'If we would have had the ability to do this, I think we would have tried to do the same thing.'
___
AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

USA Wrestling team for World Championships nearly set after Final X
USA Wrestling team for World Championships nearly set after Final X

Yahoo

time13 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

USA Wrestling team for World Championships nearly set after Final X

Paris Olympic medalists Helen Maroulis, Kennedy Blades and Spencer Lee headline the U.S. wrestling team for this September's World Championships. Maroulis, Blades and Lee were among the winners at Saturday's Final X — a series of best-of-three finals per weight class — to determine the roster for worlds in Croatia. Advertisement Maroulis, who in 2016 became the first U.S. woman to win Olympic wrestling gold, swept Amanda Martinez for the 57kg spot. Maroulis, 33, is currently tied with Adeline Gray for the most combined Olympic and world medals for a U.S. female wrestler (10). She is also the lone U.S. female wrestler to win three Olympic medals, also taking bronze in Tokyo and Paris. Blades, a 76kg silver medalist in Paris in her Olympic debut, moved down to 68kg and swept Brooklyn Hays to make her first senior world team at age 21. Lee, the Paris Olympic 57kg silver medalist, is going to his first senior worlds after sweeping Luke Lilledahl. Lee is already a world champion at the U17 and U20 levels. Advertisement At 86kg, Zahid Valencia swept two-time Olympic 74kg bronze medalist Kyle Dake. It's the first time that Dake, a two-time world champion each at 74kg and 79kg, has been beaten for a world team spot since 2017. Neither of the Americans who won gold in Paris competed at Final X. Sarah Hildebrandt has retired, and Amit Elor missed the event for health reasons. 2025 USA Wrestling Final X Results Women's Freestyle 50kg: Audrey Jimenez def. Erin Golston 10-2, 12-2 53kg: Felicity Taylor def. Brianna Gonzalez 2-1, 6-4 55kg: Cristelle Rodriguez def. Everest Leydecker 12-8, 8-5 57kg; Helen Maroulis def. Amanda Martinez pin, fall Advertisement 59kg: Jacarra Winchester def. Abigail Nette 4-6, 9-7, 11-0 62kg: Adaugo Nwachukwu def. Kayla Miracle 14-8, 3-4, 8-4 65kg: Macey Kilty def. Aine Drury 10-0, 10-0 68kg: Kennedy Blades def. Brooklyn Hays 10-4, 5-2 72kg: Alexandria Glaude wins by forfeit (Amit Elor withdrew for health reasons) 76kg: Kylie Welker def. Dymond Guilford 2-1, 9-1 Men's Freestyle 57kg: Spencer Lee def. Luke Lilledahl 7-2, 6-0 61kg: Vito Arujau vs. Jax Forrest on July 14 after Arujau received an injury delay. 65kg: Real Woods def. Joey McKenna 7-3, 5-4 70kg: PJ Duke def. Yianni Diakomihalis 0-10, 17-10, fall 74kg: David Carr def. Mitchell Mesenbrink 4-3, 4-4 Advertisement 79kg: Levi Haines def. Evan Wick 10-0, 6-1 86kg: Zahid Valencia def. Kyle Dake 5-3, 4-1 92kg: Trent Hidlay def. Joshua Barr 6-1, 3-2 97kg: Kyle Snyder def. Hayden Zillmer 8-0, 8-2 125kg: Wyatt Hendrickson def. Trent Hillger 10-0, 20-14 US Olympic Trial: Wrestling Jordan Burroughs weighs wrestling future away from World Championships trials field Jordan Burroughs will not bid for the World Championships team, ending a streak dating to 2011.

Heat's Trade Offer to Suns for Kevin Durant in February Revealed
Heat's Trade Offer to Suns for Kevin Durant in February Revealed

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Heat's Trade Offer to Suns for Kevin Durant in February Revealed

Heat's Trade Offer to Suns for Kevin Durant in February Revealed originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Miami Heat are interested in trading for Phoenix Suns superstar Kevin Durant again. The Heat tried to trade for Durant at the February NBA trade deadline, but the Suns rejected Miami's offer for the future Hall of Famer. Advertisement Durant turns 37 in September. He has one year left on his contract. KD will make $54.7 million next season and will become an unrestricted free agent in the summer of 2026 if he doesn't sign an extension with his new team. According to Shams Charania of ESPN, the Suns and Durant's business partner, Boardroom CEO Rich Kleiman, have met multiple times over the past week to get KD out of Phoenix. The Heat offered Jimmy Butler to the Suns for Kevin Durant in Johnson-Imagn Images It's unknown what the Heat will offer the Suns for Durant this time around, but in February, Miami offered Phoenix a package built around Jimmy Butler, who wound up getting traded to Durant's old team, the Golden State Warriors. Advertisement 'That Heat offer, according to a source, included Jimmy Butler, Josh Richardson, a first-round pick and potentially another component,' Barry Jackson and Anthony Chiang of the Miami Herald wrote. "Five Reasons Sports reported that Miami offered Nikola Jovic as that fourth component, but that was disputed publicly by a close Butler associate.' Durant remains an elite player in the NBA. He averaged 26.6 points, 6.0 rebounds and 4.2 assists for Phoenix this season while shooting 52.7% from the field, 43.0% from beyond the arc and 83.9% from the free-throw line. A top 75 player of all time, Durant has played for the Oklahoma City Thunder, Warriors, Brooklyn Nets and Suns. He has career averages of 27.2 points, 7.0 rebounds and 4.4 assists. Advertisement Durant won two titles and two Finals MVPs with the Warriors. He hasn't reached the conference finals since leaving Golden State for Brooklyn in the offseason of 2019. The Heat reached the NBA Finals twice (2020, 2023) in the Butler era, losing both times. Related: Kevin Durant Expected to Be Pursued by Familiar East Contender Once Again This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 11, 2025, where it first appeared.

NBA Trade Idea Pairs Kevin Durant With Two Multi-Time All-Stars
NBA Trade Idea Pairs Kevin Durant With Two Multi-Time All-Stars

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

NBA Trade Idea Pairs Kevin Durant With Two Multi-Time All-Stars

NBA Trade Idea Pairs Kevin Durant With Two Multi-Time All-Stars originally appeared on Athlon Sports. According to Shams Charania of ESPN, the Phoenix Suns are talking to the Houston Rockets, San Antonio Spurs, Minnesota Timberwolves, Miami Heat and New York Knicks about a Kevin Durant trade. Advertisement Durant, 36, has one year left on his contract. The superstar swingman will make $54.7 million next season. A future Hall of Famer, Durant turns 37 in September. The four-time scoring champion and one-time MVP averaged 26.6 points, 6.0 rebounds and 4.2 assists for the Suns this season while shooting 52.7% from the field, 43.0% from beyond the arc and 83.9% from the free-throw line. Most fans and pundits expect Durant to end up in Houston, San Antonio, Minnesota, Miami or New York. This NBA trade idea sends Kevin Durant to Dallas. Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images However, Chris Herring of ESPN proposed that the Dallas Mavericks trade for Durant. The ESPN insider proposed that the Mavericks send Klay Thompson, P.J. Washington, Naji Marshall, Dereck Lively II and a 2028 first-round pick (via Oklahoma City) to the Suns for Durant. Advertisement This trade idea would pair Durant with nine-time All-Star Kyrie Irving and 10-time All-Star Anthony Davis. Durant and Irving were teammates on the Brooklyn Nets. Dallas traded Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers in February and missed the playoffs this year after making the 2024 NBA Finals. Durant has career averages of 27.2 points, 7.0 rebounds and 4.4 assists with the Oklahoma City Thunder, Golden State Warriors, Nets and Suns. He and Davis were named to the NBA's 75th Anniversary Team in 2022. A Texas product, Durant won two championships and two Finals MVPs with the Warriors. However, he hasn't gotten back to the NBA Finals since leaving Golden State in 2019. Advertisement Durant has been swept in the first round of the playoffs twice since departing the Warriors. It will be fascinating to see where KD is playing next season. Related: Heat's Trade Offer to Suns for Kevin Durant in February Revealed This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 12, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store