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<UID>
8602010864
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860721
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, July 21, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
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<PAGE>
1H
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
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<AFFILIATION>

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<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
NORMAN'S WIN UNSEATS ALL THE JOHNNY CARSONS
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<BODY>
"I love you whether you win or lose. But it would be nice if you won."

-- Laura Norman, to her husband Sunday.

  TURNBERRY, Scotland -- "Four, three . . . 
  Greg Norman was squaring off on his  approach shot. He was in the middle of
the 18th fairway, the final hole, and the massive British Open crowd was
pushing at the ropes and counting down.
  "Two . . . 
  Norman hunched slightly, bringing  his club head to within a grass blade of
the ball.
  "One . . . 
  He swung, and that was it. Zero. He never saw where the ball landed. The
screaming mob was on the fairway like locusts, surrounding  him, cheering him,
celebrating him as if he was one of their own -- until the platinum-blond
Australian disappeared, momentarily swallowed by success.
  Gotcha.
  A major championship. The first  one. How long had he been waiting? Ten
years as a professional? A lifetime as a dreamer? Norman, 31, had led the last
two majors going into the final round -- and lost them both. And in 1984, he
dropped the U.S. Open to Fuzzy Zoeller in a playoff.
  He was becoming the golfing world's Ed McMahon, the recognizable name only
recognizable because he sets up the biggies. What had he done but come close?
  "It was a monkey on my back," he would say later. "Everybody is always
asking why didn't you win this one, why didn't you win that one? It can get
you down, and I woke up nervous this morning. But  this time I said, 'OK. I'm
gonna stay nervous all day.' "
  And only in that sea of hysteria, that romp to the 18th green -- where two
putts later he would claim the British Open crown -- did Greg  Norman finally
begin to calm down. 
Help from a friend
  It was a long time coming -- even though Norman led this tournament since
Friday.  On Saturday night, he and his wife had been sitting in the  Turnberry
Hotel restaurant when another blond-haired golfer came over and asked to speak
with him. Norman said OK. The two men separated from the table. They talked
for a few minutes.
  "What did he  say?" his wife asked him later.
  "He gave me a few tips," Norman replied.  "And then he said, 'Nobody wants
you to win this more than I do.' "
  She smiled. Norman smiled. Coming from Jack Nicklaus,  that meant quite a
bit.
  Especially because it was Nicklaus -- or rather Nicklaus' books -- from
which Norman first learned the game at age 16 in Queensland.
  And especially because it was Nicklaus  to whom Norman surrendered the
Masters this spring. You remember that, don't you? Norman missed the green
badly --  real badly -- on the 18th hole and wound up second by a stroke.
Bridesmaid again.
  No chance of that here. True, Norman did not play what you'd call classic
golf Sunday -- he hit only five fairways -- but every time he got into
trouble, he escaped beautifully. Like a Houdini in cleats,  the more dire the
situation, the more impressive his performance.
  "Were you ever worried?" he was asked.
  "When I bogeyed five," he said. "I forced my tee shot on seven. It hooked.
I never do  that.
  "But that's when Pete (Bender, his caddie) said to me 'OK, walk the same
speed as I do. I can see you're going too fast. You're too pumped up.' "
  Norman slowed himself, matching steps with  his caddie. By the time he
reached the eighth hole, he was at, shall we say, championship pace?
  "I sank a birdie on eight, and I said, 'Well guys, I'm playing too good.
Shut the gates.' "
Savoring  the moment
  Cocky? Well, yes. A bit. This is the man they call "The Shark," the guy
who goes for greens from the next town away, the guy who -- after blowing the
lead at the U.S. Open in Long Island  last month -- hates New York fans and is
not afraid to tell you why.
  He has a sort of jutting confidence, just on the edge of brashness. But
then, you need that when you're ankle deep in the Turnberry  rough. And Norman
was there quite a few times Sunday.
  The one he remembers -- the one most people will remember -- came on the
par-4 14th hole, when he and a half-dozen stewards had to beseech the  crowd
to give him enough space to swing.  With the flag barely visible, he whacked a
7-iron shot that rose in a low trajectory, fell to earth on the putting
surface nearly 200 yards away, and hit the  stick. 
  He birdied. He was ahead by five strokes. The crowd following him was
becoming his coronation parade.
  "I always wanted to win my first major by a lot," Norman said, "It's nice
to play  with a lead. You can savor the moment. I said to Pete, 'Let's just
walk slow. I love it.' "
  Of course, he was helped by the rest of the field, which had fallen too far
behind in the previous three  days of chill and wind and, sometimes, rain.
Nicklaus, Watson, Ballesteros were all way behind. Norman, who came into the
day at 211, one over, was being rewarded for braving the elements for three
rounds, for entering the clubhouse soaked and wind-whipped, and for staying
near par when almost nobody else could. 
  Only Tommy Nakajima, Norman's playing partner, had any chance to catch him
Sunday.  And Nakajima -- who would finish at 289 -- never got any closer than
three strokes.

Crowd favorite
  Which brings us back to that mob scene on the 18th hole, where Norman was
momentarily lost.
  "All I could see were the back of people's heads," he said. "I tried to get
near the BBC truck. I figured they wouldn't run over that."
  You can forgive the crowd their enthusiasm. Many of them  had suffered the
dismal conditions for three days, just like the golfers, and now, suddenly
both Norman and the sun were emerging as genuine. The moment was ripe for
celebration.
  When he finally  reached the green, Norman had a final-putt chance to break
par for the tournament. The only player to do so. He tapped the ball and it
rolled close, close, but went past the hole. The crowd sighed. Turnberry  had
given its message: "You can have me. But you can't beat me."
  Norman plunked in the finale. The crowd exploded. Even par, 280. In four
days, he and Turnberry had fought to a standoff.
  But  everything else had changed. No more monkey. No more Ed McMahon. This
was one for all the second-placers in life, for all the understudies waiting
for their big days. 
  A silversmith inside a small  office  began to work feverishly on the
Open's silver cup. On went the letters: "Greg Norman at Turnberry, 280
strokes."
  Thirteen minutes later, that cup -- and a check for 70,000 British pounds
-- was being presented to Norman, while the fans sang his praises.
  "You can spend all your money," Norman said into a microphone, "you can
lose everything you have, but you can never lose your trophy.  I'm so happy to
win this cup here."
  He wiped away a tear. A Concorde jet flew overhead from nearby Prestwick
Airport and, apparently informed of the news, dipped a wing in salute to the
new champion.
  Norman held the trophy high, and with the waves of the Firth Of Clyde
slapping in the distance, he planted two kisses on it. The first, perhaps, a
goodby to No. 2, the second, a friendly peck at being  No. 1.
  Gotcha. At last.
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