Nicklaus not letting virus stop
Memorial handshake tradition
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[July 15, 2020]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) - The congratulatory
handshake with Jack Nicklaus that follows a win at the Memorial
Tournament he hosts is a coveted prize in golf and the 18-times
major champion said on Tuesday he will not let the COVID-19 outbreak
get in the way of tradition.
Several former Memorial Tournament winners have said the
congratulatory handshake with Nicklaus, whose record haul of 18
major titles is three more than second-placed Tiger Woods on the
all-time list, is special and one they would never forget.
Nicklaus, speaking at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio
ahead of this week's Memorial Tournament, said he will be in his
familiar spot behind the 18th green on Sunday with his right hand
extended to the winner.
"I'm going to shake their hand. I going to walk right out there and
shake your hand," said Nicklaus.
"If they don't want to shake my hand, that's fine, I'll give them a
fist bump or an elbow bump, but I'm not going to give them COVID-19,
so that's -- I wouldn't put anybody in that position.
"I wouldn't do that, and if I was in any danger of doing that, I
wouldn't shake their hands."
The Memorial Tournament was originally supposed to be the first
event on the circuit's revamped schedule to have fans present and
despite getting state approval in mid-June to do so the PGA Tour
decided last week to scrap those plans.
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Steve Stricker (R) of the U.S. shakes hands with Jack Nicklaus after
the final round of the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf
Club in Dublin, Ohio June 5, 2011. REUTERS/Jay Laprete
Nicklaus said he would have loved to have had fans present this week
to watch a solid field headlined by Woods and the top five golfers
in the world but he understood the decision.
"I think that the Tour probably made the right decision as it
relates to the Memorial Tournament. Maybe we are a little too early
for the galleries. We didn't have a problem with it," said Nicklaus.
"In the end, the players -- you know, you can't have a dance without
the dancing girls, and so you just -- and I can understand where
some might be very hesitant.
"We're probably doing the right thing right now, and we're
going to have a good tournament either way."
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Toby Davis)
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