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Jack Nicklaus did not get his own green jacket until 1998

Posted on 12/23/25 at 8:55 pm
Posted by LSUTANGERINE
Baton Rouge and Northshore LA
Member since Sep 2006
37956 posts
Posted on 12/23/25 at 8:55 pm
I’m sure some know this, but some don’t.
quote:

Jack Nicklaus, the only six-time Masters winner, discussed his personal history with the green jacket on Thursday shortly after striping a ceremonial tee shot down Hole 1 to open the 2014 Masters. Nicklaus won his first Masters in 1963, and when he arrived at the green, The Powers That Be had a 46 long waiting for him. "It looked like an overcoat," Nicklaus recalled


quote:

When Nicklaus arrived at Augusta the next year, he assumed he wouldn't have to wear an ill-fitting green jacket, and he was right: in his locker waiting for him was the green jacket of Tom Dewey, former governor of New York best known for the "Dewey Defeats Truman" headline misfire. "So I put that on, and I won a few more Masters, and no mention [was ever made] of a green jacket," Nicklaus said. "I kept putting Tom Dewey's on."

quote:

Dewey passed away in 1971, but his jacket remained in circulation. Still, after so many years, Nicklaus realized the jacket was starting to fray at the edges. He decided to take matters into his own hands and approached Hart Schaffner & Marx to create his own green jacket. Yes, really. "I said, 'Could you make me a green jacket, please?' " Nicklaus explained. "I'm afraid to ask Augusta because they don't want to give me one, I guess."

The resulting jacket was a bit off, both in material and color, so Nicklaus went back to Dewey's jacket all the way until 1998. That year, Nicklaus mentioned to former Augusta National chairman Jack Stephens that he'd never actually gotten a green jacket. Sure enough, when Nicklaus next visited his locker, there was a note:

"You will go to the pro shop and you will be fitted for your green jacket."

And there you have it. Nicklaus wears that jacket to this very day.


I know the story is old. But still.

LINK

This post was edited on 12/23/25 at 8:56 pm
Posted by Tangineck
Mandeville
Member since Nov 2017
2762 posts
Posted on 12/23/25 at 9:33 pm to
quote:

"I'm afraid to ask Augusta because they don't want to give me one, I guess."



Was this Jack being overly modest and not pointing out an obvious oversight, or was there really more to the story? He won his third in '66. I find it hard to believe it he had even mentioned it in even an offhand way the matter would not have resolved. Still an interesting story that it took 35 years.
Posted by Morpheus
In your Dreams
Member since Apr 2022
7267 posts
Posted on 12/23/25 at 11:16 pm to
It really doesn’t make sense outside of him telling others at the club that the jacket he was wearing fit perfectly and he didn’t want one at the time as it might have been “lucky” in some ways and by 98’ it was time for one of his own because he was no longer competing.

Honestly thought you got a new jacket every time you won. Who knew?

But nonetheless its an interesting story.
Posted by jlovel7
NOT Louisiana
Member since Aug 2014
23853 posts
Posted on 12/23/25 at 11:21 pm to
quote:

Honestly thought you got a new jacket every time you won. Who knew?


You do not.

My question is who was in charge of giving him Tom Dewey’s jacket? Augusta is so well run, I don’t beleive that’s some oversight.

Are member jackets often loaned out for non member use?
Posted by molsusports
Member since Jul 2004
37139 posts
Posted on 12/23/25 at 11:31 pm to
quote:

Honestly thought you got a new jacket every time you won. Who knew?


You do not.

My question is who was in charge of giving him Tom Dewey’s jacket? Augusta is so well run, I don’t beleive that’s some oversight.



Way back when the divide among many golf fans was between fans of Arnold Palmer and the younger upstart Jack Nicklaus.

It would have been very in keeping for some stodgy old guys in Augusta to refuse to get the new guy a properly fitted jacket
Posted by Tiger Ugly
Baton Rouge
Member since Jul 2008
17792 posts
Posted on 12/24/25 at 8:40 am to
quote:

Way back when the divide among many golf fans was between fans of Arnold Palmer and the younger upstart Jack Nicklaus.

It would have been very in keeping for some stodgy old guys in Augusta to refuse to get the new guy a properly fitted jacket


No doubt, there was a lot of hard feelings about Jack clearly supplanting Arnold who was very popular with fans and I'm sure folks at Augusta where Arnold was very popular.

It was not until the 70's when Arnold had pretty much quit winning tournaments and Jack's talent was undeniable that fans started to accept Jack a bit....but I could see the old money August folks holding on to the hard feelings.
Posted by MikeD
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2004
8174 posts
Posted on 12/24/25 at 10:29 am to
quote:

Augusta is so well run, I don’t beleive that’s some oversight.


It probably wasn’t quite the tight ship with money coming out the wazoo in the 70s and 80s that it is now.
Posted by InkStainedWretch
Member since Dec 2018
4921 posts
Posted on 12/24/25 at 11:57 am to
There was a great book that came out a few years back about the Nicklaus-Palmer rivalry. Short version, the young Jack Nicklaus was maybe the most competitive MF ever to be on the Tour, Tiger Woods wasn’t close. He didn’t just want to beat Palmer on the course, he wanted to cut his liver out and eat it. And Arnie was starting to wane when Jack was hitting his stride, and Arnie had people sympathetic to him and Jack being a barracuda rubbed people the wrong way. As he got older and matured Jack realized he probably could have reeled in the hyper competitiveness a bit and still excelled. And at the end he and Arnie were legitimately tight.
Posted by Dr RC
The Money Pit
Member since Aug 2011
61313 posts
Posted on 12/24/25 at 12:02 pm to
quote:

He didn’t just want to beat Palmer on the course, he wanted to cut his liver out and eat it.




It's just golf my dude.
Posted by InkStainedWretch
Member since Dec 2018
4921 posts
Posted on 12/24/25 at 12:08 pm to
I know that but Jack was quoted in the book as basically saying that he thought Arnie was an obstacle he had to destroy to be the greatest golfer in the world which he was determined to be no matter what it took. Again, in hindsight and with more maturity he realized he took it too far although he never stopped being hugely competitive.
This post was edited on 12/24/25 at 12:10 pm
Posted by chalmetteowl
Chalmette
Member since Jan 2008
53788 posts
Posted on 12/24/25 at 1:13 pm to
quote:

by 98’ it was time for one of his own because he was no longer competing.


‘98 he was like 58 years old but was in the hunt on Sunday… he finished T6 and that was the year Mark O’Meara won two majors
This post was edited on 12/24/25 at 1:16 pm
Posted by JLivermore
Wendover
Member since Dec 2015
1690 posts
Posted on 12/24/25 at 1:45 pm to
I wonder if there is more to the story, such as the superstition angle.

I just can't see 1) someone as meticulous as Mr. Roberts allowing that kind of oversight to happen, and never be fixed 2) Cliff holding a grudge against Nicklaus 3) Jack being afraid of Cliff, esp after all the Champions dinners, and seeking advice re: Muirfield 4) Augusta National being anti-Nicklaus.

Did always find it interesting how Palmer was cited as Roberts' favorite. I always assumed Cliff got along best with Ben Hogan due to their personalities being so similar. Arnie flying his plane over Augusta must have driven him crazy but the ratings, growth, and money he brought to professional golf more than made up for it.




This post was edited on 12/24/25 at 1:52 pm
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