Sleep to Golf Podcast
1970 Open Championship — Date: Sunday, July 12, 1970 Course: The Old Course, St Andrews Leaders entering the day: Doug Sanders (–7), Jack Nicklaus (–5) The final round of the 1970 Open began under calm grey skies at St Andrews — the kind of still Scottish morning where every sound carries: the soft click of spikes on turf, the faint hum of seagulls, the gentle applause from galleries lining the fairways. Doug Sanders started the day with a two-shot lead. Confident and stylish, he played smooth, conservative golf through the early holes, holding off Jack Nicklaus, who pressed with steady precision. By the turn, Nicklaus had drawn closer — his approach shots crisp, his putting firm. Sanders matched him stroke for stroke, the two exchanging birdies and pars in near silence, save for scattered claps and the murmur of the crowd. As they reached the closing stretch, both stood tied. Nicklaus narrowly missed birdie at the 17th, the Road Hole, while Sanders safely found the fairway on the 18th. Needing only a par to win, Sanders placed his approach just short of the green, then chipped safely to within three feet. The crowd hushed. He bent to putt — paused — then backed away, unsettled. When he tried again, the short putt slipped past the right edge. A quiet gasp rippled through the gallery. Nicklaus tapped in for his par, and Sanders did the same, leaving them tied at 283 (–5) after 72 holes. The missed putt meant an 18-hole playoff would decide the championship the following day. The final round ended not with noise, but with stillness — the gentle murmur of a crowd that had just watched golf’s calmest heartbreak unfold on the ancient turf of St Andrews.
3 episodios
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