Jack Nicklaus was a great golfer, perhaps the best the game has ever seen. He practically invented course management and his incredibly smooth swing tempo was the key to both his unmatched ball-striking and distance control, helping him capture 18 career majors and 72 professional wins. While not the greatest putter, he came through when it counted. In addition to his golf talent, Jack has publicly and repeatedly credited his family and friends as integral pillars that supported his illustrious career. We see this time and time again with successful people.
In 2001, when it became public that Tiger was dating Jesper Parnevik's Swedish nanny, critics argued that such a relationship would be a detriment and distraction to his golf game. Jack silenced these critics though by citing the crucial role his wife, Barbara, and his four children played in his storied career. He could not have done it alone.
Nine years later, the world’s #1 golfer is faced with losing what Jack had claimed to be so integral to his success, yet most of the media is concerned with his neck and his coach. Tiger has experienced loss before - be it his father in 2006 or even a golf tournament here and there - but in the past, he's always had a club in his bag that got him out of those hazards. He's now lost sponsors, fans and a coach, but he'll win back his sponsors, most of his fans, and find a new coach in no time. But losing his wife....for good?? and what that means for his children? He just can’t walk into a golf tournament and forget that his kids might be moving to Sweden.
Golfdigest's Sr. Writer, Ron Sirak, recently discussed
the mental, physical and mechanical pieces of the Tiger Puzzle While all three elements may be struggling in their own right, the loss of those closest to him has proved to be a migrane headache for his mental game and the ultimate challenge to his golf game. His life off the course must start to repair and rebuild itself for his swing to come back to form. A mentally stable Tiger doesn't miss cuts or withdrawl from tournaments. I think Tiger would admit he returned before he was mentally ready. He's won on a broken leg before and contended on Sundays when his mechanics were all but in order. A WD and MC in back-to-back starts proves that what is so paramount to all our golf games -the game between our ears - holds true for Tiger and is undoubtedly the true source of all his struggles.
As independenetly successful Tiger might have been, he's faced with losing what helped propel Jack to all his victories. Tiger did dominate the tour while transgressing and leading a wild double life on the side. But he still had a home, wife and children to lean on when he needed it. Jack needed that support and Tiger needs it now. Unfortunately, and at no fault but his own, it is possibly gone.