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Nick
Price To Receive USGA Bob Jones Award


November
29, 2004
E-mail address: mediarelations@usga.org
Far Hills, N.J. — Nick Price, a 2003 inductee into the
World Golf Hall of Fame and winner of three major championships
and more than 40 professional titles worldwide, has been selected
to receive the 2005 USGA Bob Jones Award.
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| Nick Price can now add the Bob Jones Award
to his list of golfing accommplishments. (USGA photo archives) |
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Presented annually since 1955, the USGA's top award is given
in recognition of distinguished sportsmanship in golf. The award
seeks to recognize a person who emulates Jones' spirit, his personal
qualities and his attitude toward the game and its players. It
will be presented on Feb. 5 at the Association's Annual Meeting
in Santa Barbara, Calif.
Now 47, Price was the best player in the game in the 1990s, winning
15 PGA Tour events and another 12 times internationally. His highlight
season was 1994 when he won six times, including top finishes
at the British Open and PGA Championship, on his way to PGA Tour
Player of the Year honors for the second consecutive year. In
his overall professional career, he has won 18 times in the U.S.
and 23 times internationally.
He has been a professional golfer since 1977 and has ranked among
the sport's top 50 leading money leaders for the last 18 seasons.
He has published books on the golf swing, built golf courses and
learned to fly his own helicopter and recently started his own
golf apparel company. He also is the only golfer to be ranked
among the top 50 of the world rankings since its inception in
1986.
More noticeable, however, is the way Price has shown his personal
qualities in his daily routine, with a manner befitting the phrase,
"It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice."
"To receive this award is a great honor for me," said Price.
"I have always respected and admired Bob Jones, not only for the
way he played golf, but also because of the way he conducted himself
both on and off the golf course. Throughout my career, I have
strived to achieve the etiquette and sportsmanship that Bob Jones
exemplified."
In 2002, Price was the first winner of the ASAP Sports/Jim Murray
Award from the Golf Writers Association of America for his consistent
and thoughtful cooperation and accommodation to the media. Later
that year, he received the annual Payne Stewart Award from the
Tour for his respect for the game, his professional conduct and
his commitment to charities.
"He is as decent and nice to the little old ladies in the parking
lot when the TV cameras are nowhere near as he is when he's attempting
to close the deal late on a Sunday afternoon before thick galleries,"
wrote veteran golf writer Bob Verdi on the eve of Price's 2003
induction in to the World Golf Hall of Fame.
"I think the players recognize what a great guy he is," says
Davis Love III of his fellow Tour player. "People always ask who's
the nicest guy on tour, and Nick Price's name always comes up.
"He stood by his long-time friend and caddie, Jeff "Squeeky"
Medlin, while he fought a losing battle with leukemia that came
to an end in 1997. He shared the spotlight in happier days with
Medlin at the 1994 British Open at Turnberry, Scotland, when the
two walked arm-in-arm on to the final green to a thunderous ovation
before two-putting for par and the win.
He supports charities that benefit children within Palm Beach
County and his native homelands of South Africa and Zimbabwe,
formerly Rhodesia. In addition, he formed the Nick Price Junior
Golf Foundation in 1997 to support junior golf development in
Zimbabwe, a land of 12 million people that is torn with strife
and under a strict one-party rule.
He is committed to bettering the life for those around him, particularly
his family.
Just last summer when the family — wife, Sue; Gregory (13),
Robyn Frances (11) and Kimberly Rae (8) — was having a well-earned
vacation, Price surprisingly extended the vacation by opting out
of the PGA Championship several days before the event.
"Nick is one of those people who has a firm grasp on what's important,"
says Sue. "In his soul, he thinks about others. I rarely have
seen him become abrupt with anybody. He just wants to give the
best of himself in whatever he does."
A resident in the U.S. since the early 1980s, he lives comfortably
in Hobe Sound, Fla., but his roots are in Africa.
Born in Durban, South Africa, to English parents, Nick was raised
by his mother in Zimbabwe. His father died when he was 10 before
getting a chance to introduce him to the game of golf. His older
brother, Tim, showed him the game, giving him a left-handed 5-iron
for his first club.
The two spent countless hours chipping golf balls through their
mother's backyard garden while pretending they were on the best
golf layouts and playing for major titles.
On his first trip to the United States, as a 17-year-old, Price
won the Junior World Championship in San Diego. He turned professional
three years later, in 1977, but in between he learned never to
take his good fortune for granted.
During that time, he served 18 months in Rhodesia's Air Force,
fighting in a civil war that would end in 1980.
"The service taught me that golf is not the be-all and end-all
in life and that I am fortunate to do something I love," Price
says.
Having achieved success on both the European and South African
Tours between 1978 and 1982, earning his first four wins, he ventured
to America where he earned his PGA Tour card for the 1983 season.
Later that summer, he edged out Jack Nicklaus to win the World
Series of Golf event. Along with the win, came a 10-year exemption
on Tour. But there were lean years ahead and a time when he came
within a week of running out of money to stay on Tour.
Somehow he held on, believing that his rebuilt swing would pay
dividends. It did, beginning with a win at the 1991 GTE Byron
Nelson Classic. He won the 1992 PGA Championship at Bellerive
Country Club in St. Louis, and then won it again in 1994 at Southern
Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla.
His last win was at the 2002 MasterCard Colonial, a year in which
he topped $2 million in earnings for the first time and finished
fifth in scoring average.
He sees himself playing into his 50s, and would like to add to
his win total and accomplishments in the game. He has Tour wins
in each of the last three decades, and he is one of only seven
players since 1945 to capture consecutive majors.
No matter what the next few years bring, Price has left his mark
on the game he loves. "Like Ben Crenshaw (the 1991 Jones Award
winner), he's a role model that a lot of the players out here
need to pay attention to," says Love.
"When I see a young guy who has shot 78 giving a signed ball
to a kid who is there with his dad, that's huge," says Price.
"That's what golf is all about."
Winners Of The
USGA Bob Jones Award
| Year |
Recipient |
| 1955 |
Francis
Ouimet |
| 1956 |
William C. Campbell |
| 1957 |
Mildred D. Zaharias |
| 1958 |
Margaret Curtis |
| 1959 |
Findlay S. Douglas |
| 1960 |
Charles Evans Jr. |
| 1961 |
Joseph B. Carr |
| 1962 |
Horton Smith |
| 1963 |
Patty Berg |
| 1964 |
Charles Coe |
| 1965 |
Glenna Collett Vare |
| 1966 |
Gary Player |
| 1967 |
Richard S. Tufts |
| 1968 |
Robert B. Dickson |
| 1969 |
Gerald H. Micklem |
| 1970 |
Roberto De Vicenzo |
| 1971 |
Arnold Palmer |
| 1972 |
Michael Bonallack |
| 1973 |
Gene Littler |
| 1974 |
Byron Nelson |
| 1975 |
Jack Nicklaus |
| 1976 |
Ben Hogan |
| 1977 |
Joseph C. Dey Jr. |
| 1978 |
Bing Crosby and Bob Hope |
| 1979 |
Tom Kite |
| 1980 |
Charles Yates |
| 1981 |
JoAnne Carner |
| 1982 |
William J. Patton |
| 1983 |
Maureen Ruttle Garrett |
| 1984 |
R. Jay Sigel |
| 1985 |
Fuzzy Zoeller |
| 1986 |
Jess Sweetser |
| 1987 |
Tom Watson |
| 1988 |
Isaac B. Grainger |
| 1989 |
Chi Chi Rodriguez |
| 1990 |
Peggy Kirk Bell |
| 1991 |
Ben Crenshaw |
| 1992 |
Gene Sarazen |
| 1993 |
P.J. Boatwright Jr. |
| 1994 |
Lewis Oehmig |
| 1995 |
Herbert Warren Wind |
| 1996 |
Betsy Rawls |
| 1997 |
Fred Brand Jr. |
| 1998 |
Nancy Lopez |
| 1999 |
Edgar Updegraff |
| 2000 |
Barbara McIntire |
| 2001 |
Thomas Cousins |
| 2002 |
Judy Rankin |
| 2003 |
Carol Semple Thompson |
| 2004 |
Jackie Burke Jr. |
| 2005 |
Nick Price |

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