Covetous eyes on man who has everything

Andy Farrell, in Augusta, on the envy and rivalry that the world No 1 provokes

Andy Farrell
Sunday 14 April 1996 18:02 EDT
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Greg Norman has been there, done that, and got the T-shirt but as he teed off yesterday he still did not have a Green Jacket to wear. Not that elusive jacket he wanted so badly.

To a man who usually gets there quicker than anyone else, gets it done faster, and has his own Great White Shark Clothing Company to produce those T-shirts, it was a strange position to find himself in.

Norman's is a life in the fast lane, be it cars, jet fighters, helicopters or making an obscene number of birdies in outrageously low scores. But at Augusta the red figures had always been followed by red lights. His journey to the champions' locker-room has been a crawl in rush-hour traffic.

"Irrespective of what happens," Norman said on Saturday, "I'm going to enjoy every step I take. You have got the chance to win the tournament. I have got a chance to win the Masters. I've been there before. There is no better feeling that having a chance to win a major championship."

Except actually winning, something Norman has done only twice, at the 1986 and 1993 Opens, out of all the chances he has had. Not having a major to his name in America, where he makes his home and dominates the US Tour could not be explained rationally. He has won more money than anyone else - $9.5m (pounds 6.33m) before this year - and has a higher percentage of top- 10 finishes than anyone except Jack Nicklaus.

Not that he would get much sympathy in the locker-room. Norman is the golfer who has everything. The good looks, the do-or-die game, the larger than life personality. That is out of the league of the average millionaire touring pro.

"Most guys are jealous," said Brad Faxon. "He's got the great look, the black clothes, the black hat, the blond hair. And players say, `yeah, he's got all that money, so it is easy to go at every flag'. But it is going for every flag that made him all that money in the first place. All the helicopters and jets, that pisses guys off too. They think he is big-timing them, but if he didn't buy the helicopters and the jets, they would call him cheap."

Norman's face stares down from the billboards above Times Square, but in a golf clubhouse he is as likely to be left alone as Nick Faldo. The Englishman's whole being states that he is here to win major championships, and only Seve Ballesteros of his generation has won as many as his five. It is the same with Norman. No other players are better prepared and over the last 10 years, there have been few weeks when neither of them has been the world No 1.

Saturday's third-round pairing recalls memories of the 1990 Open at St Andrews when Faldo outplayed Norman 67-76. Norman drifted for a couple of years as Faldo added more majors, but announced his return with an emphatic last-round 64 at Royal St George's in 1993 which was too good for Faldo.

It has taken three years for Faldo to put himself back in such a position in a major, but as Norman made putt after putt on the back nine, Faldo let chances slip away to open the six-shot gap.

But they were only playing out their allotted roles as sprinter and marathon runner. Both like to fish. Faldo, 38, could not be happier than on the banks of the River Test; Norman goes in for shark fishing and deep sea diving. "We enjoy each other's company and each other's ability to play the game," Norman said. "We shared a joke out there. We have had a good rivalry since 1976. But you have to keep your mind focused on your own job. I don't think he pays attention to my game and I don't pay attention to his game. I don't go up and say, `Hey Nick, how are my four and five- footers?' "

Both men wanted to head to the practice ground after their third rounds, but while Norman lingered at his press conference, joking with some of the American writers, Faldo was in less effusive mood. Asked how Norman was playing, Faldo replied: "Good. Did you make a note of that?"

Though the Australian seems to be heading into the future at an unstoppable rate, Norman, 41, still believing his best golf is ahead of him, lives in the present tense. "I don't live in the past," he said. "I have played in some great tournaments in the past and people have played some great shots to win some of them.

"But when you have got the lead in a tournament you don't think of the end result. You just think about what you are doing at the time and relax and chill out. You never get ahead of yourself."

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