Just out of curiosity, does anyone know how many times Jack came from behind? How far was he down?
And with Trevino staring down Jack repeatedly, as Matt implies, can someone relate the facts there? I know they went to a playoff at Merion, but I don't know how they ended up there, nor the respective scores in the playoff.
These are all honest questions, not an attempt to deflect....
George:
Jack won six majors coming from behind the lead entering the 4th round -- '62 US Open (2 strokes behind), '63 PGA (3), '66 BOpen (2), '67 US Open (1), '75 Masters (1), '86 Masters (4). His '62 win came in the famous playoff against Arnie.
Closing rounds (in order): 69 (-3); 68 (-3); 70 (I believe -1); 65 (Baltusrol, and the famous 1-iron); 68 (and the famous 40-footer on 16); and 65 (famous because it's the best closing round ever played in golf).
In the first three, Jack to my mind clearly played well, but also benefitted from somewhat indifferent play among those ahead of him. In the last three, he clearly went out and took the championship with stellar rounds.
Jack won three majors when tied for the lead entering the final round -- '66 Masters, which he won in a playoff; '78 BOpen; and '80 US Open, and his famous duel with Aoki. Closing rounds were 72 at Augusta (in a very tough scoring year; even-par 288 got you in a playoff); 73 (on a very tough final day of scoring at TOC; only one player in the top 25 shot lower than 72 that day); and 68 at Baltusrol, or two under par that day.
Trevino beat Nicklaus three times in what you might call head-to-head duels, although one of them really wasn't. At Merion in '71, amateur Jim Simons held the 3rd-round lead, with Nicklaus two strokes behind and Trevino four behind. Simons collapsed, and Trevino shot a 69 to Jack's 71 and they ended tied. Trevino went 68 to Jack's 71 to win the playoff (Jack left two shots in bunkers that day).
In '74, Trevino led after three rounds, but only one stroke ahead of Jack. They matched 69s that day, with Trevino edging him out at Tanglewood, NC (perhaps best known for the 1-under 279 -- good for a tie for 3rd -- shot by 62-year-old Sam Snead).
In '72 at Muirfield, Jack played the final round a few groups ahead of Trevino, who led after three rounds, and was six strokes ahead of Jack. Nicklaus shot a closing 66 that quite easily could've been a 63 or so with a few more made putts that he lipped out. Trevino closed with a 71 to win. Trevino butchered the 17th, and was off the green in four when he chipped in for a par. Tony Jacklin, playing in the final pairing with Lee, proceeded to bogey the 17th after three-putting from 15 feet. Still the best final round in Open Championship history, for my money.