Tiger v. Jack Audiobook By Bob Harig cover art

Tiger v. Jack

Golf's Great Debate

Preview

Get 30 days of Standard free

Auto-renews at $8.99/mo after 30-day trial. Cancel anytime
Try for $0.00
More purchase options

Tiger v. Jack

By: Bob Harig
Narrated by: Adam Barr
Try for $0.00

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $18.74

Buy for $18.74

SI golf writer and author of Tiger & Phil, Bob Harig's Tiger v. Jack, an examination of the greatest argument in golf—who was better—exploring the records, rivalries, statistics, and context of their illustrious careers, including the intangibles that made them both icons.

When Jack Nicklaus stunningly won the 1986 Masters for his 18th major championship victory, it was a reminder of the greatness of a golfer who had done so much. The major title – six years after his last – brought into focus again the dominance of his career. At the time, nobody was close to him in major wins, and the idea of anyone getting within miles of Nicklaus’ major record, let alone match or overtake him, seemed, frankly, preposterous.

And yet, there was a kid who was just 10 years old when Nicklaus won that last major. Tiger Woods was already thinking about Jack. He would put his accomplishments on a wall by age and try to beat those feats. Eventually, he put Nicklaus’ 18 major titles in his sights, and for the better part of a decade was on pace to match or exceed the record, a remarkable thought itself. The fact that he came up short doesn’t diminish the chase.

In Tiger v. Jack, Bob Harig explores and compares the two legends in a lively examination of the greatest argument in golf—who was better, Jack Nicklaus or Tiger Woods—exploring the records, rivalries, statistics, and context of their illustrious careers, including the intangibles that made them both icons. They both had their moments of brilliance and dominance. What we’ve seen from Nicklaus and Woods is likely to never be duplicated, all the more reason to celebrate it.

A Macmillan Audio production from St. Martin’s Press

Biographies & Memoirs Golf Sports
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c

Critic reviews

"Woods accomplished his amazing “Tiger Slam,” holding all four majors at the same time, but for Harig, Nicklaus wins the longevity race. Is that enough to make him the greatest player of all time? You’ll have to read the book to find out what Harig thinks. Insightful side-by-side assessments of two champions." -Kirkus Reviews

People who viewed this also viewed...

All Carry Audiobook By Gene Wojciechowski cover art
All Carry By: Gene Wojciechowski
A Course Called Home Audiobook By Tom Coyne cover art
A Course Called Home By: Tom Coyne
All stars
Most relevant
While Tiger and Jack are the focus the book is really about the pursuit of major championships and the grand slam as it highlights numerous other players which is fine. Numerous facts, stories, and stats are repeated three and four times. Quite annoying and unprofessional. The author also compares Ben Hogan’s and Tiger’s automobile accidents on their careers but conveniently omits Hogans was a head on collision the fault of a bus driver and Tigers was his own fault as a result of reckless and hi speed driving.

Misleading, highly repetitive, and in places insulting.

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.