This is the one kind of conversation that gets golf nerds fired up: Tiger Woods vs. Jack Nicklaus —the holy grail of golf debates. And now, golf legend Gary Player has just dropped his own definitive rankings — Jack one, Tiger two, Gary himself at three, setting his record straight.
Jack’s Record Still Towers Over the Field

Let’s get something straight: nobody disputes that both Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus are Mount Rushmore material in golf. But how you crown the “GOAT” depends on what you value more: sustained excellence or pure, jaw-dropping dominance. And according to Gary Player, he thinks that Jack’s record speaks loudest. Eighteen majors and nineteen runner-up finishes in majors. The guy just lived on leaderboards when it mattered most. And let’s not forget, he won the Masters at 46.
Tiger Woods Prime Was Golf’s Version of a Supernova
During Tiger’s prime, he was on Mount Everest. His 2000 season is practically sports sci-fi. Nine wins, three majors, and one of those, the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, was a 15-stroke obliteration. And who can forget the “Tiger Slam” in 2001, where he held all four major titles at once. Nobody’s ever done that before, not Jack, Player, Jones, or Hogan.
Still, Gary Player doesn’t budge. Why? Because when it comes to Tiger Woods, there are a lot of ‘If’ moments, plagued with injuries and off-course incidents, and as Player puts it, “if is immaterial.” If Tiger hadn’t had injuries, if he hadn’t had off-course issues, he might have passed Jack. But he didn’t. Jack’s record still stands.
Gary Player Isn’t Just In the Conversation — He’s Leading It
Gary didn’t just weigh in on Tiger and Jack, he went ahead and put himself in that number-three spot. Above Palmer, Hogan and Bobby Jones. That’s the kind of statement that usually comes with a PR team on standby. But let’s give the man his due: he did get nine majors, a career Grand Slam, more than 160 professional wins, and fitness levels that would make most 30-year-olds feel like they’ve got work to do.
And look, he’s not throwing shade at Arnie or Jones out of nowhere. He admired Palmer — he calls him his brother. But he’s also not wrong when he points out the math. And he did rack up more majors and better scoring averages and overall more wins.
So the GOAT debate rolls on, and we may never get a final answer. But if Gary Player’s voice is in the mix, you better believe it’s worth listening to.




