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Colourful 'Peacock of the Fairways' Doug Sanders dies

Doug Sanders, who missed one of the most heartbreaking potential winning putts in British Open history, died on Sunday of natural causes. He was 86.

The US PGA Tour Champions website said he died in Houston, Texas.

Known as the "Peacock of the Fairways," Sanders was one of the most colourful personalities on golf's US PGA Tour, capturing 20 titles including the 1956 Canadian Open.

He had four close runner-up finishes in majors with the 1970 Open Championship at St Andrews ingrained in the memories of most golf fans.

When he reached the 72nd green, he was left with less than three feet for par to beat Jack Nicklaus by one shot.

But Sanders nervously pushed his putt right of the hole, sending the tournament to an 18-hole playoff the next day where Nicklaus prevailed on the final hole.

"I missed a 30-inch putt on the last green that would have won the 1970 British Open. It's all anybody wants to talk about," Sanders said.

"I won 20 times on the PGA Tour, and if you gave me one birdie, four pars and a bogey wherever I could put them, I'd have five majors.

"But it's that putt that everybody remembers. What can I say? It's what I remember most, too."

Sanders likewise finished a stroke behind Bob Rosburg in the 1959 US PGA Championship at Minneapolis Golf Club.

He was a stroke back of Gene Littler at the 1961 US Open at Oakland Hills, and one short of Nicklaus in the 1966 Open Championship at Muirfield.

He also had the third-round lead at the 1960 US PGA Championship but finished two back of winner Jay Herbert.

Esquire magazine once chose Sanders as one of America's "Ten Best Dressed Jocks."

He liked to say the two most frequent questions on tour were, "What did Arnold Palmer shoot?" and "What's Doug Sanders wearing?"

The Cedartown, Georgia native bragged that he owned over 300 pairs of shoes. "Clothes make the man," Sanders said.

Sanders also played in 218 events on the senior Champions Tour and hosted his own tournament, the Doug Sanders Celebrity Classic.

But it was the St Andrews miss for which he became most famous.

Years later Sanders was asked if he ever thought about missing that putt, he replied: "Only once every four or five minutes."

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