In Golf We Trust Blog
Posted By The Original Golf Blogger
Dumb Announcer Statement of The Week
I just heard Kelly Tilghman on The Golf Channel say:
“One of the best things about the state of Florida is that you can watch the sun rise and the sun set all in the same day.”
Uh ... Kelly .... We can do that in Michigan, too. And just about everywhere else on the planet, too.
Posted By The Original Golf Blogger
Golf Ball Dowser
Posted By The Original Golf Blogger
Career Switching Athletes
ESPN’s Jason Sobel asks the question: “Who Are Some Pro Athletes Turned Golfers?”
I’m sure he didn’t mean it, but isn’t the implication of that headline that golfers aren’t athletes.
Posted By The Original Golf Blogger
Walter Hagen’s Majors
I recently finished a couple of biographies of golf great Walter Hagen. Hagen is one of the pivotal figures in the history of golf, and is rightly credited with creating the concept of the “playing” (as opposed to the “club” or “teaching”) professional. He is probably the first professional athlete to have reached the $1 million mark in career earnings (approximately $12 million in 2007 dollars).
Hagen currently is credited with eleven major victories: the 1914 and 1919 US Open, the 1922, 1924, 1928 and 1929 British Open Championship and the 1921, 1924, 1925, 1926 and 1927 PGA Championships.
Hagen played in just three Masters tournaments, and these were when he was well beyond his prime. In those, he finished T13, T15 and T11.
But after reading the biographies, I believe that Hagen has been short changed. For while the fourth modern major—the Masters—did not exist during most of his playing career, there was a tournament that could (and was in its time) rightly be considered a major: The Western Open.
Posted By The Original Golf Blogger
Pinemeadow ZR1 Hybrids
The PineMeadow ZR1 Hybrids offer many of the features of the Ping G5 hybrids at a fraction of the price. With its long profile and wide sole, the ZR1 offers the accuracy of an iron and the playability of a wood. It’s designed—like all hybrids—to offer a higher and longer shot.
The only problem that I’ve found with hybrids is that they often can created a distance gap in clubs. My experience is that I hit my 4 iron replacement hybrid longer than I ever did the iron. It takes a bit of adjustment.
If you don’t already have one in your bag, the ZR1 offers a good chance to try a hybrid for yourself—especially since they start at just $39.
Posted By The Original Golf Blogger
Tiger Gets His Own PGA Tournament
Once again the Golf Blogger dons his tinfoil cap and ascends the grassy knoll ...
A couple of weeks ago, the International, a generally well regarded tournament in Denver, was forced to shut down for lack of sponsors. Jack Vickers, organizer of the tournament, said that the issue was that no one wanted to sponsor the tournament unless Tiger would commit to playing at least once every five or six years.
Unfortunately, the word from Tiger’s camp was that he would never, ever play in the International. Tiger’s people apparently had blamed the scheduling of the International, which was “too close to the PGA Championship.” (The Golf Blogger believes that it had to do with the Stableford Scoring).
Yesterday, however, the PGA Tour announced that the replacement for the International will be a new event in Washington, hosted by ... The Tiger Woods Foundation.
Now, holding a tournament in Washington, D.C. is a very good idea (as I’ve written before here and here). But THIS is just too convenient.
The Rocky Mountain News has an interesting take on the story ... and you can see the suspicion in their eyes:
Officials of the defunct International golf tournament at Castle Pines were tortured because Tiger Woods often bypassed their tournament.
The hurt likely became more painful Tuesday when the PGA Tour announced The International’s Fourth of July weekend date on this year’s schedule was given to an event in Washington - and that the Tiger Woods Foundation will run the tournament.
International officials were not available for comment Tuesday. But three weeks ago, in officially announcing the cancellation of the event, International founder Jack Vickers noted the significance of the absence of Woods, who played in the Castle Pines event twice (1998 and 1999).
“There is no question that (Woods) has a profound effect when he plays,” Vickers said then. “He would have had the same kind of effect here that he has everywhere he goes.
So El Tigre can’t get to the International, but he CAN make it to his own event.
To be fair, it’s noted that Tiger might not actually play in this year’s event because of his wife’s pregnancy. But it’s a sure thing that he’ll be glad handing and pumping corporate sponsors. And you can bet your bottom dollar that he’ll be a regular in his namesake tournament.
Do you want an indication of just how important Tiger is to the PGA Tour? There are just three tournaments named after golfers: The Byron Nelson, the recently renamed Palmer tournament ... and now the Tiger Woods Foundation Tournament (I haven’t seen a name yet, but there is no doubt his will be on it).
There are a couple of explanations for this turn of events: 1) Mere coincidence; 2) the PGA, desperate for a tournament that weekend, begged Tiger to step up to the plate; or 3) Tiger (or his people) deliberately crippled the International with the intention of getting their own tournament in its place.
Which is it? You answer is as good as mine. I want to believe the best. But it looks awfully suspicious.
Posted By The Original Golf Blogger
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