Category: News

Random Golf Notes and Thoughts

It was a good win for Phil Mickelson at Riviera. Down at the turn, he played very strong golf coming in. He’s looking very good in the early going. Can he detrail Tiger’s quest for a Grand Slam at the Masters? I hope so. I can’t bear the thought of listening to the media hype over a possible Tiger Grand Slam this summer.

I love the finishing hole at Riviera. The tree lined curve heading toward the clubhouse on the hill is absolutely beautiful.

Tiger Woods will face JB Holmes in the first round of the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship in Marana, Arizona. It’ll be a great way to start off the event, but the sponsors have to be a bit nervous. Holmes is one of those golfers who I think could give Tiger a run for his money. If Holmes eliminates Tiger in the first round, ratings are sure to fall for the rest of the weekend.

For me, match play is the best form of golf to watch—although with its unpredictable finishes, it’s terrible for television and the advertisers.

It was good to see Anika Sorenstam back in the winner’s circle this weekend. It was her 70th victory, but only her first since Sept. 2006. Sorenstam carries with her the same sort of greatness that Tiger does on the men’s Tour. We have all been fortunate over the last decade to be able to watch perhaps the two greatest golfers of all time.

It’s interesting that the New Zealand PGA this past weekend was also a Nationwide Tour Event. Michael Campbell, native New Zealander and the 2005 US Open Champion, finished in 98th place. O, how the mighty have fallen.

Donald Trump has fallen afoul of the law for failing to register a heraldic crest that he wants to use to promote his new Scottish Golf club. Who knew there even was such a regulation.

A British court convicted a man of aiding and abetting terrorists in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Among his schemes was a plot to ship golf rangefinders to terrorists to help snipers target western soldiers.

February 18, 2008 |  Category: News
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Legally Blind Golfer Gets Hole In One

A great story:

Fiyalko is 92 and has macular degeneration. He’s been golfing for 60 years, but his 110-yard shot with a five iron on Jan. 10 was his first hole-in-one.

“I was just trying to put the ball on the green,” Fiyalko said.

Fiyalko tees off every Thursday with a group of golfers ranging in age from 70 to 90-plus. He used to have a seven handicap, but now he needs help lining up his shots and finding his golf balls because he only has peripheral vision in his right eye.

Jean Gehring was playing in his foursome and watched Fiyalko’s swing.

“I could tell it went on the green, (but) when we got up there I didn’t see it. I looked in the hole and there it was,” Gehring said.

To be playing golf at 92 is wonderful. To get a hole-in-one is something else again.

February 4, 2008 |  Category: News
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African American Golfers Digest

In a multicultural world, golf will only be as strong as its ability to attract players of both sexes, all ethnicities and with various disabilities.

Founded by an African American woman, Debert Cook, The African American Golfers Digest has at least two of those bases covered.

Or maybe all three. On their winter issue is a photo of Kevin Hall, the deaf, African American golfer.

Now that really speaks to me. I’m a “profoundly deaf” (the technical term) Native American. But I’m here to tell you that being deaf is not a handicap in golf. Cell phones ringing? Camera clicks? Crickets? Birds? I have no idea what those things sound like, although I’ve played with golfers who have complained about all of those, and more.

February 1, 2008 |  Category: News
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Woman’s Body Found On Golf Course

In a mystery worth of Cassie Burdette, Michigan State University junior Rylan Cotter was found dead on a golf course in Indiana.

Police say a body found last week on an Indiana golf course is that of a Michigan State University student.

The body of 20-year-old Rylan Cotter was found fully-clothed on the course on Brassie Golf Course in Chesterton on Wednesday.

Golf club employees found no signs of foul play, but the Porter County Coroner says an autopsy shows the woman died of massive blunt trauma to the chest and abdomen.

The coroner still does not know whether the death was a homicide, a suicide, or an accident.

The details of her death aren’t the only mystery.

There are reports the student’s parents say they have “no clue whatsoever” why she would even be in Chesterton.

Her family lives in the Lansing, Michigan area, where she went to school.

This one bears watching.

January 15, 2008 |  Category: News
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Ball Markers Focus of Sweatshop Protest

The Colorado State University bookstores have pulled school logo ball markers from their shelves following accusations they were made with sweatshop labor.

CSU said it pulled the Team Golf products from the bookstore pending an investigation by the Fair Labor Association. CSU refuses to sell any licensed apparel or logo items made in questionable working conditions, said Mark Minor, CSU’s assistant vice president for public affairs.

In a statement, Minor noted that the allegations against Team Golf are just that - allegations - but said CSU immediately pulled any of the company’s items just to be sure.

“We have contacted our FLA representative, who says they have begun an investigation,” Minor said. “Until that investigation runs its course, and/or until the charges against Team Golf are either substantiated or proven false, CSU has suspended business operations with Team Golf including pulling any existing Team Golf inventory from the shelves of the CSU bookstore.”

If making things in questionable labor conditions is a rationale for pulling things from the shelves, then CSU had better remove the better part of its licensed apparel and the various logo trinkets. I haven’t been to CSU’s store recently (my father was a graduate, and we visited several times back in the 70s and 80s), but if it’s anything like UM bookstores, it’s full of stuff made in China. And by definition, that means poor working conditions.

My guess is that they’re picking on a small ball marker maker because Nike has too many lawyers. So instead, these moonbats sweep the stores clear of ball markers and then go home, feeling smug and satisfied that they’ve done their part for global justice ... while wearing their made-in-China t shirts, cargo pants and shoes, listening to their iPods (produced in China by women who make $50 a month) and driving their hybrid vehicles (whose batteries are produced in environmentally disastrous Chinese nickel processing sweatshops). 

January 15, 2008 |  Category: BusinessNews
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