Whiffle: verb – to blow lightly in puffs or gusts; noun – something light or insignificant.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Inspiration

Posted without further comment ...



(Hat tip: golfdigest.com, Local Knowledge blog)

Monday, December 13, 2010

Tiger vs. Jack

Fellow blogger Phil Capelle has a new book out! In Tiger vs. Jack: Golf's Greatest Rivalry, Capelle takes issue with what he calls the "overly simplistic" notion that Tiger will replace Jack as golf's greatest player once he surpasses Jack's total of 18 major professional championships. In his view, "the quality of competition, the rules of the game, equipment, and course conditions are among the ever changing factors that must be weighed when debating who is the best."


     Whiffling Straits will post a review of Tiger vs. Jack once we've had a chance to read it. In the meantime, you can learn more or purchase a copy by visiting Phil's website: Capelle on Golf. It is also available here at amazon.com.

Monday, November 29, 2010

A Visit with Sir Bob Charles

Over the weekend, Sir Bob Charles, the first left-handed golfer to ever win a major professional championship, the 1963 Open Championship, became the first person inducted into the New Zealand Golf Hall of Fame. The new hall of fame was inaugurated in honor of the 100th anniversary of New Zealand Golf.

We here at Whiffling Straits are intrigued by Sir Bob – and not just because he won the first major championship contended in my lifetime. It's also because he's not really a "left-hander." He's a natural righty who plays golf, as he prefers to call it, "backhanded," standing on the right side of the ball and hitting to his right. Recently, we had the honor of speaking to Sir Bob in his native New Zealand – about his backhanded approach to golf and his big win in July 1963.

(Image: Condon/Getty Images, via pgatour.com)

Whiffling Straits: How did you come to be a right-handed person who plays golf left-handed?
Bob Charles: Well, I’m just doing something that comes naturally. It’s instinctive for me to grip with one hand, to pick things up, grip anything with my right hand. But when it comes to putting two hands on anything, I automatically put the left hand below the right hand. For example, if I pick up a rifle, I put the left hand belowthe right hand. If I pick up a pool cue, I put the left hand below the right hand. A spade, an axe, everything I do with two hands, I put the left below the right. And swing obviously … with an axe I swing it over my left shoulder, a rake … you know, that’s just natural. 

WS: I had read in Sports Illustrated that your parents were both golfers and lefties, and that’s how you came across your first set of left-handed clubs, is that correct?
BC: Well, yes, that’s correct. Actually my mother started out as a right-handed golfer and she switched to becoming a left-handed golfer. My father is the same as me. He’s right-handed with one hand, but with two hands he puts the left hand below the right. 

WS: Was it because of them that you started playing left-handed?
BC: Why did I start playing golf standing on the right side of the ball? It felt the most natural way to me. I play all ball games. I’m fascinated with all ball games. I’ve got my own tennis court here on the farm, I’ve got my own pool table in the house, I have a ping pong table, so … my father was a very good sportsman, and had a good eye, instinct for ball games. He was just playing what was natural for him. He played cricket, he was a good cricketer. He bowled right-handed, batted left. If you use baseball as an example, he and I both would have been right-handed pitchers and left-handed batters. 

WS: Do you think there’s an advantage for a right-handed person to turn things around and play left-handed golf?
BC: I think a lot depends on whether you’re left-eyed or right-eyed. You see, I don’t consider myself a left-handed golfer. I’m a back-hander. I prefer to use backhand, I play a double-handed backhand. I stand on the right side of the ball, I hit the ball on the right side of the clubface and I’m hitting to my right. Now when I’m lining up a putt, I’m looking at the hole and the ball with my strong right eye. So, I’ve got a feeling … well, it’s not a feeling. I’ve got a theory I suppose is the best way of describing it. If you’re left-eyed you should be a right-handed putter, if you’re right-eyed you should be a left-handed putter. I think you get a better perception, better depth perception. If I’m looking to my right, to my strong side, visually I get a better picture looking right than looking left. 

WS: What do you remember most about that (British Open) victory?
BC:There’s a lot of things. Let’s put it in context, we’re going back how many years? Well, 47 years, aren’t we? Of course, the field: the best players of the day were there. Nicklaus was there, Palmer was there, Player was there, Peter Thompson was there, Kei Nagle. They were the leading players of the day. I had won at Houston just the month before, so I arrived there full of confidence, having won my first tour event in the United States. So in effect, those five players I mentioned were probably the only ones I had to beat.
     Nowadays of course things are quite different. What I’m saying is, the quality was there but there was no great depth to the field. Whereas today, instead of just five players, you’ve got 50 players to beat. So, as a fact, [I arrived] full of confidence, I had a great week. Putted particularly well. And of course the 36-hole final [playoff] with Phil Rogers was a little bit of an endurance contest, as you can imagine, playing 72 holes in two days. And I think I was the fitter of the two. Then, Phil Rogers would never consider himself to be one of the fittest people in the world. And my putting continued through the final and I think I won by, what was it, seven shots.

Friday, November 19, 2010

The Year in Pictures

How cool is this photo?


As someone who loves photography, I really enjoyed browsing the "2010 TOUR Photos of the Year" galleries at pgatour.com. The editors asked their three staff photographers to each pick their favorite 10 photos from the 2010 season. The photo above of Arnie, Jack, and Gary is by Chris Condon, taken at the Big 3 fund-raiser for the Mountain Mission Kids at the Olde Farm Golf Club on June 8.
     "These guys don't get together very often and it was a pleasure to be a part of this event that raised a record amount of money for charity," Condon comments.
     You can view the rest of the pictures, along with comments from the photographers, from all three galleries (including those of photographers Stan Badz and Caryn Levy) here.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Mike Small is Big Time

Steve Stricker says his former teammate Mike Small is doing an "unbelievable" job as coach of the Fighting Illini men's golf team. If Steve says it, it must be so – and the stats back him up. Small's Illini, the two-time defending Big Ten Champs, finished the fall season ranked 9th in the country in the Golf World/Nike Coaches Poll and claim the reigning NCAA men's individual champion and Big Ten Player of the Year, Scott Langley, among their ranks. In 2010, Small was named Big Ten Coach of the Year for the third time (2002, 2009).
     On the course, Small is two-time defending champ at the PGA Professional National Championship – he's won the tournament a record-tying three times overall. He's also won a remarkable nine titles at the Illinois PGA, including the last eight straight.
     That's why the staff here at Whiffling Straits was so honored to have spoken recently with Small about playing, coaching, and what the future holds, both for him and for his exciting Fighting Illini team. 

UPDATE: Coach Small made the cut on the number this week at the Children's Miracle Network Classic at Disney World, the final official event of the 2010 PGA Tour season. He shot a 2-under 70 on Thursday and followed that up with a bogey-free 71 on Friday. He held fairly steady on the weekend, shooting 71-74 to finish at 2-under for the week in a tie for 65th place. Nice job, Coach!

(Image: Small with his 2010 PGA Professional National Championship Trophy. Montana Pritchard/The PGA of America.)

Whiffling Straits: Is it unusual for a college coach to play as much competitive golf as you do?
Mike Small: I don’t think anybody does it to my level. A lot of [college coaches] played in the past, on tour, but they seem not to have success once they start coaching. When I started coaching, I didn’t think I’d be playing this well or this much. So I didn’t really plan on it. But the way I’ve played, it just kind of evolved.

WS: What kind of challenges does that present?
MS: It actually presents a lot of them. It makes things really confusing. But I think there are a lot of positives that come out of it that outweigh the negatives. The negatives are, obviously, family time, away from home, I’m gone a lot. Coaching is my number one gig, my full-time thing, that’s what everything kind of revolves around. But at the same time, playing at my level, or trying to play, is an advantage to our program. It’s a niche that we have that kind of helps separate ourselves from other schools. I tell people we don’t have the ocean, we don’t have the [warm] weather, that a lot of other programs have … but every program has to kind of have a niche, a fit. And we run our program, approach our program from a player’s perspective, somebody who’s still playing. [Because] all these kids aspire to play on tour someday.
     The positives behind it: being out there and still being in the game, competitively, learning the new stuff that’s on the cutting edge in golf when you’re on the PGA tour, playing in events, equipment-wise. I’m bringing information and knowledge back to the players that most coaches get second-hand. So to get that first-hand is always nice and it helps our development.
     I always do my schedule around my coaching, but I have a very understanding AD – and my players are very understanding; they get a kick out of it. So when conflicts do arise, I have to make the decision based on what’s happening. But if we’re playing in a tournament that’s not as big or as prominent, or I can be gone when I need to play in a tour event, I usually can go. But that doesn’t happen very often at all. I try to have coaching be number one and playing be number two. And that’s the way I schedule my time professionally.
      But with the family, and being gone a lot, it is tough. But they get a lot of advantages, too, being a coach at a major university, and also being able to play on tour. Like this next week we’re going to Disney World for the tournament. The whole family is going. So it will be fun to go down there and spend some time, kind of relive the old days of playing, and then our fall season is done. Where it gets tricky is with recruiting. Because coaches recruit every day, all day, almost. And I do that on the road, juggle two things at once.
     But to wrap this whole answer up, personally I think it makes me better at both. Because if you do something all the time, 100% of the time, you get a little stale and burn out on it. I think coaching, if I’m coaching all the time with the guys, all spring, and I know I have some tour events coming up, or the PGA of America event coming up, in early summer, it kind of gives you something to look forward to and it gives you a fresh clear picture … you don’t get stale. There’s no repetitive stuff, there’s always something to look forward to, and vice versa. When I’m out playing for a week or two, I’m always looking forward to coming back and talking to the guys and see how they’re doing, and see what we can do with their game. I think my patience is better, I think I’m fresher at what I do with both of them. I’m not on edge or stressed out with just one job.

WS: Does it help you feel like one of the guys?
MS: Yeah, I think so. Normally I only play about four or five events a year. So I don’t really play a lot of tournaments, but I space them out so I stay involved. But it’s weird, the last 7, 8, 9 years, I’ve played so well in the PGA of America events, and the Illinois events, the Illinois Open, the Illinois PGA, I’ve been winning them. And it’s always in the news, and people are reading that and thinking I’m always playing. But I’m really not. I play four or five times a year.
Now this year I’ve played more. And next year I’ll play more. And like in 2006, I played more, because when I won the National Club Professional Championship – or the PGA Professional National Championship, what it’s called now, the PPNC – I get all those exemptions the following year. So I’ll play 11 or 12 events in those years, and this coming year, because of the exemptions. I’ve been fortunate to play well and get some media attention, so it seems like I’m playing a lot.

WS: Is it tough to keep your game sharp, to find time to practice?
MS: Yes. It’s getting harder and harder. I’m getting older. My kids are at an age now there are more things to do with them at night, school, and their activities. And yes, finding time to practice the last few years has gotten tougher.

WS: At this level of the college game, what do you primarily work on with your players?
MS: It’s probably more mental game, course management, scoring – scoring attitude and aptitude they have to have. But we’ll work individually on their golf swings if we need to. But if you’re a top 20 team in the country and you’re recruiting kids where you need to build golf swings, you’re recruiting the wrong ones. At this level … major college golf is not a golf academy. We need to teach these kids how to be players. And how to be tournament players and how to score and deliver a score. The golf swing is obviously a portion of that, but they should hopefully have good fundamentals when they come here.
     What we spend a lot of time on is ball flight, distance control, short game, getting command of our short game, increasing the number of shots they have. Most of them have five or six different shot around the green when they come in, if that many. You need to have 20-25 to be good. We [work on] how to handle course conditions, the mental approach to the game, mental toughness, mental competence, how to handle different situations. And I think that’s where we tie it all together.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Happy Birthday, Gary!

Gary Player turns 75 today. Earlier this year, I predicted:
Gary Player, the Jack LaLanne Perry Como of professional golf, will celebrate his 75th birthday on November 1 with a 40th anniversary release of his album, "Gary Player Sings."
As far as I know, this is not going to happen. In the absence of a Gary Player serenade, however, here's a link to an interview at golf.com, which includes this enlightening snippet about Martin Kaymer:
"I like his manner, and the way he shaves every day."
Yes, Gary Player is unique, a man with his own way of thinking and of doing things. After I made the above prediction, I posted this reflection on "The Legend that is Gary Player." An excerpt:
I find Player absolutely fascinating. He has an inspiring backstory, having grown up dirt poor in South Africa, where his father was a miner. His mother died when he was 8. He's gotten where he is today by working harder than anybody in the history of the game (even Hogan, by my estimation), both on and off the course. The winner of nine (yes, nine!) major championships, he was an amazing player, even as he labored in the shadow of Palmer and Nicklaus. Because of the "golden era" in which he played, I think he sometimes doesn't get enough credit today for what he accomplished on the course. Who knows how many majors he would have won had he peaked in, say, the 1980s?
That's two more majors than Arnie! Yet, who comes more readily to mind as one of the greatest players of all time? Probably Palmer over Player – a common perception that's really not supported by their respective records.
     So happy birthday, Gary! May your stature one day grow as large in the minds of fans as it already is in your own!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

More Men in the Mirror

Add Bob Charles, David Graham, Johnny Miller, and Nick Price, to the list of major championship winners who play golf from the "opposite" side. That makes eight total that I've learned about. There must be more -- right?

Natural Righties Who Play Lefty
Bob Charles (1963 Open Championship)
Mike Weir (2003 Masters)
Phil Mickelson (2004, '06, '10 Masters; 2005 PGA Championship)

Natural Lefties Who Play Righty
Johnny Miller (1973 U.S. Open; 1976 Open Championship)
David Graham (1979 PGA Championship; 1981 U.S. Open)
Greg Norman (1986, '93 Open Championship)
Curtis Strange (1988, '89 U.S. Open)
Nick Price (1992, '94 PGA Championship; 1994 Open Championship)

(Image: AP via espn.com)

UPDATE: According to this article, Byron Nelson and Ben Hogan (!!) were also natural lefties who swung righty.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Thursday, October 21, 2010

One-Armed Wonders

So here's an interesting twist on the left- vs. right-hand debate. It seems there are a couple of organizations that cater to one-armed golfers. The "domestic" version is the North American One-Armed Golfer Association (NAOAGA); their European counterpart is the Society of One Armed Golfers.  In addition to sponsoring various championships, the two organizations stage a biennial Ryder Cup-style competition called the Fightmaster Cup. Alas, much like their two-armed counterparts, the Europeans won the 2010 match, which was also held in Wales, by a score of 16-12.

Here's a video of the top American player, 47-year-old Bobby Baca, in action:



What I find interesting, in perusing photos on the NAOAGA website, is that while most of the golfers seem to swing the club in a "forehand" style, a number of them are "backhanders." I'd be very curious to learn more about the advantages and disadvantages of each approach, and why each golfer chose to swing the way he does.
     What do you think? Would forehand or backhand be a better way to go? Personally, it certainly seems like it would be easier to go forehand – but I wonder what the advantages to backhand would be.

Monday, October 18, 2010

A Golf Workout Whiffle

As far as I know, Ben Crane has never been one to make a lot of noise on tour – except for winning a couple tournaments while playing frustratingly slow. So I can't say if this is "out of character" for him – though it is surprising, and very funny ...



UPDATE: For a little more background on the video, click HERE.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Men in the Mirror

Four-time major winner and perennial world #2 Phil “Lefty” Mickelson is right-handed. So is 2003 Masters champion Mike Weir. And so, for that matter, is tennis great Rafael Nadal. Yet each of these guys has succeeded wildly at their respective sports playing from the sinister side.
    What’s up with that?
    Ever since I was a kid first taking up the game of golf, I was taught that the left hand is, or should be, the dominant hand in a right-handed golf swing. “You’re using too much right hand!” was my dad’s most consistent piece of advice. “Let your left hand pull the club through; don’t push it through with your right.”
    How can that be? I always wondered. I throw with my right hand. I write with my right hand. I hit my annoying younger brother with my right hand. Why wouldn’t I use my right hand more to swing a golf club?
    And, assuming it’s true that I shouldn’t, wouldn’t it make sense for me, as a right-handed person, to play golf left-handed?
    That thought has haunted me ever since. And so when Phil the Thrill, the right-handed lefty, first burst onto the scene by winning the U.S. Amateur and a boatload of college titles (not to mention a PGA victory) as a young amateur, I assumed he was a product of just such a theory. Surely, I thought, someone must have groomed him to play as a southpaw with an eye toward testing this theory – and hopes of turning him into a world-class player.
    The truth, as it turns out, is more mundane – but at least as interesting. When Phil was first taking up the game as a wee lad in San Diego, California, he learned to swing a club by standing in front of his father and literally mirroring the elder Mickelson’s movements. At some point they tried to turn him around, to swing the club like a proper right-handed little boy. But Phil was a stubborn cuss, and he would have none of it. So a “lefty” he remained, albeit only on the golf course. But did it make him a better golfer?
    Mike Weir, being from Canada, has a different story. Like most young boys in the Great White North, Weir’s first love was hockey. A natural right-hander, Weir found he could swing a hockey stick more easily with his left hand low. So that’s how he played. It probably didn’t hurt that in hockey it’s helpful to have left-handed shooters playing on the left side of the ice [hockey players, am I right in this?], putting left-handed players in greater demand.
    When “Weirsy” took up golf later, it only made sense for him to swing from the “wrong” side of the ball – using a partial set of left-handed clubs handed down to him by a family friend. Good thing, too. If none had been available, he may have been forced to turn things around – and who knows where his golf may have led him then. To obscurity? Or to possibly even greater heights? The world will never know.

    “Switch-hitting” the other way (lefties playing righty) is more common still. From what I've read, some 15 percent of the population at large is left-handed, only about 10 of golfers overall play that way. This is not likely due, however, to thinking they’ll have an advantage that way; it’s simply because there are a lot more right-handed clubs sitting around in basements and garages. Often, lefty boys and girls are forced to learn on whatever equipment they can find – which far more often than not is right-handed.
    This may explain why natural lefties Greg Norman (world #1 for 331 weeks) and Curtis Strange (a back-to-back U.S. Open champion) play right-handed. (The plot thickens!)

     So certain questions remain unanswered: What role, if any did “the big switch” play in the success of Mickelson and Weir? (Or Norman and Strange, on the other hand.) Would they, could they, have succeeded as righties? Given he success of these four great champions, is a golfer potentially better off learning to play from the opposite side?
     What do YOU think? Is there a potential advantage to be had playing from the opposite side? And if so, would it have to be learned from the start – or could an old dog potentially learn this new trick?
     Sound off in the comments section!

UPDATE: Friend of Whiffling Straits the Armchair Golf Blog has published a version of this post HERE.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

A Secretariat Whiffle

I can't wait to see this movie:



I was not quite 10 years old in 1973 when Secretariat captivated the country's imagination. I had no idea, of course, of the historical significance I was witnessing, but how could a not-quite-10-year-old boy who loved sports and animals not be thrilled by seeing a horse win the biggest race of his life by 31 lengths? Secretariat's Triple Crown triumph that year – his amazing Belmont Stakes victory in particular – was one of the most dominating performances in sports history. He remains one of my great sports heroes.
     What could compare -- maybe a 24-year-old golfer winning the U.S. Open by 15 at Pebble Beach?
     By the way, in case you're wondering, the opening lines in the trailer posted above are derived from chapter 39 of the Book of Job, verses 19-25 (I'm just sayin'):
 Do you give the horse his strength
       or clothe his neck with a flowing mane?
 Do you make him leap like a locust,
       striking terror with his proud snorting?
 He paws fiercely, rejoicing in his strength,
       and charges into the fray.
 He laughs at fear, afraid of nothing;
       he does not shy away from the sword.
 The quiver rattles against his side,
       along with the flashing spear and lance.
 In frenzied excitement he eats up the ground;
       he cannot stand still when the trumpet sounds.
 At the blast of the trumpet he snorts, 'Aha!'
       He catches the scent of battle from afar,
       the shout of commanders and the battle cry.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

I Don't Understand ...

... why Steve Stricker is not getting more talk for Player of the Year. For instance, Cameron Moffit, Senior Writer at Golf magazine, writes this today over at golf.com:
A lot of people could make a case for POY with a victory, most notably Barclays winner and FedEx points leader Matt Kuchar; BMW winner Dustin Johnson, who is second in FedEx points; newly minted Hall of Famer Ernie Els and Jim Furyk, who have two Tour victories apiece this season but have been relatively quiet lately.
 No mention of Stricker at all? Really? Yes, yes, I know I'm hopelessly biased. But it's easy to make the case on paper (or in pixels). I agree that if Kuchar or any of the above two-time winners emerges victorious at East Lake in the Tour Championship this weekend, they will likely lay claim to POY honors. But Stricker also has two twins. Granted, one was a second-tier event, the John Deere. But it still counts. And even if you wanted to only call it a "half-victory," adding the Tour Championship would put him at 2.5 wins, best on Tour.
     Much of the talk surrounding Kuchar involves his consistency, as evidenced by all his top-10 finishes. He has 11 in 24 events to lead that category. But Stricker is close behind with 9 – in just 18 events. So Stricker's top-10 "average" is actually a little better: 50% to 45.8% (Stricker played fewer events this year due to a shoulder injury).
     Yes, Kuchar leads the money list, with $4,753,727 to Stricker's $4,062,735 (#4). But again, with 24 events to Stricker's 18. Stricker leads in average money per event with $225,707.50 to Kuchar's $198,071.89. Again, which looks more "consistent" to you? And if Stricker wins (again, my case is all premised on him winning this week) he would certainly jump to #2, and could possibly even pass Kuchar (I think) if he stumbles badly.
     Finally, Kuchar and Stricker are in a virtual dead heat for the Vardon Trophy, which goes to the lowest (adjusted) stroke average. Kuchar sits narrowly on top with a 69.57 average; Stricker is within a grass clipping at 69.58. Whoever beats the other this weekend will almost certainly take the lead in this category.
     (Dustin Johnson probably has the most compelling case after these two, given his two victories, current #2 position on the money list, and two memorable performances in majors. He'd get my vote if Kuchar doesn't win this weekend and no one gets to three victories. And Kuchar I think has a wonderful case for Comeback Player of the Year. In 2007 he finished 115th on the money list. In 2008, 70th. In 2009, 24th. And this year, he currently sits at #1. That's quite a remarkable improvement – perhaps a little too gradual to capture the attention of voters, but I feel it's deserving, nonetheless.)
     There you have it: an iron-clad case for Stricker as the 2010 PGA Tour Player of the Year – IF he wins this week. So why does no one seem to be talking about him in that context? I just don't know. Maybe it's just that no one wants to see him fill the FedEx cup with tears of joy.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Tap-Ins

A few hurried, back-handed stabs at items that have caught my attention in the golfing world ...

The Best Swing on Tour. Over at golf.com, Golf magazine's panel of "Top 100 Teachers" have come up with a list of seven of the "best" golf swings on tour, based on different individual components. Who did they decide has the "Best Overall Swing"? You'll never guess. Oh, wait ... you probably already have.

Jack is ... Jack. A really nice, in-depth look at the enduring legacy of Jack Nicklaus by Jaimie Diaz over at golfdigest.com. A brief excerpt:
Nicklaus and Woods have been compared every which way, from driver through putter and beyond, with the sum total long considered almost a wash. But the potential for major life mistakes that seemed moot in two people so driven and organized has suddenly become the most important element of all. Nicklaus' steady conservatism, which on the course might have begun to seem quaint and even limiting in contrast to Woods' bolder style, has become the potential off-the-course difference-maker. As Nicklaus sits in the clubhouse, an early finisher watching the recklessness that has cost Woods the lead, the score Jack posted is looking better.
The Ryder Cup Runneth Over ... with Christians, it seems. A few people have noticed that three of the four captain's picks by Corey Pavin, a born-again Christian, are regulars at the Tour's weekly Bible study – as are a few who earned their way on (not to mention some of Pavin's assistant captains). Is there a holy conspiracy afoot? Probably not, posits Wall Street Journal writer John Paul Newport in his weekly Golf Journal column.

Title Defense – Failed! Last weekend the Whiffler attempted to defend his title at the annual White Lake Classic in Michigan. No blood clots this year, but a lingering hamstring injury – the result of a freak soccer-coaching accident  several weeks ago (it's for the CHILDREN!) – probably helped ... uh, hamstring my efforts to repeat. To prepare (since I hadn't swung a club since the accident), I'd been repeatedly visualizing the 6-iron I hit a few years back to get just inside Steve Stricker's shot at the "beat the pro" par-3 hole at a charity golf outing. (What? I never mentioned that before? Huh. For one brief, shining moment, I bettered the best swing on Tour!)
     Alas, all that visualizing wasn't enough – though I did hit one of the best six-irons of my life, to about five feet, for a birdie on the 18th hole of the warm-up round. The shot helped cap an amazing back-nine comeback by Team Butt Hutt to secure a free dinner that night. Victory never tasted so succulent as the ribeye steak I gorged on by Lake Michigan.
     But congratulations to Mike "Scruffy" "Landfill" "Homer" "Skipper" Neuses (below, with arms crossed) for his impressive victory in the main event the next day.

UPDATE: In response to Chery's comment below, here are Scruffy/Serbo, Zim (the Whiffler), the Glacier, Keith, and Little Tommy.

One more time ...

Monday, September 6, 2010

Stricker On the No-bogey Train

Going into Monday's final round at the Deutsche Bank Championship, defending champ Steve Stricker has gone 72 holes without posting a bogey or worse on his scorecard. This includes 54 holes at the Deutsche Bank and the final round of the Barclay's. The last person to win a PGA tournament without a bogey was Lee Trevino at the 1974 Greater New Orleans Open. (Image: Getty Images via telegraph.co.uk)
     Funny thing is, Steve Stricker isn't leading: he's four strokes off the pace in a tie for fourth, behind leader Jason Day at -17.
     It's tempting to say that Stricker's style of play is too conservative, that's he's not making bogeys, but not making enough birdies, either. But Stricker has shown many times that he's more than capable of going low, especially on a soft course such as the players are seeing at the Deutsche. This is the man who shot 60 at the John Deere this year (to Paul Goydos's 59), and holds the PGA Tour scoring record for 72 holes, at -33 in the 2009 Bob Hope Classic. (Unfortunately for Steve, the Bob Hope is a five-round tournament, and he lost his lead that year in the final round, but the record is still official.)
     Don't be surprised if Steve starts making more putts today and puts some pressure on the leaders. I'd love for Steve to win, of course. But as a fan of "quirky" statistics, I wouldn't be too disappointed if Steve continues is bogey-free streak today but comes up a stroke or two short of victory. Then you could add a "bogey-free runner-up" status to his back-to-back Comeback Player of the Year awards.

UPDATE: Well, there's your jinx. Less than an hour after I posted this, Stricker bogeyed the first hole of the final round – from 124 yards out in the fairway, no less. Hopefully, if he was thinking about it, he's not anymore!

Thursday, August 26, 2010

A Gong Shot Whiffle

This is pretty cool. I don't think it's faked, but I'd wager there were many, many more misses than they show in this clip!!

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Atwal vs. Van de Velde

Here's something to ponder ...
     At Sunday's final round of the Wyndham Resorts Championship, India's Arjun Atwal (a Monday qualifier!) faced a difficult approach to 18 while holding a one-stroke lead. He had a slightly downhill lie in the left rough, some 189 yards from the pin. What's the right play? At golf.com, Mitchell Spearman, a "Golf Magazine Top 100 Instructor," describes Atwal's thought process and subsequent shot selection:
A 5-iron was plenty of club to reach the flag, but Arjun knew that if he mishit the shot even a little, the ball would likely wobble into one of the gaping front greenside bunkers and he'd have a 30-yard sand shot. Instead, Arjun hit his rescue club, knowing the ball would fly past the green and settle near a grandstand surrounding the green on all sides. Arjun knew that no matter where the ball landed, he'd almost surely get a free drop by the green, and that would leave him a chance to make a simple chip and putt for par and the victory.
Atwal then did "exactly that," made par and won the tournament. Spearman called it "one of the savviest and best decisions of the year by any player." (Image: Atwal hits his approach at 18. Hunter Martin/Getty Images, via golf.com.)

     I say, "great!" Congratulations to Atwal on some savvy course management and stellar play. But I couldn't help but be reminded of a similar situation faced by one Jean Van de Valde 11 years ago at the British Open.
     You probably know the story; it's one of the most famous "bone-headed" plays in golf history. Standing on the 18th tee at Carnoustie on Sunday with a 3-stroke lead, Van de Velde pulled a driver – a club he'd been hitting fabulously all week – at the long par-4 and hit it way right. Fortunately for him, the ball was so far off-line he ended up with a good lie in the next fairway – but was still a long way from the green. What's the right play?
     (A thought on the driver selection: A lot of commentators lambasted Van de Velde, especially in hindsight, for not hitting something "safer" off the tee. But in a pressure situation like that, a strong argument can be made for sticking with what's been working (dance with the girl who brung you, you might say). If he had pulled a fairway wood or long iron, and sprayed it into the burn, he probably would have been criticized for that!)
     People seem willing to "forgive" him hitting the driver, but the second shot is where most consider the bone-headedness to have begun in earnest. Rather than take a short or mid-iron and lay up in the fairway short of the green – for a wedge, two putts, and victory – Van de Velde pulled a two-iron and went for it.
     Stupid, people said and still say. But I'm not so sure. What gets overlooked is that Van de Velde was in a very similar situation to Atwal – with two extra strokes to spare. Van de Velde felt confident he would get the ball to the green. And he knew (this is key) that if he sprayed the ball left or right, it would go in the grandstands and he would get a free drop near the green. Chip, two (or even three) putts, and victory.
     Sure enough, the ball flew far and to the right, into the grandstands. That's when Van de Velde got perhaps the worst break in major championship history. Instead of hitting a fan or a seat and settling down safely among the people, the ball hit a round railing absolutely square (can you hit a round railing "squarely?") and took a huge bounce straight backwards. The ball flew so far back it hit the rocks lining the burn in front of the green, and took another big bounce, over the burn into the rough. (The way things played out from there, he would, in fact, have been better off if it had actually gone in the water at that point.)
     This is where Van de Valde played the one shot he says he regrets. Rather than chip out sideways into the fairway, our French hero went for the green again, and chunked it into the burn from the gnarly rough. After wading into the water and briefly considering playing the ball from there (it was only half submerged at the time), he instead took a drop, hit his fifth shot into a greenside bunker, blasted out, and sunk a seven-footer for a triple-bogey 7 to sneak into a playoff – which he lost handily. (Image: Van de Velde wades into the Barry Burn – and poses for pictures!? David Cannon/Getty Images, via pga.com)
My point is simply that I think Van de Velde gets too harshly criticized. His first two shots are completely defensible. In fact, I'd go so far as to say his 2-iron second shot was a smart play, just as Atwal's was.
     Needless to say I'm in a small minority with this opinion, but I take great comfort in discovering that noted Sports Illustrated golf writer Michael Bamberger is on the same page. In his book "This Golfing Life" (primarily a collection of magazine articles), he writes:
[Jim] Nantz asks Van de Velde if he had seen Tin Cup, the movie in which Kevin Costner plays Roy McAvoy, a journeyman pro who dunks one ball after another in the water on the last hole of the U.S. Open, blowing his chance for victory by prizing pride over prudence. Van de Velde had seen it. ... He said you could not compare Roy McAvoy to him. "He went for the dream, the perfect shot," Van de Velde said. "I was just playing my game." I understood completely what he was saying. I know nobody who agrees with this, except for Van de Velde, but he did not misplay a single shot en route to his seven on the last hole of the British Open at Carnoustie, not mentally. When things go wrong mechanically, what can you do? But if a person is trying his best, there's not much to criticize, although Lord knows people make a nice living doing so anyhow.
Later, Bamberger describes Van de Velde's 18th-hole decision-making this way:
Van de Velde hit a driver off the tee because, as he told me, "I always hit a driver, whenever I can." Many have been critical of that decision. They don't recall that when Tom Kite came to the final hole of the 1992 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach with a two-shot lead, he hit a downwind driver, despite the ocean that lines the left side of the hole and the out-of-bounds on the right. He won with a par.
     There was nothing wrong with the tee shot, even though Van de Velde pushed it wildly to the right. It carried the burn and finished in the rough, where he drew a perfect lie. The golfing gods had been smiling on him all week, and they continued to. For his second shot, he had 189 yards to clear the burn in front of the green. "I am a professional golfer. I miss my two-iron, it still goes 200 yards." Easily. He pulled his two-iron from the bag and pushed the shot. He carried the burn, easily. The ball was sailing into the grandstand. No big deal, he thought, that's a free drop.
     And that's when the golf gods stopped smiling on him.
I agree, Michael! And something tells me that perhaps Arjun Atwal would, as well.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

On Whistling Straits and Dustin Johnson

I predicted this would happen. Well, not exactly this. But back in January I wrote ...
Someone (perhaps [Padraig] Harrington) will blow a final-round chance to win the PGA Championship by posting a big number on the brutal 18th at Whistling Straits.
I certainly didn't predict that it would be because he grounded his club in a bunker that he didn't think was a bunker to incur a two-stroke penalty to miss a three-way playoff after missing a seven-foot putt that he thought at the time was to win the championship! Unbelievable. (As far as  Harrington is concerned, I was a little bit right: He posted a double-bogey 6 in the second round to miss the cut by a stroke.)
     After reflecting on the tournament for a few days, the one overriding reaction I have is a certain sadness that Whistling Straits is getting beat up because of what happened. Alan Shipnuk, for instance, wrote the following in his "Hot List" at golf.com (Whistling Straits was #4 in the "Not" column):
All the flaws of this monument to artifice and excess were revealed on Sunday. If the best players in the world can't birdie a hole, then it can't be very good. The bevy of contenders combined to make exactly one birdie on 17 and 18, the latter of which might be the worst finishing hole in golf. And it's fitting the tournament was tainted by the contrived faux-bunkers which serve no purpose other than to look good on TV. On the to-do list before '15: 1) blow up 18 and start over, 2) fill in, oh, 400 or so useless bunkers, 3) create some safe, smooth walkways for fans, as dozens were injured on the extreme terrain.
A couple of things ... are the blossoming fruit trees at Augusta National "useless"? I know it's not exactly the same thing. But many, many of those trees never come into play and are certainly there only for "cosmetic" reasons. In fact, they are essential to the aesthetic of The Masters. Same with the bunkers at Whistling Straits. The course wouldn't be the same without them. It wouldn't play any different if you filled in 400 of them, but the course would lose much of it's "wow" factor. And what's wrong with wanting the course to look good on TV? Not to mention give on-site spectators something to be amazed by.
     I would agree that the 18th needs a little more tweaking. But I have mixed feelings about making it more walkable for spectators. Some improved pathways might be a good idea, but I wouldn't want them to come at the expense of "extreme terrain," which again is a big part of the course's essence.
     As far as being a monument to "artifice and excess," let's focus on the excess, and again make a comparison with Augusta. Other criticism I've read is that Herb Kohler, the course's owner and primary visionary, is an ego maniac who just wanted to have a visually spectacular course unlike any other in the world with more bunkers than you could imagine. I say, "so what?"
     The complaint is that Whistling Straits was absurdly expensively to build and is absurdly expensive to play and maintain. If he wants to spend the money to build it, and people want to spend $350 or so to play it, I say more power to 'em. The course is truly one-of-a-kind, the kind of experience you go home and tell your friends about. Should every golf course take this approach? Of course not. But this course is a wonder, completely surreal. Not the kind of course you'd want to play on a regular basis, but the kind of course you put on your bucket list.
     I have no idea how the course does financially. For all I know it may be bleeding Herb Kohler dry. But if that's what he wants to do with his fortune, that's his choice.

"Hazards" vs. "waste bunkers."  I was there on Friday and spent an amazing day with the Golden Bear Cub, 8, along with reader RobT and his son "Big Nate," who recently turned 9. When we decided to take the boys, I resigned myself to the idea that we might spend only a few hours there before the boys got sick of it, but I am still astonished that we there for a full 10 hours – almost the entire time that golf was being played that day, thanks to the fog delay in the morning. And the only complaints we got all day were that we didn't get to see Tiger Woods (who didn't tee off until 5:45 p.m. and only played six holes) and, even more catostrophic, that by the time we walked back to the car the little parking lot shuttle carts had shut down for the day. ("But Dad, you PROMISED, that we'd get to take a shuttle back to the car!!!!!!" "No, son, I said we'd take one if we could.")
     But I digress. The big reason we were able to keep the boys engaged so long is that the extreme terrain, including the useless bunkers, provided a welcome diversion when they grew bored at times with the golf. They climbed hills, jumped in and out of sand traps, had races, and, on one occasion, chased one another with "sand bombs" (OK, it was my son chasing Big Nate, an activity I quickly put a stop to). Providing entertainment for the kids was certainly not Pete Dye's intention with the course design, but the extreme terrain certainly added to the richness of our experience that day. It was a heck of a lot of fun.
     And as we traversed the course and watched the kids cavort, we noticed all the out of play bunkers and wondered if they would be considered "waster bunkers." We came to the conclusion that yes, they probably were. Because some of them had grass and weeds growing in them, and many of them were trampled nearly beyond recognition. Some were in such odd spots that we speculated that certainly no one would ever hit into them! ("I don't know, I'll bet Keith could find this one," Rob speculated. (Sorry, Keith. Rob said it, not me.))
     But as the world now knows, every bit of sand on Whistling Straits was to be considered a "hazard," and played according to the rules so governing it. A local rules accommodation was made, however, for removing loose stones from the bunkers. I nodded when I read this later, as I had noticed that some of the sand in the bunkers looked a little rocky. All the more natural, I suppose.

Which leads us now to "the big question." That is, was Johnson done an injustice? After much consideration, I have to say "no," unequivocably. Here's why ...
     The biggest thing for me is simply that the players were informed beforehand, in the clearest possible terms, that all the bunkers would be played as hazards, no matter their condition. Johnson admitted that he didn't read the rules sheet – though he also said he was aware of the rule, but simply didn't recognize his lie as having been in a bunker. He thought it was just a bare spot worn down by the crowd. So the question then becomes, should he have recognized it as a bunker?
     The biggest outrage seems to be coming from players and others who think it's ridiculous that the crowd would be allowed to stand in a bunker. How could he know it's a bunker when all those people are there? And there were no rakes, why would he think it might be a bunker? Again, the whole bunker situation should have been top of mind for the players. Much of the talk about the course all week was about the sheer number of them. The fact that it never occurred to Johnson that he might be in one smacks of mental laziness. Can you imagine Tiger or Jack ever making such a mistake?
     The whole point of major championships is that it's supposed to be a mental challenge as well as a physical one – perhaps even more so. Many golfers have the game to win a major, but far fewer have the mental fortitude to actually do it. As Nicklaus once said, he always thought he had a better chance to win majors than regular tournaments because at least half the field is essentially eliminated before they even tee it up.
     Then there's the argument that the walking rules official should have alerted Johnson that he was, in fact, in a bunker. Frankly, I don't like this argument at all. Before this all happened, it never would have occurred to me that a rules official would ever proactively remind a player about a rule. In fact, it seems to me that this ought to be forbidden. According to the rules of golf as I understand them, only a caddy may assist a player in any way during the course of play. No coaching is allowed, and players aren't even allowed to ask or tell each other what club they hit on a given shot. Why would a rules official be allowed to assist a player in such a way? The rules of golf being as complex as they are, I'm all for having an official on-hand to clarify and interpret the rules, but only at the player's request.
     If rules officials are allowed, or even expected, to remind players of rules in certain situations, where does it begin and end? It brings a lot of outside judgment into play, and could certainly create a situation where differing styles and tendencies among rules officials could potentially give one player an advantage over another.
     Over at Free Drop, a blog by USGA rules official John Vander Borght, in a post titled "Should [PGA official] David Price have said something?", John writes that "Decision 34-2/3 tells us that a referee has no obligation to warn a player and prevent a breach, but there is no problem with him doing so as long as he does it for all players." Again, this just reinforces what I think. If one referee does it for "all players," and another chooses not to do it for any, that creates a potentially uneven playing field.
     There's also the argument that the marshals did a lousy job getting the crowd out of the way, and that if they had cleared a wider space Johnson might have been able to recognize it as a bunker. Again, I say, "so what?" I will grant that it looks like the crowd control could have been better, but this is just one of the "hazards" of playing the 72nd hole in a major tournament.
     Also lost in this discussion is that Johnson got a tremendous break with his lie. If he had found himself in a deep footprint in the bunker and not allowed relief, I would likely be a little more sympathetic. According to the TV announcers, Johnson hit his drive some 40 yards to the right of where he was aiming. He was way outside the limits of where he could have been expected to have a reasonable lie. If it weren't for the crowds, he might have been in knee-deep fescue. Or if he had hit into a "properly maintained" bunker, he might have found himself plugged behind a deep lip. Fact is, he got a huge break, a lie he didn't really "deserve," and failed to take advantage by committing a huge mental blunder.
     It's also interesting to note that announcer Jim Nantz recognized Johnson as being in a bunker and identified it as such on the air (hat tip: Free Drop):



And if you watch the video above, and look where Johnson's ball is, it's hard to imagine that it didn't even occur to him that he might be in a bunker. Again, a mental error of monumental proportions.
I mentioned Nicklaus above, in the context of it being hard to imagine him ever making such a mental blunder. But the fact is that a young Nicklaus did once screw up in a major, in a way that may have ultimately cost him a chance at the title. In the famous 1960 U.S. Open at Cherry Hills, Nicklaus, then a 20-year-old amateur, was paired with the legandary and intimidating Ben Hogan for the final two rounds. Late in the final round, Nicklaus found a ball mark between his ball and the cup on a short putt. He wasn't sure if he was allowed to fix it (he was) and was too afraid, in Hogan's presence, to ask him or anyone else if he was allowed. He missed the putt, and it rattled him enough that he fell apart a little bit after that.
     Johnson is young, just 26 – which is very young to have contended so seriously in two majors in the same year. Everyone marveled how he bounced back from his final-round collapse at Pebble Beach in June. And Johnson himself says he's already moved on from his crushing loss at Whistling Straits. And that's great. A demeanor like his can be a great help in playing great golf. But you also have to wonder if his laid-back style – some would call it "lack of intensity" – will hinder him in clutch situations.
     The greats of the game are at their mentally sharpest in clutch moments. So far, Johnson has not demonstrated this trait. He'll need to if wants to make the leap from being a highly-talented young player who's won a few times to one of the elite players in the game.
     He has the talent. Only time will tell whether his major experiences this year will make him or break him.


UPDATE: Regarding crzsabas's comment below, please enjoy this word from the e-Trade Baby (a.k.a. "Nigel"?) himself:





UPDATE 2: Here is a good article at golfdigest.com talking with David Price, the PGA rules official, about what happened at 18.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Casual Water

This is the scene The Whiffler arrived home to after work tonight. A narrow band of torrential rainstorms moved through the Milwaukee area – the LONG way – right about 5:00. I took this picture from next door, standing in at least two feet of water, because I had to park up the street since the water was so deep. There was already one car stalled in the water ahead of me.
All in all, we got off pretty easy. A few inches of water in the basement, which has already receded. And the good news is we think it's just water, not sewage. It's still raining at 9:00 with more on the way, and as I watch the local news I can see there is lots of significant flooding all around us. My brother-in-law a few miles away (the one married to my sister-in-law who was asking about the caddies) apparently has 20 inches of sewage in his basement. So we're more concerned about others than about us. Prayers are appreciated all around. Thanks.

UPDATE 2: In case anyone is concerned, we've been dealing with some water damage in the basement so I haven't had a chance to put up a new post in a while. All things considered, we feel very fortunate it wasn't worse. New posts will resume in due time.

UPDATE: For a gallery of pictures from the storm that hit Milwaukee Thursday evening, go here. A number of the pictures (but not the one shown below) are from Nicolet High School, which is a half-mile from my house.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Intervention at the Old Course?

The Whiffler has been known to take shots at Sergio Garcia from time to time – primarily in regard to his occasionally sour disposition and his penchant for excuse-making. But there's no denying his talent (not to mention is flair) and I find it a bit of a shame that he hasn't capitalized more on his enormous potential. It's not like he hasn't accomplished anything; he has 19 professional wins around the world, including 7 on the PGA Tour.
     But in some ways, he seems to have fallen a long way since he nearly knocked off Tiger Woods in the 1999 PGA Championship. Back then he was a fountain of boundless energy and unbridled joy who seemed destined to step up and challenge Tiger for golf's top spot. Today he is a grouchy old man of 30 mired in a pitiful slump who seems to have lost all of that joy and much of that energy. He's no longer the "Best Player Never To Have Won a Major." Not because he finally won one, but because he's just not that good right now. (Image: Getty Images via golfdigest.com)
     But I love stories of redemption (which is why I'm still rooting for Tiger to turn things around, though more in his personal life than on the golf course). So I was intrigued to read this item in the "Local Knowledge" blog at golfdigest.com. Apparently, some people close to Sergio decided he needed a kick in the pants about his attitude and had a few words with him:
"You don't need to know, but it was people that I care about and people that care about me, and that's the important stuff," Garcia said when asked who spoke to him. "It's probably because it was the kind of day where I was really, really angry at myself, and it kind of made me feel a little better and probably realize things. I'm just hoping that I can keep doing the same things."
The Friday night "intervention" apparently had an effect, as the passionate Spaniard was reportedly much more upbeat following his Saturday round of 70 (after back-to-back 71s to start off the week). His eventual T14 finish was his best in a major since his tie for 10th at the 2009 U.S. Open. (Not a long stretch, I know, but his performance in majors has been very erratic for years.)
     Hopefully, he will be able to "keep doing the same things," whatever those may be. It seems like he's been around forever, but he's only 30. And the recent and long-overdue success of Justin Rose, another former boy-wonder who celebrated his 30th this year, is why we shouldn't give up on Sergio. If he can shed a few of his demons and gain some proper perspective, maybe he can yet become a great player.
     There's plenty of time left. And admitting you have a problem, as they say, is a big first step.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Open Championship Tap-Ins

A few stray shots on the recently concluded 2010 Open Championship at St. Andrews ...

Tiger's Putter. I found the whole Tiger Woods putter drama fairly interesting. On one hand, it probably wasn't that big a deal, because his new Nike Method putter was very similar to his old Scotty Cameron Titleist model – which he'd use to win 13 of his 14 majors. The new one no doubt had been set up to feel as much like the old one as possible; the difference being the "hotter" face on the Nike to get the ball moving a little quicker on the slow St. Andrews greens. But to me the bigger surprise was not the switch but the switch back on Sunday. It made me wonder two things: 1) Had Nike been pressuring Tiger at all to switch to a Nike putter? As I understand it, Tiger's club contract allows him some flexibility with club choices. But it's not hard to imagine something like this coming from Nike, either stated of implied: "Tiger, we stuck with you through all of this, now it's your turn to do something for us." 2) Conversely, how did Nike feel about him abandoning it after three rounds? After all the ballyhoo, they could not have been too happy.
     More significantly, you have to wonder if Tiger's putting switcheroo is a sign of desperation. Could Tiger's putting stroke be starting to abandon him – for good? It's astonishing how many all-time great golfers had their putting strokes go south at some point – or at least not be what they once were. Palmer, Hogan, Watson, and Snead come immediately to mind. Lower on the list are guys like Singh and Langer, who try all kinds of different methods to regain their putting touch. It's been easy to think of Tiger as being immune to such "human" frailties. But, as Joe Posnanski (one of the most consistently thoughtful writers on all things Tiger) writes, Tiger may be closer to descending back to earth than a lot of people are willing to admit.

UPDATE: A little more on Tiger's putter saga from David Dusek at golf.com here (in which the author, among other things, briefly addresses the "conspiracy theory" posed above about Nike's role in the switch. In short: He doesn't buy it).

Rory's Roller-coaster. What to make of Rory McIlroy? For one, I just love the fact that he still has never shot in the 70s at the Old Course – it's just that one of those non-70s rounds is now an inglorious 80. His 63 on Thursday was very impressive. Yes, it was shot in extremely benign conditions, but you still have to hit the shots and make the putts. And he bested the field by two strokes with his major championship record-tying score. As impressive as he was on Thursday, he looked just as lost in the high winds on Friday. But he showed a lot by bouncing back with 69-68 on the weekend to finish tied for third. Makes you wonder if anyone has ever finished so high in a major with an 80 on the card.
     And speaking of benign conditions ...

St. Andrews without Wind. It really was amazing how easy the course looked on Thursday morning. It was tempting to think that maybe St. Andrews has been "outgrown" by the caliber of today's players and the level of today's technology. I don't think that's the case. It seems to me that it's really just a matter of the elements being an essential part of the Old Course experience. It played tough enough the rest of the week. And if they "tricked up" the course any more to guard against the windless onslaught, the course could get almost unplayable when the weather changes – which it can do at a moment's notice. It seems unfair that the guys who played Thursday morning had so much better scoring conditions than the afternoon group, but that really is just part of the game – especially in links golf. The ones who accept that – even embrace it – are the ones who will succeed (see: Watson, Tom). The ones who don't ...

Phil's Demeanor. I have to say I was disappointed in Phil Mickelson's performance. Not with his ball-striking so much as his attitude. He felt cheat by having to play in the bad afternoon weather on Thursday, but rather than shrug it off, do his best to look at it as an extra challenge instead of a tragedy, he seemed to pout his way around the golf course. He looked defeated before his was halfway through his first round. Again, see: Watson, Tom. Story goes (retelling from memory) that Watson's longtime caddie Bruce Edwards, who went to work for Greg Norman for a couple years later in his career, explained the difference between his two bosses this way: He said that if Norman would hit a perfect drive only to subsequently find his ball in divot, he would get upset and curse his luck. Watson, on the other hand, would say something like, "Watch what I can do with this shot!" It takes only looking at Norman's and Watson's respective records in majors to understand which approach is more effective. (Are you reading this, Phil?) Speaking of attitude ...

Louie Ooie. I'm not sure which was more impressive, Louis Oosthuizen's ball-striking (especially his driving) or his calm on-course demeanor. Everybody, myself included, seemed convinced that he was a "rabbit," one of those no-name early leaders who sets a torrid pace in the early going but then inevitably fades. But he surprised us all with an historic display of precision ball-striking and all-around good play. He won by SEVEN! That's huge. That's Tiger big. His win was no fluke (even though he did benefit from the benign conditions on Thursday morning). Only time will tell where he goes from here, but he's easy to like and easy to root for. And I love the little red dot that he has on his glove to think about when he's trying not to think about anything. You can bet you'll be seeing a few more red dots around the golf world in the near future.

Gary Player and the Claret Jug. Finally, I got a big kick out of a story told near the end of the ESPN telecast – I think by Mike Tirico – about the engraving of names on the legendary trophy. Back in the day, it was once the responsibility of the winner to have his own name engraved on the trophy (such as is the case with the legendary WLC traveling trophy). However, when Gary Player won it (likely either in 1974 or 1968, Tirico did not specify) he had his name engraved LARGER than the other names! Ever since, the R&A has taken the responsibility of engraving the names on the Claret jug. This story strikes me as one that could be apocryphal, but I want to believe it because it's so consistent with what I've written about Player previously: that even though by all accounts he's a warm, charming, gracious, and generous individual, his ego sometimes gets the better of him!

Monday, July 12, 2010

Stricker Week, Continued

The Whiffler is feeling a bit prescient this morning about predicting that Steve Stricker was primed to have a good week at the John Deere Classic, where he ended up coasting to a second consecutive win on Sunday. A lot of fireworks during the week, including a 54-hole PGA Tour scoring record following rounds of 60, 66, and 62. The most amazing stat of this birdie barrage? Stricker birdied every par-5 on the week, going 12 for 12 on the par-71 course. Through Saturday, he had only two 5's on his scorecard, and one of those came on a brain-fart missed two-footer for par on 9 (his 18th) on Friday. All the rest were 2's, 3's, and 4's. During those first three rounds he birdied exactly half the holes, 27 out of 54. (Image: AP)
     As usual, he was a little shaky on Sunday – he still hasn't seemed to figure out how to keep the throttle down with a big lead – but he held on for a comfortable two-stroke victory over the persistent Paul Goydos. All in all it was a very impressive performance. Whether he can take that with him to St. Andrews remains to be seen, of course, but if nothing else it makes him one to watch this weekend in Scotland. (It also validates The Whiffler's earlier prediction that Stricker would again win multiple titles in 2010.)
     Congratulations, Steve, on another fine victory and good luck at the Old Course!

Friday, July 9, 2010

Goydos vs. Stricker

Holy smokes! When I updated the post below saying that Steve Stricker would have his work cut out for him to catch Paul Goydos (who shot 59 this morning) and repeat as champion this week, I didn't think he would try to make it all up in one round! What a match that would have been, if Steve and Paul had been going head-to-head in match play. Perhaps it would have played out something like this (with the leader's score to-par in parentheses) ...

Thru 1: Stricker 1-up (-1)
Thru 2: Stricker 1-up (-2)
Thru 3: Stricker 1-up (-2)
Thru 4: All Square (-2)
Thru 5: Stricker 1-up (-3)
Thru 6: All Square (-3)
Thru 7: All Square (-4)
Thru 8: Stricker 1-up (-5)
Thru 9: Stricker 1-up (-5)

So as they make the turn and grab a lemonade in the clubhouse (with Stricker graciously picking up the tab), Stricker holds a one-hole advantage, having shot 30 to Goydos's 31.
      "Nice shooting, Paul," says Stricker, his eyes welling up with tears at the prospect of a thrilling back nine.
      "Not bad I guess," Goydos responds, rolling his eyes slightly, "for a broken-down old man with no shoulders."
     And the match continues ...

Thru 10: Stricker 1-up (-6)
Thru 11: Stricker 1-up (-7)

The gallery swells as the birdie barrage continues. Somewhere, Phil and Tiger are glued to their TV sets. Phil cheers them both on; Tiger ... plays video games.

Thru 12: All Square (-7)
Thru 13: All Square (-8)
Thru 14: Goydos 1-up (-9)

Goydos hits 3-wood, sand wedge to six feet on 14 to take his first lead of the day with a birdie! Serious buzz about a possible 59 begins to grow. "This is quite a match, don't you think, Paul?" Stricker offers as a means of mutual encouragement. "Pffft," snorts Goydos, a.k.a "Sunshine," who once described himself as "the crust" of the PGA Tour.

Thru 15: Goydos 1-up (-9)
Thru 16: Goydos 1-up (-10)
Thru 17: Goydos 1-up (-11)

"This is surely the greatest game ever played!" declares legendary scribe Bernard Darwin from beyond the grave. "Even better than Ouimet defeating Vardon and Ray in 1913!"
     Inspired, other departed greats of the game begin to weigh in:
     "I expect someone's about to shoot a 59 -- Lord willin', of course," says Byron Nelson.
     "Thes is as braw a roon ay golf as i've ever seen – an' frae tois braw gentlemen ay th' gam," adds Old Tom Morris.
     "Jolly good, I say!" echoes Harry Vardon.
      "You know, I think that's the first time I ever birdied this hole," says Ben Hogan, who seems a bit too involved in his own Heavenly game at the moment.

A rousing ovation erupts for the combatants as they approach the 18th tee -- which quickly turns to a reverent hush as Goydos lines it up. He needs a birdie for 59, but the match still hangs in the balance. Goydos swings and finds the right side of the fairway on the 476-yard par-4. He'll have 177 yards to the front-left pin. Stricker steps up and drives it about 10 yards past Goydos, also on the right half of the fairway.
     Goydos is away, and drills a 7-iron to seven feet. He'll have that for 59 and to win the match – unless Stricker can hole his 160-yard approach. Stricker pulls what looks like a 9-iron – and nearly jars it! He'll have just over two feet to tie if Goydos misses. But Goydos calmly rolls it in to become, at 46, the oldest player to shoot 59 on the PGA Tour and win the match 1-up. And Stricker taps in for 60. Certainly the lowest pair of scores ever recorded in a single match.
     "Well played, Paul," Stricker sniffs, the tears flowing freely now. "Well played."
     "Thanks, Steve," Goydos answers. "Today was a nuclear bomb. I don't know where it came from. If I knew that, I wouldn't be able to touch it."
     Somewhere, Al Geiberger, Chip Beck, David Duval, and Annika Sorenstam are raising a toast – and wondering just what the heck Goydos means by that.


Update: I love this quote from the 5'-9" Paul Goydos: "Most people try to shoot their age. I shot my height." (From the Orange County Register, via golfdigest.com.) What's ironic is that Stricker, who is listed at 6'-0", also shot his height that day! (I love weird stats like that.)