This year is considered “fifty years of Hope” and over two million dollars were distributed in 2008 to charities through the Classic event, but even so, the top fifteen PGA Tour golfers are MIA, most with no reason as to why this tournament is not worthy of their support.
Once distinguished as golf’s best celebrity pro-am event with comedians ranging from Jackie Gleason to Jack Lemmon picking up the sticks for charity, the “Hope” seems to have lost a bit of its glamour and dimension. Utilizing Arnold Palmer as celebrity host (perhaps because he won the inaugural event) and, for the most part, only being able to conjure up a few old-time has-beens with some notables like Dan Quayle, Kurt Russell and Sterling Sharpe, I wonder when Tim Finchem will stand up for events of such illustriousness and not leave it up to freedom of choice? Can the PGA Tour impose a ruling to force more top-name golfers into faltering events?
Arnold Palmer recently mentioned, “I used to spread my tournament appearances so that I never missed a tournament more than two years in a row,” but that was back in the day when guys were living paycheck-to-paycheck, not in this era where the top-100 golfers earn over $1 million per year. Also, events like the Bob Hope Classic were special and players would scramble to get a place in the field seeking publicity and possibly the status of being a winner or even having a top-ten finish.
To try and keep golfers interested in the “Hope", the tournament has even added the private Nicklaus venue, because guys like Phil Mickelson and Pat Perez voiced disapproval over the Classic course, but that has only lassoed in a few guys like Tim Clarke. Big names like Mickelson have not budged.
I just wonder if beloved Bob Hope mainstays such as the Classic and even the USO Tour will eventually become relics with a lack of consideration for the consequences?
Should fans even care whether or not another tournament bites the dust or are there simply too many events glutting the PGA Tour season? Unfortunately, for every event that fails, no matter how insignificant they may be to those who choose not to attend, the only ones that will suffer are those who depend on the charities receiving the funds.
This week Golf for Beginners wonders why Phil Mickelson has chosen the FBR Open as his season opener (we already know why Vijay Singh and Tiger Woods are not playing at this time). We also tell you how to pierce the wind utilizing your driver and offer a few quotes from golf’s greats.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
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Although Zach Johnson created excitement at the Sony Open winning by a stroke against Toms and Scott, it was fan favorite Tadd Fujikawa whom the cameras followed with the same fervor as when Michelle Wie played here.
And why not? Both Hawaiian teenagers have caused quite a stir with solid length off the tee, hustling to create opportunities to keep them in the game. Wie’s claim to fame to date has been her numerous exemptions with slim success into men’s events while Fujikawa has earned his way in, with congratulations flowing from guys like 2007 Masters winner Johnson who consider Tadd, “borderline phenom.”
Michelle Wie, once considered a “phenom", has finally taken the necessary steps to ingratiate herself with the LPGA Tour, hoping to reinvent herself and get the fans behind her once more. It is nice to see her name listed in the roster. There were huge crowds following Tadd this weekend, hoping to see the short, stout-framed teen make the cut and put pressure on the leaders.
With the season-opening LPGA event in Turtle Bay and Michelle faring well out of the gate, Wie could easily make this combo a one-two Hawaiian punch!
Kidzworld.com thinks these two would make a great couple. “Perhaps he’ll hit a growth spurt and she won’t wear heels?”Aside from a blatant man/woman distinction, Golfchannel.com jokingly calls this a “game of inches” noting that Fujikawa almost shot his height this weekend, 62, which would be easier for Wie to do on any given day considering par is a very likely score.
This week we discuss the Fujikawa/Wie phenomenon as well as offer an easy drill from Jim Flick which could help to relax you before a round of golf.
We also talk about the 3-Trak technology behind About Golf high-tech indoor simulators and the PGA Tour’s agreement to partner with this innovative leader. With Immersive Play Technology, the PGA Tour hopes that the average golfer will soon be able to actually feel as if they are on golf courses once only available to professional golfers or amateurs with plenty of bucks to spend. But I ask, while in this simulator, can you flip grass into the air to determine the wind direction?
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes. Nextel/Sprint cell customers type http://www.mymbn.com/podcast/ in your browser and click on “sports casts". Our station number is 1955.
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With the feature golf story of 2008 being knee surgery for Tiger Woods, it seems almost ironic that, just after winning the Chevron World Challenge, Vijay Singh would be in a similar predicament. Singh claims that he was hurt during the event but obviously didn’t know the extent of his injury.
Waiting for Tiger to arrive at the podium, Vijay cajoled, “Tiger, take your time. Don’t come back too early. In fact, take a year off.” Isn’t Singh aware of the saying, “be careful what you wish for?”
It is said that Singh is looking at a recovery time of about five weeks which puts a comeback a bit closer to the Masters Tournament than should be attempted. I know that it took much longer for my husband, who underwent similar surgery, to be 100% so I doubt that Vijay, even with his ménage of sports trainers, will be in tip-top form.
Following in Tiger Woods’ footsteps, in this case, is not necessarily a good thing for Singh as the past several years of developments have kept Singh on Tiger’s tail. In 2003 it was Vijay who took the money spot on the PGA Tour away from Woods by almost a million dollars (of course Singh played a third more tournaments than Tiger in order to accomplish this feat.) In 2004 Singh dethroned Woods at the top of the World Rankings, if only for the single year when Tiger battled back.
More recently Tiger won the inaugural FedEx Cup, Singh rallied to take the second cup, both accomplishing their respective goals in similar gung-ho fashion.
Also, did you know that Vijay Singh’s name means “Victorious Lion"? Quite a coincidence to Tiger Woods’ moniker!. However, in the battle of tiger versus lion, it is theorized that the tiger would be victorious under most conditions.
This week we not only discuss the departure of Vijay Singh but the return of both Tiger Woods and Annika Sorenstam-McGee. Wait a minute, didn’t the LPGA superstar recently retire?
Also, in honor of the return of the PGA Tour to Hawaii, we offer a drill to help with the “aloha shot”.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes. Nextel/Sprint cell customers type http://www.mymbn.com/podcast/ in your browser and click on “sports casts". Our station number is 1955.
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Fear not Bill Gates! Tiger Woods will not topple the richest man in the world off of his pedestal! Tiger would require about $57 billion in order to achieve this goal but he is certainly on his way! It has been reported that Woods, even with a bum knee and attending only six golf tournaments this year has made (both on and off the course) an estimated $117 million, bringing his total earnings to just under $900 million.
If Tiger plays equally as well in 2009 as he did last season and picks up another sponsor to offset the $50 million loss of his General Motors contract, there is the possibility that Woods could crack the $1 billion mark by the end of the year.
Even if Woods barely grazed the billion dollar ceiling, it is improbable that he would join Gates on the Forbes 400 as “the price of admission … is $1.3 billion for the second year in a row.” Heads up, George Steinbrenner, the Tiger is on your tail!
Prediction as to how Tiger Woods will climb the ranks of the world’s richest humans? His “mini-tour” will become the place where the top golfers play for high purses, turning the PGA Tour into a shell of its former self.
While Tiger is busy building golf courses and instituting himself as the harbinger of a new age in sports, John Daly is complaining that this is the “lowest point” in his life. At one point, Daly had enough money to gamble away some $50 million but now the US PGA Tour has suspended John, forcing him onto the European Tour to play in their events.
Daly, who has dived to an unimpressive 736 position in the world rankings, should be grateful for this new opportunity to “reinvent himself". Unfortunately, I think the European Tour would be more appreciative if John would continue his antics across the pond. The Australian Tour offers him a pittance, equivalent to about $50,000 of flights and accommodations (and probably all of the beer that he wants) and, in exchange, receives about $3 million in publicity that they certainly would not have had otherwise!
This week, Golf for Beginners talks about Tiger Woods’ ranking both on and off the course as well as John Daly’s opportunity for a change of pace. We also offer a few golf drills to practice during the cold of winter.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
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Photo Credit: © Smh.com/AP, stopmikelupica.com
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Recently, a former SWAT team cop from Los Angeles won the golf RE/MAX World Long Drive Championship. The nearest competitor lost by only a few yards in windy conditions and, where some of the challengers didn’t seem to mind the outcome, a few had problems with it. Why, you may ask?
By the way, I am not talking about newly crowned RE/MAX long drive champion Jamie Sadlowski, who, with his 160-pound frame, defeated guys almost twice his size with great timing and a convincing hockey-esque style slap shot. Instead, this blog focuses on the controversy surrounding 55-year-old Lana Lawless, a 175-pound transgender who once weighed in at 245-pounds and was considered by law enforcement peers to have a very “tough and mean exterior” as Lawless admits. Lawless took women’s RE/MAX honors this year after a narrow defeat at last year’s semifinals.
Clubhead speed, not power alone, made the difference in the case of Sadlowski who carried his drive 400 yards. Lawless claims that her muscles have atrophied with the help of drugs that stem the flow of testosterone and that she is, for all intents and purposes, more woman than man. Sure she had drives of over 300 yards but she only bested her nearest opponent, 21-year old former long drive champion Phyllis Meti, by four yards.
About three years ago the Ladies Golf Union, which oversees that British Open, allowed transgenders to compete and Mianne Bagger took them up on their offer, becoming the first transgender since Renee Richards to play a professional sport. Looking at Bagger’s 2008 stats, she appears to be a solid player with no advantage over the other players in the field but instead seems to fit right in to the middle of the pack.
The question is then, is there a definitive advantage of transgenders over “real” women and should transgenders be allowed to compete against their “peers"?
Three-time world champion Sean “The Beast” Fister said, “It’s not an apples-to-apples deal. Men and women are different.” Former women’s world long drive champion Lee Brandon added, “if a woman has the knees, hands and feet of a man, she has genetic real estate that is more gifted.”
Fox Sports polled the internet asking if it is fair for women who used to be men to compete as women and, out of almost 90,000 respondents, the answer was an overwhelming “No".
Where the average person may have trouble accepting transgenders into the fold, the media has said, “Vive la difference!” with ABC-TV leading the way featuring characters in both “Ugly Betty” and “All My Children". Of course transgenders don’t have to physically compete in this platform so the question of athleticism still remains but, as long as proper procedures and guidelines are followed to ensure that transgenders do not have an unfair advantage, I think they should be allowed to compete. However, for those men who cannot adequately compete alongside their own gender and choose to make the switch solely for one-upmanship over the fairer sex, think again. Is the mandatory onsite testing really worth it?
I guess we won’t be seeing “Philomena” Mickelson on the LPGA Tour any time soon!
This week on the Golf for Beginners show we not only talk about transgenders making their way onto the sports scene but also offer some great golf tips courtesy of Butch Harmon.
There is still time to get your golfer a gift! Check out our Holiday golf gift-giving guide!
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Photo Credit: © House of Forged-Whiteshaft, FoxSports.com
Don’t tell Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods that the country is in a recession and that the rest of the world is suffering as well because neither will believe you. Both golfers have moved forward with plans to build high-end communities in spite of the downward trend perhaps hoping that the number of “haves” will be enough to pave the way for future development.
Nicklaus, for example, has just entered into an agreement with Grupo Viveros to create a private town complete with two hotels, marina, airstrip, hangars, two hundred fifty high-end villas as well as a Jack Nicklaus signature golf course on a currently uninhabited island off the coast of Panama. Oceanfront lot prices start at $530,000.
Tiger Woods is working on courses in Dubai, Punta Brava and in the high Carolina area where two of Jack Nicklaus’ Signature golf courses are already situated alongside of courses designed by Gary Player and Tom Fazio.
Woods mentioned recently during his tour of the Punta Brava site, “My goal is to design a collection of amazing golf courses around the world.” Following in Nicklaus’ footsteps as he has chosen to do will be a lifelong venture as the Golden Bear currently has 337 courses open for play in 33 countries with 55 golf courses and projects under construction in 45 different countries.
Will Tiger Woods find filling the shoes of Jack Nicklaus an easy feat and will he be able to conquer all of Nicklaus’ accomplishments both on and off the golf course? Nicklaus recently stated that he doesn’t want Tiger to break his records. Do you blame him? Just ask kids today if they ever heard of the Beatles and about their contribution to music. Nicklaus just doesn’t want to fade into obscurity.
As for the race for “best golfer ever", Woods may well be on his way to beating Nicklaus’ record but, with a recurring bum knee thrown into the equation, only time will tell.
In this week’s Golf for Beginners broadcast, we discuss “King” Nicklaus atop his huge empire and Tiger Woods’ need to build equally large scale private communities for the wealthy. With the assistance of Joan King we also identify “the Zone” and discuss ways that the average golfer can use the mental game to their advantage.
Don’t forget to check out our Holiday golf gift-giving guide!
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
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This podcast is supported by Florida Golf and Travel, 1-800-514-5131.
Photo Credit: NY Daily News/Haynes/Getty
If you have ever taken an extended leave from your job, you also factor into it that there will be a mess to clean up when you return. Such is the case with Tiger Woods as his “brand” is taking a hit.
Woods’ Gillette commercial was a flop so said the British, Buick (GM) decided to end his contract, an outburst from his caddy, Steve Williams, required damage control and today, Padraig Harrington took the coveted GWAA Player of the Year Award. Team Tiger is showing cracks in the armor. What will it take to right the ship? The only solution is for Tiger Woods to get back to work, and soon, otherwise his next scenario could be that he loses his number-one spot on the PGA Tour.
In other news, the camera smashed by John Daly has been placed on eBay in the hopes that the alleged ’space invader’ will earn enough to purchase another camera. Should Daly have offered retribution after destroying the spectator’s property? So far neither Daly nor tournament officials have offered assistance but that doesn’t matter as the current bid is at $500 with interested parties lining up to “own a piece of this very controversial incident".
Golf for Beginners also reviews Callaway Golf Big Bertha Irons made exclusively for women. Forgiveness is key as i-brids are used in place of longer irons. Fat shots are no longer an option as the wider sole glides effortlessly on the turf. The set features distinct Callaway technology which translates into a lower center of gravity creating a higher launch angle and better trajectory to get the ball airborne. I think both male and female golfers can relate to this strategy. I played golf with a foursome that included three left-handed golfers. One player asked me to try the Big Berthas and effortlessly picked a ball clean with a five-iron off the turf with his first shot.
Don’t forget to check out our Holiday golf gift-giving guide!
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com and subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes.
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“Shiny Tech” courtesy of Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)”
This podcast is supported by Arizona Golf Packages, 1-866-444-0992.
Photo Credit: © Oldmencrying.com
“I finally feel like I really earned it!” claimed a relieved Michelle Wie after realizing that she had, in fact, secured a place on the LPGA Tour for the 2009 season. This time there was no exemption, no secure feeling that Wie would just arrive and everyone would cater to her every whim. Michelle was on her own and at the end of a grueling week it felt as liberating as “high school graduation".
Wie has clearly been offered the easy route throughout her career but that isn’t necessarily the best way to attain a goal. It can make you soft, easily distracted and can weaken your determination, as it did to Michelle, being given fifty-three exemptions over the past seven years as well as contracts through Sony, Nike and Omega.
Her drive was replaced with crybaby fits, deciding how best to leave an event and how to blame everyone but herself if the weather or the situation was uncooperative. She was young, claimed the media, urging golf afficionados to be patient and watch as she blossomed into maturity.
Now a new grown-up Wie is emerging, hoping that the ladies of the LPGA Tour who have scorned her in the past will be a bit more accommodating now that she has gone the proper route. She intends to work hard and is “looking forward to people having that high expectation of me.”
David Leadbetter made mention that Wie would stick with the LPGA Tour and would not participate in men’s events for at least a few years. Michelle countered his opinion by stating, “I still definitely want to pursue that.” It’s not a bad thing to want something but it is in Michelle’s best interests right now to concentrate on the task at hand; that is, making a name for herself on the LPGA Tour.
Carolyn Bivens attempted to maintain her composure mentioning some of the other great players who are going to improve the visibility of the 2009 LPGA Tour. Although Q-School medalist Stacy Lewis was prominently mentioned as she should be, and Michelle Wie’s name was deliberately left off until the end, it was understandable how Bivens must feel relieved that the new year should bring a bevy of deals to the ailing tour.
Perhaps Bivens, Leadbetter and Wie should take this quote to heart by Alexander Pope who stated, ‘Blessed is the man who expects nothing, for he shall never be disappointed’.
This week on our Golf for Beginners show we congratulate Michelle Wie on her LPGA Tour accomplishment with Barry cynically querying if PGA Q-School is next for the recent “graduate". We also have some great golf tips from the PGA website on how to drive the ball better and some unusual rules we found in the 2008-11 Golf Rules Quick Reference Guide.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes. Nextel/Sprint cell customers type http://www.mymbn.com/podcast/ in your browser and click on “sports casts". Our station number is 1955.
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Photo Credit: © Zimbio.com
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How many times have you received a golf gift from someone who has never played the game? Although well intentioned, you secretly think, “that’s another one for the junkbox!”
Never fear! Instead of tossing this year’s presents into an attic filled with useless golf accessories, download this week’s show onto your beloved’s iPod and give them an idea of what should really be stuffed into your stocking!
In addition to a great list of stocking stuffers from retailers such as Swing Reminders, Thumb Caddy and Fine Tune Golf, we also opine on a few interesting new products from some of the most popular merchandisers in golf.
For example, Callaway Golf has just introduced a fine, new set of golf clubs, the GEMS set, specifically designed for a beginner woman golfers game. The colorful GEMS set comes complete with a stand bag, Odyssey two-ball putter as well as a mix of i-brids and woods using state-of the-art design to get a higher handicapper’s golf ball airborne and moving forward! Pair these clubs with Callaway’s HX Pearl Golf Ball, also designed specifically for women, place under the Christmas tree and spend some great twilight moments with the one you love!
The hottest gifts this season are golf GPS systems and the newest and coolest one of those has got to be the uPro! A color screen with available “flyovers” makes you feel as if you are previewing the action from the blimp. In addition, their is no subscription fee and basic downloads are free. Try playing golf knowing the distance of your shots and you will dramatically improve your accuracy.
Every golfer needs to know the rules for when, not if, the ball gets into trouble. The easy-to-read, “2008-2011 Golf Rules Quick Reference Guide” is a bestseller because of it’s glossy, user-friendly illustrations. Most answers can be found without ever opening the guide and it’s available in over twenty languages!
This week’s Golf for Beginners broadcast is not complete without gifts for the golfer who could use the essentials! No duffer can have enough tees or golf balls, but listen to a few of the other gifts we have in mind and you will definitely say, “I should have thought of that!”
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
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Photo Credit: © uPro GPS, Callaway Golf
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Annika Sorenstam’s missed cut at the $1 million dollar ADT Championship resembles the 2008 LPGA season as a whole. As Sorenstam limped through the early rounds, a noticeably hurt Bivens on crutches did the same as she gave her “State of the Tour” address. Both were frustrated by their final tallies. Sorenstam definitely wanted to ace the finals and Bivens wanted to let everyone know that under her jurisdiction the LPGA was just dandy but neither could muster up the drive needed to do so.
The new season will show a loss of three tournaments (to 31) as well as a drop of over $5 million in prize money. To further the bad news, this year’s ending was lackluster at best as top golfers Sorenstam, Ochoa and Pressel all packed their bags early leaving the Asians to save face at the event.
To add insult to injury and add to the ineptitude of the LPGA Tour, Annika was randomly selected after her last event for a drug test after already passing one given to her last month. “Pathetic” mentioned Sorenstam’s fiancé, Mike McGee. “I don’t know what they’re trying to prove.”
Wonder Woman to the rescue! Now would be a great time for Michelle Wie to ace Q-School and revive the Tour! Bivens would be grateful for any light at the end of this tunnel.
Also in the spirit of giving thanks for no more Euro Tour events, Phil Mickelson will be back in the States playing in the LG Skins Game this weekend. No trophies, no standings, means no pressure and that Mickelson can let loose, showing fans why he is rated the number three player on the PGA Tour.
We will discuss all of the above news on this week’s Golf for Beginners broadcast as well as offer up how to play golf on automatic and how to hit your woods like a pro. The $1 million Kodak Challenge is also mentioned as we further talk about the company’s switch of funding from NASCAR to the PGA Tour.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com. Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes.
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Photo Credit: © Editor’s Blog, Golf Digest, Photo Credit: © Jamd.com
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Phil Mickelson has dropped out of the 2009 Race to Dubai because he said he doesn’t have enough time to dedicate to both the European and PGA Tours. With second-rate performances at the two opening Euro Tour events in China, Mickelson may have felt his chances of making an upward move were slipping deciding instead to get out early and “save face”.
Add Sergio Garcia’s leapfrog into second place in the World Rankings and that Tiger Woods may return for the 2009 PGA Tour season and Mickelson is probably more concerned with defending interests here at home than the struggle to climb atop yet another ranking system.
One slip at a time Phil, although Mickelson insisted, “I really don’t think about the world rankings right now very much.”
Go ahead Phil. Keep asserting that you’re not losing any sleep over your drop in the World Rankings and I’ll bet that, eventually, you’ll start believing it too!
As Barry and I watched the final round of the Barclays Singapore Open, it appeared evident with every failed putt that Mickelson would be relieved to be heading back to the States on his new fourteen passenger Gulfstream conveyance. Life can be really tough on the Tour!
Add to the above an article in the latest Callaway Golf Magazine written by the extremely outspoken Johnny Miller which mentioned, “Who wouldn’t relish the prospect of Tiger and Phil battling it out for individual gold at the Olympics” and the fuel was flamed for this week’s Golf for Beginners broadcast!
Whereas Miller states that golf has gone global, he also mentions that the two men fighting for gold honors would be two Americans…so where then has golf gone global? Also, if golf is approved as a summer sport, it would not be introduced until the 2016 games. Woods would be about forty years old and Mickelson would be about ready to join the Champions Tour. Now, where’s the fun in that, I ask?
Also, with guys like Phil and Tiger going after “gold” every week in the form of million dollar payouts and glimmery FedEx type trophies, an Olympic event would seem more like just another stop on the PGA Tour. Instead, listen to what Golf for Beginners has in mind if golf becomes an Olympic sport!
In addition, we talk about Lorena Ochoa’s belief that a lack of rhythm affected her quest to win her own Invitational. Rules taken from the glossy and easy-to-use Golf Rules Quick Reference Guide about embedded and damaged golf balls, are also featured.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes. Nextel/Sprint cell customers type http://www.mymbn.com/podcast/ in your browser and click on “sports casts". Our station number is 1955.
Click Here to receive our archived podcasts and 100’s of easy golf tips free!
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“Shiny Tech” courtesy of Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)”
This podcast is supported by San Diego Golf Central, 866-825-4094.
Photo Credit: © BBC Sport
Check out Thumb Caddy, an inexpensive training aid which helps keep hands in their proper position throughout the golf swing.
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It has been said that you can tell a good deal about a person by the way he/she plays golf, and former Presidents are no exception. Which of our Commanders, for example, exemplified the integrity of the game and which men have bent the rules in their favor?
In his book, “First Off the Tee: Presidential Hackers, Duffers and Cheaters From Taft to Bush", Don Van Natta Jr’s neatly organized categories helped define Presidential proclivities noting that more than just a few in the top job have “improved their lie” during a round.
Both Clinton and Nixon made it into the book’s “Hail to the Cheats” category with number forty-two often giving himself “billigans” and “Tricky Dick” often not counting wayward shots. FDR, Ford and Kennedy, on the other hand, were considered “purists.”
So, where does that leave President-elect Barack Obama?
According to a golf swing analysis by Top 100 Teacher Brady Riggs, Obama is a good study of preparedness however the outcome lacks aggressiveness, pushing his shots far left. Perhaps that makes the future president just like the “Average Joe"?
The category which President-elect Obama falls into will eventually become apparent as the story unfolds.
In addition to our assessment of Mr. Obama, we also discuss techniques for positive thinking from William Oliver’s new book, the “Law of Focus for Golfers”. A few fixes from his ebook, “Master the Mental Game of Golf” are also mentioned.
Kodak, the EWGA and a notable distinction for Turning Stone Resort round out our News summary.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes. Nextel/Sprint cell customers type http://www.mymbn.com/podcast/ in your browser and click on “sports casts". Our station number is 1955.
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Photo Credit: © USAToday.com, Alex Brandon, AP, LifeintheTrap.com
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The European Tour is sending a message to PGA Tour players, loud and clear, that a new era in golf is beginning with the 2009 season.
A new spruced-up tour, in which the European Order of Merit has been replaced with “The Race to Dubai” offers a $10 million pie at the end of the season with another shared purse after the season-ending Dubai World Championship.
Phil Mickelson may be defending this week at the first stop on the Euro Tour, the HSBC Champions in Shanghai, but guys like Anthony Kim and Camilo Villegas are ready to pounce. Villegas, for example, is not content to just play, he’s “definitely going there to win.” Mickelson, on the other hand, is hoping that swing changes he has been working on since 2007 will finally take effect. We discuss a few of these swing changes in this week’s show.
With players like Padraig Harrington, Sergio Garcia and Adam Scott working towards another FedEx Cup-like purse on the European Tour, how soon will it be before golfers like Anthony Kim “jump ship” entirely and shift alliances? Or, perhaps one day, the PGA Tour might be forced to “merge” with the European Tour forming one huge conglomerate. Then there would be no more “off-season", no more “silly season” and viewers would be able to watch their favorite golfers throughout the year!
As Garcia noted, “Some of the tournaments we play in the Middle East … are bigger than the ones they play in the U.S. You get good players there, so world rankings points increase. At the end of the day, that’s what the big players do it for.”
Of course, if Tiger Woods has any input, his new golf course in Dubai might just host one of these events. Woods’ foray into golf course design is yielding several new courses, possibly with a consideration towards building his own “mini-tour". It is conceivable that Tiger could one day be “tapped” as the head of this global Tour…perhaps aptly named the World Tour! Who knows…stranger things have happened!
We also review Thumb Caddy, an inexpensive training aid which helps keep hands in their proper position throughout the golf swing.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes. Nextel/Sprint cell customers type http://www.mymbn.com/podcast/ in your browser and click on “sports casts". Our station number is 1955.
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“Shiny Tech” courtesy of Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)”
This podcast is supported by Premier Golf, 888-439-1831.
Photo Credit: © OverseasPropertyMall.com
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China, food for thought?
In addition to keeping up with Russia and the U.S.A. with a newly developed missile system, China is also intent upon improving their visibility in the golf world and proving, as Annika Sorenstam said, that the LPGA is becoming a “global tour".
Shanshan Feng, the only Chinese player on the LPGA Tour (so far) believes that, “China can become another Korea for golf. I believe so. Maybe not now but in the future.” In order to familiarize China as a golf destination, Feng, in the final round this week, even wore a shirt with a red China map on it.
Go China! The Empire is alive and well. The force is definitely with them.
Don’t underestimate the growth of golf in Korea and Japan either, two countries who are hosting the ‘triple-play’ of this month’s venture into Asian territory. This past week, out of a sixty-three player field, two-thirds were of Asian descent with over fifty of the ladies appearing in the upper crust of the LPGA money list.
What does this mean for the LPGA Tour? Juli Inkster contends that, instead of forcing the girls to learn English (as was the intent of Ms.Bivens) and suspending them if they did not, perhaps a more subtle approach is needed.
Inkster’s thought is that an experienced golfer should play in their foursome to show them how it’s done. As the seasoned veteran mentioned, “If I get four Korean men in this pro-am, even though I don’t speak their language, I’m going to make it fun for them.”
And fun is the name of the game as Sorenstam learned during the pro-am. Even though an interviewer mentioned the men were “depressed” over the way Sorenstam hit the ball longer and straighter than they did, she managed to do what is done in every part of the world when it comes to golf…create business opportunites for herself on the course. Annika shared some of her “secrets” with the guys (one a big developer stated Sorenstam) in a possible exchange for the opportunity to build a course in Asian territory. As Annika divulged, she “was trying to throw my name into the pool, and we’ll see.”
Only time will tell if this will be good for the LPGA Tour. If sponsorships favor Asian interests, Korea, China and Japan could very well form their own mini-tour taking both American and Asian hopefuls with them by making purses more attractive and keeping the LPGA out of the loop.
The European Tour is starting to offer bigger prize money right now and PGA Tour stars like Phil Mickelson are gung-ho at the prospect. Only time will tell.
All I can say is thank goodness Michelle Wie is both Korean and American! She may keep the LPGA alive!
Golf for Beginners also gives sound advice about one of the most important parts of your swing, the wrist hinge.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes. Nextel/Sprint cell customers type http://www.mymbn.com/podcast/ in your browser and click on “sports casts". Our station number is 1955.
Subscribe to our newsletter!
Click Here to receive our archived podcasts and 100’s of easy golf tips free!
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“Shiny Tech” courtesy of Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)”
This podcast is supported by Arizona Golf Packages, 1-866-444-0992.
Photo Credit: © Seoul Sisters
In the battle between the tortoise (Morgan) and the hare (Wie), the latest results are in: Morgan Pressel has taken the lead!
With her second win on the Tour, Pressel has been making slow and steady progress in order to solidify both her position in the Rolex Rankings and as a serious contender in the LPGA. With a slew of top-ten finishes, a USA team win at the 2007 Solheim Cup and a pairing with Gulbis and Kerr to win the 2007 Wendy’s Three Tour Challenge under her belt, Morgan Pressel is pacing herself to become a long term player and fan favorite.
Morgan has even been hailed as an ambassador for Kapalua, a distinction of which I am sure miffs Wie. Golfworld.com’s 2009 Reader Survey listed Kapalua as the sixth best resort course in the world!
Michelle, instead, has tried to cut corners to superstardom, occasionally snubbing the LPGA Tour in favor of fast fame on the PGA Tour, but to no avail. Some of the “lifers” on Tour tried to offer advice, but Wie would not listen. I’ll even bet that Ms. Bivens in particular now regrets modifying LPGA directives so that Wie could have more exemptions. With title sponsors fading quickly, perhaps Bivens felt this was a chance for the LPGA to gain more ground? It didn’t work.
Tactics from Team Wie have backfired and the Big Wiesy is now forced to prove to the LPGA that she can make it as a contender while at the same time watching her exemptions and celebrity status evaporate. The “welcome mat” has been removed from several events such as the Ginn Tribute hosted by Annika Sorenstam and even on her home turf at the Sony Open in Hawaii!
But the race is not yet over. Wie will have the opportunity to mend fences by becoming a champion this December at Q-School.
Even so, sources say that Pressel will not give up her new Hawaiian celebrity status without a fight. I understand that a new event is being planned forcing both ladies into Hula and poi-eating contests! LOL
Could a new LPGA season of excitement be on the horizon?
Photo Credit: © http://lpga.kapalua.com, Minnesota Public Radio
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Sprawling mountain views surrounded Barry and myself as soon as we departed Albuquerque airport for a week-long golf vacation in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The closest we had been to seeing vistas like this was when we travelled through Red Rock Canyon in Nevada over fifteen years ago, as a side trip to Las Vegas.
The thin air first caught my attention as I climbed the stairs to our ‘casita’ in the newly opened Encantado Resort, a member of the Auberge family of upscale properties. The ‘room’ in which we stayed had the same effect as the altitude. Approximately seven-hundred square feet of comfort and cool Santa Fe style surrounded our senses, from the wood-burning fireplace to the original artwork on the walls, all welcoming us to take off our shoes and relax awhile. From the casita, we toured the Resort only to find the same upscale luxury throughout, from the Spa to the Lodge, with incomparable views and luxurious amenities.
During the week we were slated to play both Black Mesa and Paa-ko Ridge Golf Courses. An early snowfall closed Paa-ko Ridge to golfers (there were still a few stragglers in the dining room praying for a miracle) so we were a bit disappointed not to be able to play one of GolfDigest.com’s Reader’s choice awards for 2009.
Instead, we had two prime days of golf at Black Mesa Golf Club, and I’m glad we did as once just wasn’t enough in order to appreciate the creative masterpiece of Baxter Spann. “Each hole could have easily been a signature hole,” Barry mentioned, and that a comprehensive strategy is needed for each dramatic layout. Success at putting is a must: tricky greens and undulating fairways force you to decide where you want to place the ball.
Black Mesa is definitely not for beginners but the option of five different teeboxes allows a golfer to visualize the course from different angles making it worthy of several rounds of play. Stand at the tips, bring a camera and enjoy views of the Rio Grande!
I wanted a true Santa Fe experience and found one while dining at a charming, ninety-year-old retreat; Bishop’s Lodge. The food was superb and the staff gave us a tour of the property which includes a spa, skeet/trap range and, I understand, a stable filled with Palominos. Only about five minutes to town, I would certainly consider this Resort for our next stay!
During our vacation we did everything from making our contribution to the newest Casino complex, Buffalo Thunder, to watching buffalo roam and tumbleweeds roll, all while being surrounded by the Sangre de Cristo mountains. We played golf at a course that you can never tire of and I even got an on-course lesson from Tom Velarde, Director of Instruction at Black Mesa.
New Mexico is unique destination that travelers should see at least once in their lives. I now understand why it is called the Land of Enchantment! Brian Whitcomb, PGA of America President also agrees as he recently stated, “The truth is that golf in New Mexico is a gem.” The 42nd PGA Professional National Championship is set to take place at Twin Warriors and Santa Ana Golf Clubs and will be televised by the Golf Channel.
This week’s Golf for Beginners show talks about why you should visit Santa Fe, NM at least once and offers tips from our rounds as well as from Black Mesa’s Director of Instruction Tom Velarde. We also have plenty of pictures to show of Black Mesa (click here for front nine and back nine) and of our trip. Enjoy!
Note: If you cannot see the photos, just head over to the MySpace page below and locate ‘pics’ under my lead picture.
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes.
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Check us out on MySpace!
“Shiny Tech” courtesy of Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)”
This podcast is supported by Arizona Golf Packages, 1-866-444-0992.
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Please don’t say that Tiger Woods is becoming an elitist!
I always thought that Woods’ upbringing was middle-class Cablinasian , entering the sport at a bit of a disadvantage but now it appears to me as if Tiger Woods is becoming one of them…that is, corporate, blue-blooded American. Even his name, Tiger, seems much more of a terrific marketing ploy than Eldrick, a name in which his father tagged him after being saved by a South Vietnamese soldier during the war.
Woods believes, before even building his new golf course in Punta Brava, that it will rival Pebble Beach! Nattily clad at a press conference at the Bel Air Hotel in Los Angeles, CA, Tiger said, “When you get to No 12 it is similar to No 8 at Pebble Beach.”
Ah but there IS a difference between Pebble Beach and Punta Brava, dear Tiger. Pebble Beach, although woefully expensive to tee off from, is public and Punta Brava will be private and, as Woods mentioned, “safe".
Perhaps Woods is building up his new course as a way of building his high-end brand (as Tim McDonald believes)?
As anal as he is with his golf game, so is he with his golf course. Tiger Woods “walked three and a half hours on site and had to have surgery the next day,” mentioned Brady Oman, Flagship Group co-founder and one business partner in the deal.
Another surgery? Maybe el Tigre is tired of playing the game and is now resorting to, well, resorts? Despite a slumping economy, there are still plenty of wealthy individuals who would pay upward of $3 million dollars for a plot of land where Tiger plans to settle himself. Although Woods is ‘mum’ on his return, he has mentioned that he won’t be 100% until 2010!
Golf for Beginners also offers plenty of golf tips this week in addition to the Tiger Talk. We discuss offbeat and peculiar ways to get to the green. Do you always have to sink a birdie putt with a putter?
Send your golf questions and comments to golfforbeginners@worldgolf.com.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast through this RSS feed: http://feeds.worldgolf.com/stacy_solomon or through iTunes. Nextel/Sprint cell customers type http://www.mymbn.com/podcast/ in your browser and click on “sports casts". Our station number is 1955.
Subscribe to our newsletter!
Click Here to receive our archived podcasts and 100’s of easy golf tips free!
Check us out on MySpace!
“Shiny Tech” courtesy of Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)”
This podcast is supported by Premier Golf, 888-439-1831.
Photo Credit: © PETT
Source: Lexington Herald-Leader - Lexington, United States