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Archive: July 2008

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July 31, 2008

The Method to Mickelson's Maddening Set Composition

Posted at 3:42 PM by David Dusek

No one was bad-mouthing Phil Mickelson when he won at Augusta National in 2006 using two drivers. He was a revolutionary at Winged Foot for adding a 64° wedge (well ... until... you know)  and cunning at Colonial for going with five wedges.

Then, Lefty took a lot of heat at Torrey Pines for not using a driver. His thinking was that going with a strong 3-wood would mean he'd find the fairways more often, offsetting the sacrificed distance. But missing all those fairways created a double whammy; Mickelson had to not only hit from the rough, but needed longer clubs to reach the greens.

So how does he decide which clubs get to see the course each week?

"Sometimes when we just play a course we realize we haven't used a certain club," Mickelson said Wednesday during his press conference before the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. "Other times it'll be a computer program that we'll use to identify what element of the game is more important."

Pelzmick_300 According to Mickelson, Dave Pelz (right with Mickelson) developed the software he uses, and it's taught him something very interesting.

"If you increase any statistical category 10 percent across the board, it lowers scores. Okay, 10 percent fewer putts obviously lower scores. But 10 percent more greens, 10 percent closer to the hole, 10 percent more fairways, every one lowers scores except longer driving distance. Longer drives does not equate to lower scores on any course in America except one. There's one golf course in America where 10 percent longer driving equates to lower scores, and what would you think it would be? Augusta National."

So the next time you play Augusta National, feel free to grip it and rip it. And when a guy in a green jacket asks you what's with the John Daly impression, tell him Mickelson said it's okay.

(Photo: Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)

July 30, 2008

Does the PGA Championship need more breathing room?

Posted at 11:00 AM by David Dusek

There were 59 days between the final round of the Masters and the first round U.S. Open this year, and 31 between the fourth round at Torrey Pines and the first round at the British Open.

So why does the turnaround between the British Open and the PGA Championship, the season's final major, have to be so fast? This year, it's a scant 17 days, with a World Golf Championship event squeezed in between.

Stuart Appleby, who is playing this week at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, said on Tuesday, "I would personally like to see the PGA another two to four weeks later." He went on to say, "We wait for the Masters so much, then we have a nice break 'til the [U.S.] Open, and then we get to the [British] Open, and only a handful of weeks later, really, and then we jam in the PGA sort of very, very close. I'd ideally like to see them spaced out relatively evenly. But then you might be clashing with TV ratings in other sports, so there is a TV functional reason why."

Starting the first Sunday in September, the NFL will cast a huge shadow over every other sports broadcast. Baseball may be our national pastime, but you don't want to get between a football fan and his TV, and, evidently, neither does the PGA. Beyond programming considerations, there are the Fed Ex Cup Playoffs, and this year the Ryder Cup, to work into the schedule before October.

What do you think of the schedule? Should golf's organizing bodies work together to space out the majors and playoffs more evenly, or is the rapid-fire string of big tournaments a great way for golf to stay relevant as U.S. sports fans turn their attention to football?

July 27, 2008

Shark Bites from the Vault

Posted at 12:50 PM by John Garrity

TROON, SCOTLAND –- Greg Norman birdied five of the first seven holes this afternoon at the Senior British Open, reminding old-timers of his six-birdie start in the final round of the '89 Open Championship. It sent me running to the SI Vault for a long interview I conducted with the Shark in the autumn of 1991. Specifically, I wanted to take a second look at Norman's answers to questions about form, momentum, and the fabled "zone" of peak performance.

"The thing with golf," Norman told me at the time, "is it's like a cat chasing its tail. You're never going to catch it. The day you think you've got your swing down pat, something goes awry and you've got to go back to the driving range, back to square one. That's one reason why I love the game so much. It's the soul-searching and the never-ending search for the perfect swing. Nobody's ever going to achieve the perfect swing, but you get those moments where you can put a golf ball within a foot from 180 yards away. That's a very unique time."

"How would you describe that feeling," I asked.

"There's this inner calm you get. Nobody's going to break your concentration, and it's like you're flowing along -- you don't feel the ground. You pick up the golf club and it feels like you're milking it. The swing feels like it takes five seconds, when it really takes 1.2. That's what the game is all about, that feeling."

"How long can you sustain that feeling?"

"One shot, maybe. Yeah, 'cause the next shot is a different situation."

For more of my Q&A with Norman, take the stairs down to the Vault and tell the clerk that Garrity sent you.

July 25, 2008

British Writers Wowed by Wichita

Posted at 3:49 PM by John Garrity

TROON, SCOTLAND –- I’m suddenly the go-to guy for British writers covering the Senior Open Championship at Royal Troon. The number one question: “What do you call somebody from Kansas?”

“A Kansan,” I tell them without hesitation.July25_watson_600x446

“Where’s the windy bit?” asks the writer for The Scotsman. “Is it the whole state, or more toward the west?”

“I’d say central to west,” I reply, drawing on my long tenure as a licensed Kansas Citian. “You’ve got the Flint Hills, which is tallgrass prairie, and then you’ve got the flatlands out west where they grow winter wheat. The wind can really howl out there.”

“Where’s Hutchinson?” asks the man from The Daily Record.

“Near Wichita.” I throw in a freebie: “Lots of grain elevators.”

Why am I in demand? Because our second-round leader, Bruce Vaughan, is from Hutchinson, Ks., and one of his closest pursuers, Tom Watson, lives on a farm pond in Stilwell, Ks. So naturally the local writers want to know if the film version of The Wizard of Oz can be relied upon for pertinent details of Kansas life.

“It’s spot on,” I tell them, “except for that black-and-white business. Kansas is more sepia-toned until winter sets in, and then it’s battleship gray. You don’t get much color until early summer, when the grasshoppers arrive in great clouds and devour everything.”

The Brits take all this in and tap away merrily on their keyboards. If they ask me directly, I’ll have to confess that I am not a Kansan myself, but more of a … well, a Missourian. I can reach Kansas from my house with a driver and 9-iron, but my tax dollars go to Jefferson City, Mo., and my Border War loyalties go to Mizzou. But I see no need to make that distinction to my new friends, who are treating me like Alistair Cooke.

Watson, meanwhile, turned his post-round press conference into a seminar on the Kansas wind. “Wichita and Oklahoma City are the two windiest cities in the United States,” he said, sounding very convincing, “and Hutchinson is not too far from Wichita. That’s where T. Boone Pickens wants to put all those windmill farms and use up all of the natural gas so we can turn energy consumption to different sources.”

The writer on my left leaned my way and murmured, “Who is T. Boone Pickens?”

“A club pro,” I replied.

The Brits are writing on deadline, so I don’t have the heart to break it to them that Tom Watson is actually a Missouri native and a graduate of Pembroke-Country Day School, a Missouri institution. I’ll save that bit of trivia for some tournament where Watson shares the leader board with Hale Irwin -- the pride of Joplin, Mo.

Before I gave them “Kansan,” by the way, one of the Brits guessed out loud with “Kansites.”

I like it.

(Photo: Phil Inglis/Getty Images)

Shark Still Circling PGA Bait

Posted at 12:27 PM by John Garrity

TROON, SCOTLAND –- Still no word from Greg Norman on whether or not he’ll accept the PGA of America’s last-minute invitation to play in their Championship at Oakland Hills. “He has until Monday to decide,” his bride Chris Evert said this afternoon as she followed Norman in the second round of the Senior British Open at Royal Troon.July24_norman_600x393

“He has a lot to consider,” said Evert, who has faced a few roadforks of her own since retiring from competitive tennis. “What are your motives for playing? Do you play just because you’re flattered that you’ve been invited, or do you play because you feel good about your golf and really want to play?”

The answer, of course, can turn on a single putt that lips out … or tumbles in. As recently as May, Evert pointed out, her part-time-golfer hubbie was a stroke out of the lead with two holes to play in the Senior PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club. “Everybody’s saying it’s great, he’s back!” Evert said. “But then he goes double-bogey, bogey, and it’s, ‘Do I really want to do this?’”

The mood pendulum swung strong the other way last week at Royal Birkdale, where the 53-year-old Norman thrilled the world –- and himself -- with his T-3 finish in the Open Championship. And now it’s swinging back again at Royal Troon, where the Shark made the turn at +6, nine strokes off the lead of Bruce Vaughan and John Cook.

“I’ll give my opinion, but it’s entirely his decision,” Evert said of the PGA invite. “If he wants to play, I want him to play. I just want him to be happy.”

(Photo: Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)

Andrew Giuliani meets the press at the driving range

Posted at 8:22 AM by Charlie Hanger

Duke_range Andrew Giuliani and his mother, Donna Hanover, met with reporters on Thursday at the driving range at Randall's Island. As he beat balls off a mat, he talked about his lawsuit against Duke, which accuses the university of dismissing him from the team without just cause and of dashing his hopes of becoming a pro. But it also emerged that he's seeking lifetime playing privileges at Duke's facilities. According to The Times:

In the suit, Andrew Giuliani is asking for damages and for the right to use Duke’s golf center for the rest of his life, as he said he was promised when he was recruited to play for the school.

While it looked like a very nice range at Randall's Island, especially by New York City standards, losing out on a neverending pass to the spread at Duke (above right) definitely seems worth going to court over. The school's Web site describes the practice facilities this way:

The practice and chipping greens total over 20,000 square feet of putting surface and are carefully maintained to match the speed of the greens on the course. You can really give your "short game" a great workout here! 

The driving range is also enormous, with more than 40 hitting stations. The Duke men's and women's golf teams have their own practice areas, so don't worry about being crowded!

(Photo: golf.duke.edu)

 

July 24, 2008

Mild Makes Wild at Royal Troon

Posted at 4:19 PM by John Garrity

TROON, SCOTLAND –- When does a 12-mph wind wreak more havoc than a 35-mph wind? When it’s coming from the wrong direction, that’s when. As the first day of play ends at the Senior British Open, the scores at Royal Troon are shocking. There are 34 rounds in the 80s, and the average score is almost six over par. Shades of last week’s Open Championship at Royal Birkdale, where gale-force winds led to similar scores.

But the conditions today are idyllic. It’s been sunny, warm and just breezy enough to keep the flags fluttering. But it’s not the prevailing wind. It’s a southeast current that has made Troon’s front nine, which is normally downwind, play unusually long. The inward wind is similarly bass-ackward, leading to some giant tee shots (Bernhard Langer smacked consecutive drives of 400 yards) and some gargantuan hole scores (17 sevens on the back nine, plus 5 eights and a nine).

“We got on the first tee today, and it was basically a new course for me,” said John Cook, who tied for third after shooting a 2-under-par 69. “I had never seen it with that south/southeast wind blowing. It kept me paying attention, that’s for sure, because I didn’t know quite where to go.”

Another American, three-time New England club-pro champ Kirk Hanefeld, checked in with a 69 of his own. “When we started this morning the wind was coming from the complete opposite direction,” Hanefeld said, “so everything was a little bit of a guess. It was very tough going out, on some of the easiest holes on the golf course, because of the wind direction. It made club selection more difficult than in any of the practice rounds.”

First-round co-leader Eduardo Romero, who bombed a 210-yard 9-iron to birdie the par-3 17th , said, “It’s unbelievable, downwind. And then also, the 16th hole. I had 280 yards [from the tee to the burn]. I laid up, I’m playing with 4-iron, and I go into the water, 280 yards! It’s crazy!”

Get used to it, guys. Tomorrow’s forecast calls for afternoon showers and southerly winds of 10 to 20 mph.

Norman off to slow start at Troon

Posted at 11:50 AM by John Garrity

TROON, Scotland -– Was it the south wind? Or was it the burden of expectations?

Greg Norman chose the former to explain his bumpy start at the Senior British Open. The Shark bogeyed five of the first eight holes at Royal Troon this morning and then failed to capitalize on his opportunities on the homeward nine, finishing at 4-over-par 75.

Norman_300 “I really got off to a poor start,” said Norman, who came to Troon as the favorite after stunning the world with his T-3 finish in last week’s Open Championship. “I never played this golf course in this wind before. I didn’t feel that confident with some of the tee shots, to tell the truth, and I hit it in a couple of divot holes, which didn’t make me feel too good. That was it, really.”

Norman played with defending champion Tom Watson and former Masters and U.S. Open champ Sandy Lyle. Both those golfers agreed that the warm southeast breeze was baffling, even if it never blew more than 10 or 15 mph. “We don’t usually play Troon with this type of wind,” said Watson. “That made it play completely differently than it did Monday and Tuesday.” Lyle, who matched the Australian’s 75, said that Norman had “a little bit of an aerie-faerie start. He looked a little impatient. But he eventually settled down and got some feel back in his game.”

Indeed, Norman birdied 13 and 18 and scared the hole a couple of other times on the closing nine. “I just had to hang in there and gut it out the best I could,” he said. “The ball just wasn’t rolling my way.”

For scores, visit europeantour.com.

(Photo: Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)

Monotony suits Watson at Troon

Posted at 11:09 AM by John Garrity

Watson_300 TROON, Scotland – “No shanks today.” That was the first thing out of Tom Watson’s mouth this afternoon as he briefed reporters on his 1-under-par 70 in the first round of the Senior British Open. The defending champion could have added, “No tops, skulls, chunks or whiffs, either,” but he didn’t mention any of those calamities yesterday, when he dropped the S-word 13 times in a single press conference.

Today, however, it was Watson’s shankless task to describe a round of unprecedented monotony, a round in which he hit all of Royal Troon’s greens in regulation. “How about that?” he asked. “I’ve never done that before. I don’t think I’ve ever hit 18 greens on Tour, EVER, in my life.”

Despite finding all those greens, Watson had only a few good birdie opportunities this morning, most of his putts being in the 20 to 30-foot range. “I wasn’t that close to the hole,” he conceded. “But I played a good round of golf today.”

The highlight of Watson’s round? Probably the eleventh hole, where a spectator collapsed. “The gentleman was a typical Scot,” said Watson, who went over for a look. “He said, ‘Quiet, they are trying to hit.’ He’s on the ground like this” –- Watson tilted his head and rolled his eyes back to simulate a dying man, gasping. “’Quiet, they’re trying to hit!’”

The afflicted Scot recovered quickly, Watson added, lest we think him heartless.

Anyway, it’s one good round down for the links-loving Missourian, who is trying to accomplish at Royal Troon what he has already done at Turnberry and Muirfield –- win the Senior British Open on a course where he won one of his four five Open championships. But Watson insisted that he looks neither backward nor forward at this stage of his life. He’s all present-tense –- as is Royal Troon, which plays no easier for former champions.

“This course, it takes,” Watson said. “If you hit it in the wrong places, it REALLY takes. You have to avoid those wrong places.”

And you have to avoid the shanks. But that goes without saying.

You’d think.

(Photo: Phil Inglis/Getty Images)

July 23, 2008

Norman Mulling PGA Invite

Posted at 8:49 AM by John Garrity

July21_norman_600x399 TROON, Scotland –- To play or not to play, that is the question. The PGA of America, impressed by Greg Norman’s third-place tie in last week’s British Open, has invited the Shark to the PGA Championship at Oakland Hills outside of Detroit in two weeks.

“I have to make a decision,” Norman said this morning at Royal Troon, site of the British Senior Open, which starts tomorrow. He has until Thursday to make the call, according to the Associated Press.

A no brainer? Not exactly. Norman has already committed to next week’s U.S. Senior Open at the Broadmoor Resort in Colorado Springs. If he adds the PGA to his dance card, that will be four straight weeks of competition for a 53-year-old bloke with a dodgy back and a global business empire to run.

“I have to be careful,” he said. “I can’t go out there and just pound golf balls and pound golf balls.”

Norman also has to consider the fact that his PGA appearance might be anti-climactic because American tournament courses have little in common with the relatively short and windy Royal Birkdale links.

“To go to a behemoth like Bethpage Black [site of the 2002 and 2009 U.S. Opens] would be more of a mountain to climb,” Norman said. “7,700 yards, heavy rough. I’m strong, but my fingers are not as strong as they used to be. And as soon as you start pushing the golf course to 7,600 yards, it starts to compound the problem a little bit.”

In other words, he might like to sit on his current peak for a while, just to enjoy the view. Norman has gotten more than 500 e-mails and texts since the weekend, many of them from tournament players of a certain age.

“Well, it’s inspirational,” said Sam Torrance, the former European Ryder Cup captain. “I mean, it was the performance of a lifetime, a 53-year-old man leading the Open with nine holes to play. Looked like he turned the clock back 25 years, to be honest.”

The irony, of course, is that Norman went to Royal Birkdale simply as a tune-up for the two senior majors. “I’m warmed up, basically,” he joked before Wednesday's practice round at Troon. “Now I’ve got to step up.”

He’ll get his chance tomorrow at 9:20 a.m. local time (4:20 a.m. ET), when he tees off with defending champ Tom Watson and former Masters and British Open champ Sandy Lyle.

(Photo: John Biever/SI)


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