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About moegolf

Moe is a narcotic golfer, father, and lover of golden retrievers, chocolate and well done fries. He plays the holes over in his head endlessly at night.

True Linkswear Walking Shoes

TRUE Tour-the original

These guys have done some serious research and engineering trying to create the perfect walking golf shoe.  Integrating some distinct ergonomic characteristics into these shoes they have succeeded in producing a comfortable walking shoe that competes in the street golf shoe category that has caught fire among walking aficionados since Ecco introduced the Freddie’s.

If you have self-esteem concerns when it comes to dressing for golf, these are not for you.  They do look like something your podiatrist would prescribe for a bunion problem.  But if you are a regular walker you owe it to yourself to at least find a store that has these and try them on in person to see if they are to your liking.  At a suggested retail of $150 they are very reasonably priced and they come in a wide array of color combinations.

The features and benefits of their True Barefoot Platform include the following, all of which are real and accrue benefit to someone who walks all the time.

-Lightest golf shoe on tour.

-Wide toe box that allows your toes to function individually.  There will be no crowded pigglies with these I can assure you.

-Flexible sole and cushioned footbed.  There is no stiffness in the bottom of these shoes and, as a result,  you get no foot strain or pain by the end of the 18 holes.

-“Ergo-Traction” tread maximizes surface contact and grip. Wide front sole and a grippy spikeless bottom works great in all conditions-even on wet turf.

-Built close to the ground at 10 mm off the grass.  Lowest profile out there helps you get a real feel for the ground as you walk and swing the club.

-Waterproofed Leather (two-year warranty except on Phx model).  Here they surpass the Freddies where the weep holes make playing in the rain problematic.

-Roll/Post Toe provides stability throughout the entire swing.  In the Tour model the toe rolls upward-it does seem to enhance walking comfort and follow through stability.

-Temperature control lining.

-Full grain leather upper.

-Sock-Fit Liner to enhance fit .  This elastic gusset is just under the laces and what it does do is comfortably keep your heel snuggly in place.  I wore them with a hard orthotic and my heel never came out of the shoe and the orthotic worked just as it should.  This feature not included in the Phx model.

All-in-all this is a well thought out product that does what they claim-providing a comfortable walk and good performance throughout the round.  If I have any complaint it is a minor one, the funny elliptical shape of the toe gives you no line-up feedback at address.  For those who use the front of their shoes to confirm their line-up to the ball and target this can be a problem.

TRUE Phx-new for 2012

For 2012 they have added a new entry level Phx model for $99 with most of the same ergonomic characteristics and a lower waterproof factor.  It also has a wide array of youthful funky color combinations which should give it more street appeal among the younger set.  You can see the full selection of available colors in all models at their website.

TRUE Stealth-a bit more fashionable

Their “modern classic” version, the Stealth, is about $50 more and it blends some modern fashion with traditional styling.  This is a nice way of saying if looks matters to you here is an alternative.  I have not been able to find this model in a store-had to buy them on line to try them out.  They are certainly more palatable looking than the Tour version- they have a fashionable orthopedic look to them.  Engineering is identical so they accrue the same comfort benefits of their cheaper sibling.  The price difference is all for the look.

Bottom line is, if you have an aversion to carts like I do, find these in your local golf store and give them a look see.  Make sure to hit a few balls in the hitting bay with them on to see if you like both the look and the feel of them.

December, 2011

 

Master Of Fashion

Ian Poulter, ever the fashion maven, made sure his IP black shirt and favorite plaid trousers would look resplendent with the yellow blazer they give you for winning the Australian Masters.  Then he went out and shot a masterful 67 at Victoria Golf Club in the final round of the JBWere Australian Masters to complete his outfit.

In relatively benign conditions for the Australian Sandbelt region, Poulter’s solid ball striking and putting led to 65-68 as he comfortably led the tournament at 8 under after the first two days. On Saturday Geoff Ogilvy, who grew up down the street from the storied Royal Melbourne and Victoria Golf Clubs, used a entire childhood of local knowledge to his advantage.  He rocketed up the leader board with eagle, birdie, birdie on the first three holes and had 9 birdies and an eagle on the day shooting a blistering 63 to take the lead at 13 under par.

As we saw at the Presidents Cup a month earlier, the northern breeze provides the stiffest defense to these Sandbelt courses and the final round would not yield the kind of scoring the players enjoyed the first three days.  The wind played havoc on everything from tee to green and even more so on the putting.  There were lots of incredulous head shakes after balls seemed to veer inexplicably off line on their way to the hole.

Ogilvy’s jeweled carriage turned into a pumpkin on the back side on Sunday as he made two bogies and a double in the last six holes to take himself out of the hunt.  Poulter, on the other hand, eagled the opening hole to tie for the lead and made three more birdies on his way to 15 under and a 3-shot victory.   Ian seemed to comprehend the wind effect better than most making a ream of testing 5 to 15 footers to save pars and keep the competition at bay.  Through the week he hit over 70% of the greens and was under 28 putts a day on greens that seemed to confound most of the field.

Good bet the yellow blazer will be added to the IP Fashion Collection come spring.  He certainly looked handsome in it.  On the golf course Ian Poulter Fashion Statements generally speak for themselves.  This week his clubs were on the same page as well.

December, 2011

Bad Temperament

Gallery

This gallery contains 3 photos.

Nothing in golf generates more of this than missing a three-footer.  Most famous for this was Terrible Tommy Bolt, of blessed memory. ______________________________________________________________ “Tommy Bolt’s putter has spent more time in the air than Lindbergh.” Jimmy Demaret ______________________________________________________________ After missing … Continue reading

His Writing Is The Cure

“Tim, thank you very much.  When you rattled off that list of credits, you left out my cure for polio, but I’ll excuse you for that.  You got all those other things in there.”

Dan Jenkins response to Tim Finchem’s introduction and announcement that he would be only the fifth golf writer in history to be inducted into the Golf Hall of Fame.

Jenkins then concluded with:

“Thanks to all those people that called in with having nothing better to do.  I can’t wait until May 7th when you put some (indiscernible) on my shoulder and give me a saber.”

(Click here to read Bill Fields Golf Digest article “Honoring a Prose Pro”)

December, 2011

TaylorMade Introduces Rocketballz…….Seriously!!

The golf world is a twitter with the buzz created by the TaylorMade’s introduction of their new line of metal woods, hybrids, and irons for Spring 2012 called “Rocketballz”. They claim these clubs are engineered to provide “the first significant innovation in relation to COR (coefficient of restitution) ball speed since the introduction of steel construction to fairway club in the 1980’s”. Apparently, according to the pros who have demoed these puppies, the ball rockets off the club face like an X-15 in heat. So they get their name.

The double, triple, and quadruple entendres are already percolating across the golf media in relation to the introduction of this name. It took some real kishkas for the TaylorMade higher ups to “support” this moniker for their new line of clubs. But it is clear to me it did not take sophisticated focus groups to know who they are selling these things to……men….big, burly men who have no shame about flaunting their wares.

Taylor Made Rocketballz Driver

Men will not only embrace this name but they will brag on it. When a guy cranks one out there about 270 and one of his admiring buddies pipes in “Wow Joe, what you got there?”, he will proudly bellow without hesitation “Rocketballz”. It will be in the mind of the beholder to determine what piece of equipment he is referring to.

The marketing of this line has endless possibilities. I personally think John Cleese should spearhead this campaign in a dark coat and an oversized fedora playing the role of the “TaylorMade mohel” consecrating these new implements. The rumor has not been confirmed but I believe that these can be bought with circumcised or uncircumcised head covers.

Mark my words, there will be billboards this spring with Dustin Johnson proudly brandishing the “RBZ” belt buckle with his stock white pants and royal blue Adidas shirt …..probably with a sultry Natalie Gulbis hanging on his arm.

The TaylorMade guys are no dummies-sexual imagery sells. I see cross marketing possibilities-commercials with a couple of 17 degree hybrids sheepishly sticking out of the Cialis bath tubs basking in the setting sun.

December, 2011

Aussie Days At Night

If you did not get enough of the Australian Sandbelt from the President’s Cup then your golf fix for this week is some late night quality time with the remote viewing of Golf Channel’s broadcast of the JBWere Australian Masters beginning at 8:30 EST Wednesday.  The third leg of the potential Greg Chalmer’s Slam is taking place at the Victoria Golf Club where he will be trying to add to his startling wins in the Australian Open and Australian PGA the past few months.

Victoria's Spectacular Par 3 14th at 156 yards (www.geoffshackerford.com)

The field includes the world number one, Luke Donald along with your household collection of Australian pros like Geoff Ogilvy, Robert Allenby, John Senden, Rod Pampling, and James Nitties.  The quality of play should be high as these guys have shown they know how to negotiate the rugged playing conditions and warp speed greens presented by these links style courses.

Geoff Shackelford reveals in a wonderful Viewmaster review of this third gem of the Australian Sandbelt courses that Victoria Golf Club has many of the same characteristics as  her more famous sisters at Royal Melbourne or Kingston Heath.  Mike Clayton, who has done renovations on many of the Australia’s finest layouts, has brought this one back to life removing trees and restoring the sandy areas that give these courses their distinctive charm.  Shackelford describes in great detail a course with “green complexes that offer a mix of extreme and subdued surfaces, with the par 3’s standing out as some of the most intriguing on the course”.

Imaginative Short Par 4 15th at 315 yards (www.geoffshackelford.com)

There could be some lingering verbal mud wrestling between Geoff Ogilvy and Robert Allenby resulting from their Spat Down Under after the Presidents Cup and be prepared to strain to understand the always entertaining golf terminology of the Aussie golf commentators.  This should be four nights of splendid golf from down under.

(Click here to read Geoff Shackelford’s review of Victoria Golf Club)

Geoff Shackelford

http://www.GeoffShackelford.com

December, 2011

December Golf

December always holds some mild-enough days. Sunshine glints like a thin shell of ice on the upper side of the bare gray twigs, the sky is striped like blue bacon, a tardy line of Canadian geese wobbles its way south, and the air is delighted to be providing oxygen to some plucky sportsmen.

The foursome, thinned perhaps to a mere threesome or twosome, meets by the boarded-up clubhouse, exhilarated to have an entire golf course to itself. There are no tee markers, no starting times, no scorecards, no gasoline carts — just golf-mad men, wearing wool hats and two sweaters each, moving on their feet. The season’s handicap computer has been disconnected, so the sole spur to good play is rudimentary human competition — a simple best-ball nassau or 50-cent game of skins, its running tally carried in the head of the accountant or retired banker in the group. You seem to be, in December golf, reinventing the game, in some rough realm predating its modern refinements.

The ball even smartly struck, has a deadish sound…..The balls themselves are apt to be those at the bottom of the golf bag pocket, the scarred and dirty orphans of the season……  Excuses abound, in short, for not playing very well, and the well-struck shot has a heightened lustre as it climbs through the heavy air and loses itself in the dazzle of the low hibernal sun.  Winter rules legitimize generous relocations on the fairway, and with the grass all dead and matted who can say where the fairway ends.

A lovely leniency, that is, prevails in December golf, as a reward for our being out there at all……There is a misty woodsmoke feeling to the round, the savor of last things.

…….. By then the nassau has been decided, and dusk has crept out of the woods into the fairways…..Ice has found its way into your golf shoes; the fingers on your right hand have no feel; your face hurts.  Time to pack it in…..

The last swing feels effortless, and the ball vanishes dead ahead, gray lost in gray, right where the 18th flag would be. The secret of golf has been found at last, after eight months of futilely chasing it. Now, the trick is to hold it in mind, all the indoor months ahead, without its melting away.

John Updike

December Golf

Golf Dreams-Writings On Golf

Choosing The Right Stick

In this two-part post on Secret In The Dirt.com, Timothy Goynes describes the proper way to choose the right stick off the tee and into the green.  Most people’s response to this would be, “Well this is not rocket science is it?”.

They would be right.  But it is astonishing how many players fail to consider honestly a tactical plan for choosing the right stick in these situations.  This is not dependent on caliber or talent-all player’s scores benefit from having a good intention for every shot they hit.  The mantra he wants all players to consider every time they choose the proper club is “Safe Line, Aggressive Swing”.

(Timothy Goynes-SecretInTheDirt.com)

As Tim Goynes describes in Part 1-Choosing The Right Stick-Off The Tee, most people will viscerally grab their driver on almost every driving hole without taking into consideration where is the trouble and where they want their drive to end up.  Being honest with yourself, something most golfers are not very good at, is essential in deciding whether to go over, play short, or play away from the trouble on any given drive.

Much of what you will read in this part seems elemental but, after being schooled in macho driving tactics by the weekend golf broadcast, smart people often lose their minds and continue to drive the ball with reckless abandon.  The result is they have no chance to put the next shot on the green and have a reasonable chance to make a par or better.

(Click here to read Choosing The Right Stick-Off The Tee)

In Part 2-Choosing The Right Stick-Into The Green, Goynes emphasizes what we should already know-golf is a game of specific targeting.   Considering all the parameters of where you are targeting is essential to hitting greens and giving yourself chances to make a good score.

(Timothy Goynes-SecretInTheDirt.com)

As he says in this part, it is not only knowing distances to the center of the green that matters, you need to know the distance to cover the front of the green, fly any trouble between you and the flag, and not to go too long as to bring in problems behind the green.  It is not distance to the flag you must determine but distance to where you want the ball to land to give you an aggressive putt at the hole.

Further he points out that is not only how far you have to go that will determine the proper club choice but it is the lie you are hitting it from, the topography of that lie, and any outside factors like wind, temperature, firmness of the turf, and precipitation as well.

Figuring how those factors will affect your shot based on your golf aptitudes is essential to consistently putting the ball where you want it to make good scores.

(Click here to read Choosing The Right Stick-Into The Green)

None of this is rocket science, but considering the intelligence level of most of the guys who play this game, it is amazing how smart people consistently fail to consider what is in their best interest in choosing the right stick on any given shot.

Timothy Goynes

Secret In The Dirt.Com

December, 2011

Diplomatic Impunity

U.S. Open Trophy (USGAMuseum.com)

Apparently the Chinese Government will go to no end to garner bargaining chips for their diplomatic conversations with the U.S. government.  It is not enough that we already send them the farm every month to settle our balance of trade deficit.  Now they are in to purloining our national treasures as well.

As you can read in an article done by Bernie McGuire for Golf, By Tour Miss, it seems that Rory McIlroy sent the U.S. Open Trophy that has been in his protective custody since June to Shanghai so it could be displayed at a number of the European Tour events as the Race To Dubai goes into it’s final laps.  Apparently there was no one on the other end to sign for the package when it arrived so the Chinese officials impounded it.

In spite of several diplomatic overtures, they have refused to release the trophy.  So we sent in our real junkyard dogs to negotiate, the USGA, who have apparently made little impression on their Chinese counterparts.  Rumor has it the Chinese are demanding a guaranteed 6% return on all long term treasuries they purchase and a relaxation of the Coefficient of Restitution regulations on drivers sold in China in 2012.  Guess the Maoists want to take it deep.

Lesson in this, don’t trust the welfare of your cherished heirlooms to foreigners.

(Click here to read McGuire’s account of Rory’s mishandling of our American treasure)

Bernie McGuire

December, 2011

Spat Down Under

As Randall Mell reports in this Golf Channel article a spat has broken out between Robert Allenby and Geoff Ogilvy over Allenby’s perceived notion that his poor performance in the Presidents Cup a few weeks ago was apparently the fault of his partners.

He virtually threw Geoff Ogilvy (as well as Retief Goosen and Y.E. Yang) under the proverbial bus complaining that at least three times Ogilvy put him in the woods off the tee in the Saturday Foursomes.  Sounds like sour grapes to me….coming from a guy who has a history of ungracious behavior when things don’t go his way on the golf course.

Fellow Australian Pro Golfer Paul Gow, who played for many years next to Allenby on the PGA Tour said in reaction to Allenby’s latest comments, “I have said it before… I think he acts like a five-year-old when he plays golf. He has to understand he plays golf for a living. He was in a team environment and to throw out those comments was really immature.”

The two almost came to fisticuffs on Sunday night at the Australian PGA when Allenby, who had just tanked in a playoff with Greg Chalmers for the title, confronted Ogilvy at his table at the post event celebration.  Apparently he actually challenged Ogilvy to step outside to the parking lot settle it.  Sounds to me like the man has a monopoly on sour grapes.

From what I have seen of Allenby the last few years it is his putter he should be throwing under the bus, along with any number of iterations of his putting stroke, since that has let him down way more than his teammates from these biennial events.

(Click here to read Randall Mell’s Article about the Allenby-Ogilvy Spat)

Randall Mell

November, 2011