Grounded

All inebriated golfers have their dream foursome, the three guys with whom they want to play their fantasy round. In my case the number has climbed to double digits so it is kind of my moegolf dream outing.

Snedeker would make a great two-man pard ! (photo: brandtsnedeker.com)

With that attitude what a great two-man pard he would be ! (photo: brandtsnedeker.com)

Brandt Snedeker is a the top end of the ‘Please Save The Date’ list because he has three of the personal characteristics to pass my dream outing litmus test. He smiles all the time, has a humble respect for the game, and seems like a thoughtful guy with whom I would enjoy spending an afternoon playing golf and sharing a side of fries.

As you can read in John Garrity’s Golf.com article on “Sneed-a-ker” this is a guy who knows where he came from (in fact he still lives there), plays within his abilities, enjoys the game, and has a competitive fire for taking your money. He is very grounded in his values and the way he carries himself on and off the course. A bit of prankster lurks behind that innocent “Opie” moniker, but he certainly he qualifies as a guy you would want your kids to look up to and root for.

Sneds has been a moegolf post focus on more than one occasion.

(Click to read moegolf post about his early years)

(Click to read moegolf post about this season’s early triumphs)

No question he has the attention and respect of his peers with a too die for putting stroke and excellent course management skills. His five professional win venues include Harbour Town, Torrey Pines, East Lake, and Pebble Beach-any of which will do just fine for my dream outing.

Given the way Sneds has played so far this year-win at Pebble, two seconds, and a third, he has to be in that upper tranche of favorites at Augusta next week.

(Click to read John Garrity’s wonderful article about Brandt Snedeker)

John Garrity

Golf.com

April, 2013

Uplifting Experience

This will make all the traditionalists cringe but with this prototype Hovercraft Golf Cart  I have to hand it to Bubba he is thinking outside of the box.  Or is it that he is just out of his mind.

The disclaimer form you are going to have to sign to drive this thing will be seven pages long.  Have to think he has gotten the attention of Club Car and other cart makers at this point.

Some Arab Sheik will be driving one of these things on his personal links in the very near future.

Bubba Watson

April, 2013

 

Peer Pressure

Paula and friend doing a Dufner   (credit: @THEPCREAMER)

Paula and friend doing a Dufner       (credit: @THEPCREAMER)

Apparently it is getting to everyone since Jason Dufner ignited the “Dufnering” craze with a Kodak moment during a charity appearance in a Dallas elementary school.  Tour players across the globe have taken on the challenge to do a Dufner.

(Click to read the Yahoo Sports report on Dufnering)

March, 2013

Pong

With Tiger back at number one in the world after his victory at Arnie’s Barbeque this past weekend there may not be much time for him to savor the spoils.  As you can read in Jason Sobel’s Golf Channel piece, Rory can steal back the number one ranking from Mr. Redshirt with a win at the Shell Houston Open this weekend.

Not everyone thought this made high ethical marks  (Picture: Nike Facebook)

Not everyone thought this made high ethical marks (Picture: Nike Facebook)

The folks at Nike are in full embrace of ‘Tiger’s Return’ with their somewhat controversial “Winning Takes Care Of Everything” Facebook campaign launched right after the final putt dropped in the Monday finish at Bay Hill.

(Click to read the CNN.com piece on the Nike Facebook campaign controversy)

Having their number one and two vieing weekly for the top spot in the World Golf Rankings has to have Nike bigwigs doing cartwheels across the company conference table.  This is the Nike  “No Cup Is Safe”  ad becoming reality right before our eyes.

As Sobel says, Tiger’s fraternity brother advice for Rory this week involving the relocation of a particular digit pretty much says “Rory, your serve”.  I feel the little white dot moving across the old Atari screen right now.

And this entertainment seemed so high tech in the day!!

And this entertainment seemed so high tech in the day!!

There could be real electronic fireworks if Rory can step up and compete with Tiger head-to-head when he is playing at the top of his game.  In the past when Tiger has been number one it has pretty much been Game-Set-Match no matter how credentialed the challengers have been.

Should be interesting to see who is waving a finger come Sunday afternoon.  Hopefully they have some hand sanitizer in the scorer’s hut.

(Click here to read Jason Sobel’s GC article “McIlroy Can Reclaim #1”)

Jason Sobel

Golf Channel.com

March, 2013

Still Waiting

Kootch and Rose…….sounds like a new brand of a southern comfort whiskey. Instead both, in their young thirties entering the prime of their golfing careers, are rising stars in the game steadily building resumes that have put them solidly in the top ten of the World Golf Rankings.


The two burst on the golf radar screen at the same time in 1998 as pedigree Amateurs elbowing their way into the major Championships that year. They had competed against each other at the Walker Cup at Quaker Ridge the previous year and became friends when they played a practice round together at Loch Lomand the week before the 1998 Open Championship. Kootch introduced his 20 year-old telegenic smile to our TV screens with flash performances in The Masters (T21) and U.S. Open (T14) that year. Rose stunned the British golf fans as an 18 year-old holing out a dramatic wedge shot from the rough on the last hole to tie for fourth at Royal Birkdale.

But then the waiting began. As is common with young players both of them hit the pot hole laden developmental road soon after they turned pro. Kucher won the Honda Classic in 2002 but did not hoist a trophy in the winner’s circle again until Turning Stone in 2009. Justin Rose suffered the indignity of missing the cut in his first 21 pro events but broke through to win The Dunhill in 2002 and three more times on the European Tour before he won The Memorial on the PGA Tour at Jack’s Place in 2010.

The breakout year for both of them was 2010-Kootch won the Fed Ex Barclays in 2010, The Players in 2011, and finished top ten in the World Gold Championships 7 times since then including his win at the Accenture Match Play this year over Hunter Mahan.
In the majors the last three years he has been top ten 4 times with a T3 at The Masters last year. For Rose it was the Fed Ex BMW in 2011 and 4 top tens in WGC events including the Cadillac Championship at Doral in 2011. In 2012 he finished tied for eighth at The Masters and third at the PGA.

Between them they have 13 PGA and European Tour wins, 2 FedEx Cup event victories, 2 WGC wins, 5 Ryder and President Cup appearances, 5 World Cup appearances, and a Players Championship.

So what is missing……a Major. The two are at the top of that infamous list of the best players in the world yet to win a Major. But I sense the wait could be over for them over the next 24 months. Both have been in top form so far this year and I would not be surprised to see Bubba slipping that Green Jacket over the shoulders of one of the distillery brothers this April.

March, 2013

Retrievers

Golfers who carry ball retrievers are gatherers, not hunters. They’ve given up the chase. They’ve climbed as far up the hill as they can climb, and now the paths lead only down. They’ve stopped tinkering with their grip. They don’t practice in the sand. Their dreams are no longer of conquest, but only of salvage.

David Owen

My Usual Game

March, 2013

Seriously!

34 year-old Kevin Streelman starring in those Wilson Staff commercials as the super confident pro juxtaposed to the high bravado slacker seemed like a stretch to me.  Maybe those producers knew something the rest of us had missed about a guy who had yet to win on the PGA Tour.  Winning the Tampa Bay Championship from behind Streelman displayed unexpected moxy of someone who had been there and done that.

Boo Weekly came from nowhere shooting a sizzling 63 in the final round to set the clubhouse lead at 8-under.  But he would have three hours to eat pizza and sip hard lemonade and see if anyone could match his number and extend his day.  The pursuers included Streelman, Justin Leonard, Jim Furyk, and defending champ Luke Donald. Most of them wilted under the pressure struggling to hit fairways and greens on the tight tree -ined back nine of the Copperhead Course at Innisbrook.

Streelman donned his red cape on the 13th tee and hit a baby fade boldly into a phone booth location between water, bunker, and high rough on the par 3 to set up an unlikely 6-foot birdie putt and grab the outright lead at 9-under.  A couple of routine pars on the next two brought him to the fabled snake pit, the last three holes on the Copperhead Course, with the task of making pars to protect a slender one shot lead.

On sixteen he put the thrill back into a three-footer slipping a putt into the right side pocket to save a par.  At the long par three seventeenth he put that same aggressive baby fade on his tee ball covering the flag line all the way leaving him a 20-foot birdie putt right up the gut that he buried for another unlikely birdie and a sweet two-shot lead at 10-under going to eighteen.

It was evident that close call misses pursuing in previous events had taught Streelman that playing conservative with the lead is a formula for disappointment on the tour.  He played full bore. flag hunting all the way in to close out his first win in style.

We should not be all that surprised at this because Streelman has been on an uphill trajectory for years.  After winning a million bucks in the year-long Kodak Challenge in 2009, he had 11 top-10 finishes on the tour in 2010 and 2011 and another 3 in 2012 to compile over $6 million in career winnings.

Guess it is time for a Streelman image rethink for the rest of us.  At least this day that “Seriously” line in the Staff commercial seems to fit like a glove.

March, 2013

Mizuno MP-H4 Hybrid Long Irons

This spring’s equipment juggling act has guys rethinking to some degree that bouquet of head covers crowding the top compartment of their bag.  The swoon for hybrids has people discarding every long iron because, rightfully so, these hybrids are easier to elevate than the butter knives, they work better out of the gnarly lies in the rough grass, and they land softer on the business end of the shot.  Who wouldn’t go all in for this concept.

Long irons try to reclaim your affection

Long irons try to reclaim your affection  (mizuno.com)

But as the snows recede you may note some better players toying with a new version of their old friends, utility long irons.  Titleist and TaylorMade call them driving irons, Callaway’s are utility irons, and to Mizuno they are hybrid irons.  They basically took the long irons-2 thru 4 in most cases-fattened the sole and widened the cavity back to improve the center of gravity and make them easier to launch and more forgiving.   These will not replace all of your hybrids but for certain players they will backfill niches created by full migration to hybrids.

Players may have found three conditions for which hybrids have left them without an implement.  The monster player, you know him, 27 years old, without a dimmer switch, 290+ off the tee, he finds driving it into the tight nook of the dogleg about 240 a tough task with a 3 hybrid.   The regular stiffs have that 210 yardish shot into a gale force wind where lowering the trajectory on the hybrid is not an option.  Lastly for all of us a wayward drive ends up in the pine straw with a limited access window about 10 feet off the ground 20 yards ahead of us and still a long way to go to reach the green.

The new Mizuno MP-H4 Hybrid Irons have a 2,3, and 4 iron (18, 21, and 24 degrees of loft respectively) which can provide a solution for these problems.  For people who actually have to pay for their equipment, Mizuno makes the finest players irons out there.  These H4s are Grain Flow Forged like all of their Mizuno cousins and have been craftily engineered by their white jackets to deliver the forgiveness required and maintain the normal top edge look of a long iron.

In my field testing I have found these to my liking, very easy to elevate,  generous forgiveness, dependable contact except out of the heavy rough, and very pliable trajectory control.  Mizuno offers them in a wide variety of shafts so you need to do some research to find the right combination to fit your swing aptitude.

My son, who fits into the first category above, hits his Zuno H4 2 iron about 240 to 250 off the tee with much greater towardness control than his old hybrid.  I used my H4 2 to replace my 19 degree hybrid and the low trajectory and roll out to accessible greens works very well into the wind.  From incarcerated circumstances they prove very crafty off of skinny lies with limited windows of escape and a 130 yard carry to clear the rough.

I see both the H4 2 and 3 iron finding their way into my starting lineup at times this year.   Seeing that in their current state of mind the USGA is likely to frown on my petition to expand the acceptable club limit to 16, it looks like there will be some serious social networking of long irons and hybrids in the boot of the Mini Cooper this spring.

Watching the flat bellies on TV, you are seeing a number of the pros migrating back to these clubs for reasons one and two.  Club players with a bit of imagination are finding some favor in them as well.  Much like adding a gap wedge to the north end of the set, going to a hybrid long iron is a circumstantial switch to address voids created by our total abandonment of low lofted irons.  If you are tempted by this I highly recommend the Mizuno MP-H4 as a place to start your inquiries.

March, 2013

(For another person’s opinion on the Mizuno H4 Hybrids check out this Golfwrx review)

moerate4