Bothwell Golf Club (Ratho Links)

June 2010
The course
Ratho Links
Par: 69 (34,35)     Length: 5130 (dubious) metres

Cool fact: Ratho is the oldest surviving golf course outside of the home of golf, Scotland.
It lies on the Ratho farming property in Bothwell which was settled in around 1822, which by Tasmanian and Australian standards is pretty damn old. It is currently 15 holes but is in the process of being redeveloped as a full eighteen hole course. Originally it was a 12 hole course, like Scotland's first golf course Prestwick (the home of the British Open for the first heaps of years). Originally six holes ran North and six holes ran South towards Bothwell from the shearing shed. Three of the Southern holes were abondoned after World War II and the other three South holes were lost when the Government put in a road and bridge into Bothwell. Three additional holes were added (the 4th, 5th and 6th) to the surviving six and there is quite a different feel to these, in my opinion. In the last few years (2000's) six new holes have been added apparently with the aim of reproducing the lost six. A further three will be added at some stage to complete the 18 holes although there was no evidence of any construction when we visited. There endeth the Ratho history lesson. A test on this subject will be held on Tuesday.

To get to Bothwell you head up the Midland Highway (or down if you are coming from the wrong direction) and turn left at the Melton Mowbray Hotel (or right if - ah forget it). Pull into the pub for a beer - you deserve it, it's been a long drive and what harm can one beer do? After finishing the shout, get your designated driver to take you the rest of the way to the golf course, or hitch a ride from a friendly local. You might be too pished to drive, but not to play some of your best golf, or darts, or 8 ball.

The first thing that strikes you when you step onto the course/farm is the fences around the greens. These fences are required to keep the greenkeepers (a.k.a. sheep) off the short stuff. Apparently the little fellas aren't trusted to operate the greens mower although they'd have to be better operators than my mate Matho first thing on a Saturday morning.

The annual Highland Championship is the time to play Bothwell. The middle of winter in the highlands of Tasmania on a links golf course is surely the way the Scottish intended golf to be played. In this event in years gone by you would play your first nine and come into the wood heated clubhouse for a home cooked meal and a couple of (few) drinks to prepare you for the back nine (I don't know what happens now the course has been extended). One of my best golfing memories occurred at Bothwell when we were in the clubhouse along with many drunken golfers (some finished, others in between nines and the rest yet to tee off) watching Kieran Perkins in his memorable 1500m gold medal swim in Atlanta from the outside lane.

The holes at Bothwell are quite short by today's standards and the fairways aren't really defined. As mentioned above, the 4th, 5th and 6th differ from the rest in the fact that they resemble "standard" golf holes. The course can be exploited with today's technology  (any clubs post 1985). The back six holes are completely different. Firstly the greens aren't square and they don't have fences. Secondly these holes are built on a patchwork of paddocks, rather than one consolidated farm as is the case on the front side. In my opinion these holes do not complement the others and it appears to me as if it is an attempt to make a standard 18 hole golf course out of a golf links that is anything but standard.
Another blind tee shot to a patchwork paddock. This time it's the 15th.

That said, Bothwell has a candidate for the best local rule.
SHEEP: A ball striking a sheep on the course, may be replayed without penalty.
At other courses they protect the greenkeepers and if you hit one then you would expect some sort of penalty - maybe not the golfing kind.

The course is so unique that I think it deserves a quick hole by hole run through - something I haven't done for my other reviews.

1st. Blast a drive to a fairway that is wider than the 1st at St Andrews. Pitch and putt.
2nd. Driver, 7 or 8 iron to a green that backs onto the highway. Don't hit the cars.
3rd. Standard par 3 (except for the square fenced green and the fact it is bloody cold)
4th. Blind dog leg. 3 wood, pitch and putt.
5th. Blast a drive, pitch up the hill
6th. Very short par 4 - 3 wood. Slicers need to aim away from the highway. Used to alternate between a par 3 and par 4 for each nine.
7th. Very short par 5 - Blast a drive, hybrid or long iron.
8th. Very short par 3 - throw it on.
9th. 141m par 3, slightly uphill. Don't go long because it is out of bounds but don't leave it short because it is a very sloping two-tiered green. Don't be right or left either or you will be faced with a difficult chip. Basically it's a hole that will ruin your front nine.

There were no cards available in the clubhouse when we teed off so at the end of the first nine, we didn't know where to find the 10th tee. Luckily the greenkeeper (human variety) hollered out to us as we walked down the wrong road.
 
The peculiar par 5, 10th
10th. A blind tee shot where the fairway starts at about 250m after traversing a couple of fences and a road.
11th. Par 3, island-like green. There is no real place to miss the green if you decide to get it on (which you should because it is a par 3). The hole reminded me of Lara Bingle - Looks good at first but it really is a bitch.
The par 3 11th

12th. Yet another blind tee shot (getting slightly sick of them by now) with a short approach.
13th. And now for something completely different. Walk back to a nearby paddock just so you can hit out if it over trees. Weird much? It's a very short par 4 at 280m and suggests to me that they ran out of room.
The strange 13th tee

14th. Short par 3. Standard fare.
15th. Par 3. Another blind tee shot into the next paddock.
 
15th tee shot. Spot the flag. Hint: It's not on the immediate paddock.

Usually to complete a round of golf at Bothwell, you would replay the 1st, 2nd and par 5 7th. For the purposes of playing all the holes on Tasmania's golf courses I didn't think this was necessary. Instead we proceeded to load the clubs in the car and headed off to Barnbougle.

Best Hole
None of the back 6 - they are all quirky. I think the first hole is great because it reflects everything that is unique about Bothwell. There is a square green with a fence for starters. The fairway is non-existent and is just an open canvas but there is a fence crossing about 100 metres off the tee catching any mis-hit low drives.
Worst Hole
The 4th - The local rules forbid you going around the right hand side of the trees and makes you play the hole as a dogleg to the right. For someone like me who draws the ball, I'd prefer to go for the green with a high draw but the shot is too risky with out of bounds looming. Conversely when I play it as it is intended I inevitably end up in the reeds even when I try to play safe with an iron. Frustrating!
The 4th (arse)hole

The Round (15 holes)
Date: 30 April 2010
Score: 61 (+5)     Greens: 8/15     Fairways: N/A   Putts: 25

Bothwell was the first course on the inaugural trip of the CODJ3R Golf Club. Patto, Yabbi, Scooby and Godfrey the human wind sock were in the first group. Potts, Dave, JP and the Stallion were also in the first group as least for the 1st hole and a half before we split into the more traditional two groups.
1st tee - CODJ3R Golf Club (Est. 2010) - Note the matching shirts

Bothwell is a remote course so imagine the surprise that faced the couple who walked in the gate as a group of 8 hackers walked off the tee. I'm sure they expected a walk up start to a quiet and empty course but we did the right thing and let them through when they'd got their stuff together.

After chunking my approach short to the 1st, I pitched just past the hole and made the putt for the first par of the CODJ3R trip.
1st hole - up and down for par

As is my usual thing when I play a different golf course, I displayed much muppability and couldn't get up and down from next to the green, had 3 putts and didn't make birdie putts that I'd expect to have a good go at on a course I'm more familiar with. I wasted shots on 2, 3 & 6 by not making pars from right by the green, or on it in the case of the 6th. 

After teeing off the 6th hole, we looked back down the 5th and saw our 2nd CODJ3R group. They were scattered left and right but (not) surprisingly none were in the fairway. 15 minutes later the 4 players had moved around 50 metres towards the green with some swapping sides of the rough.
Potts, the Stallion, Dave and JP lost on the 5th hole

I found myself at 5 over after 6 holes and finished the original front nine with 3 regulation pars for a 39 (par 34).
The greenkeeper told us on the way to the 10th tee, "I don't care if you're Tiger Woods, you won't reach the 10th green in two shots".
Challenge accepted.
Unfortunately there is now way of knowing where the hell to aim on the 10th the first time you play this course. We struggled to find the damn 10th tee, so obviously we were going to struggle with the finer details.
10th tee - where to aim?

After blasting a drive I found myself on a cross-road with my second shot partially blocked out by a tree. I elected to play my hybrid and squeezed it (quite accidentally) between the branches just short of the two-tiered green. Considering I lost a few yards dropping off the road and that I couldn't hit my fairway wood because of the lie, hitting this green in two shots is definitely achievable for longer hitters.
The undulating 10th green

We came up with a new rule for CODJ3R golf which should apply universally. You are not allowed to lay up the first time you ever play a hole. You must elect to play the hole as it was designed to be played and commensurate with your handicap (which ever is the lesser).
i.e. you must go for the green in two on a short par 5 the first time you play the hole even if you know you that laying up is the better option for your score. The next time you play it (e.g. the back nine on a 9 hole course) you can elect to lay up.
Putting this strategy into effect on the 11th I went for the green and even though it landed up there, it bounded off into the hazard. I was able to get up and down for a bogey.

I'd like to suggest that a lot of the hole yardages are wrong but it is just as likely that the the wind affects shots a lot more on this exposed and elevated course than at others. It was either that or the gutta percha balls we were using (kidding).

I drove into the rough on the blind tee shot on the 330m par 4 12th which isn't surprising as there is no guide as to where to hit from the tee. I pitched out of the heavy lie and ran it up near the hole for my first birdie of the back 6. After driving near the green on the 280m par 4 12th I only had a pitch to the pin that was perched on the top tier of this large and sloping green. I thought that I should experience all this hole had to offer by pitching well right and long to the bottom tier. Luckily I was able to two putt for a regulation par.
My drive on the 13th just short. My pitch finished behind the bunker.

After parring the 14th we walked to the difficult looking 15th which was 197m into a stiff breeze. I gripped down on my 1 hybrid knowing it was too much club, but I knew my 3 iron would get caught up in the wind. As a result of my indecision, I came out of my tee shot and splayed it out to the right by about a paddocks length (the standard Bothwell unit of measurement). After spotting my ball from the traditional paddock the green is on, I had to circumnavigate my way by running back to the tee paddock and up a nearby path, using landmarks for reference. For a 197m hole I reckon I traversed over 800m - in good time too.

So after only two 1 putts on the front side, I managed to have five 1 putts around the back (out of 6 holes). As usual for me, if I could get used to the local conditions more quickly I could have threatened par for the course.

Best shot
My pitch out of the rough on the 12th setting up birdie

Worst shot
The 40m pitch on the 13th that ended up 20m right of my target was a shocker as well as my tee shot on the 15th that went a good 50m right of the target.


Bothwell is a short course by today's standards, but don't try to force it as the course has some bite as well. I look forward to playing at the Australian home of golf again on a regular basis.

Royal Melbourne Golf Club

June 2010


A golf course ranked in the top ten in the world should be a special place and Royal Melbourne is. There are two courses at Royal Melbourne, an East and a West. The composite course at Royal Melbourne Golf Club (ranked #8 in the world) is made up of twelve holes from the West course and six holes from the East Course. The composite can only be played in tournaments, thus I played both the East and West courses on separate days.

Alister MacKenzie did the routings of both the East and West courses in the mid 1920s. Club member Alex Russell and superintendent Michael Morcon oversaw the implementation and building of the courses and thus are co-credited with the design since MacKenzie spent only 23 days there.

Like many great designs including Pine Valley and Sand Hills, the course has wide open fairways that are playable for the average golfer, yet demand the more skilled player to drive the ball into dangerous corners to get close to the flags. It is also compared to Pine Valley because it is a “second shot” course.

Like Pine Valley, the first thing that strikes you when seeing Royal Melbourne is the scale of the course. It has a “big” feel to it with holes routed around big sand dunes, forced carries over bracken fern and sweeping fairways with big doglegs. The World Atlas of Golf describes Royal Melbourne as a “kaleidoscope experience of obstacles and emotions.”

The second hole (West), is a 485 meter (add 10% for yards) par five of excellence with a formidable sand bunker off the tee on the left and a big sweeping fairway to a well protected green.



rmw2-1
The approach to par five 2nd green

From the World Atlas: “The third hole is a Russell creation of 324 meters. Few holes of this length anywhere have its class. The tee shot aims out to a wide expanse except for the spread of sand on the right at the crown of the hill. Beyond, the fairway rushes down to a hollow before a two-tiered green that steps down from right to left, the third stage dropping into a final huge trap at its lowest and farthest left point.”


rmw 3 green
The 3rd green

The fifth and sixth holes on the West course are two great ones. The fifth is a 161 meter par three that plays up a hill. It has the MacKenzie look and feel of Cypress Point and is clearly well-bunkered. You also get a good sense from this picture of the massive scale the course achieves by using the elevation changes to maximum impact. This is a real man's course with some teeth.



rmw5
The classic par three 5th hole


One of the distinctive features of Royal Melbourne are the hard edges many of the greens have, cut at a 90 degree angle to the bunkers. As a result, it is highly likely that a shot not perfectly hit will remain in the bunker or run through the green.


rmw 5-2
Detail of the 5th bunker and green


The 391 meter par four sixth is one of the best in golf. It plays from an elevated tee down into a sweeping valley over bracken and with tea trees protecting the right side. It’s classic risk-reward. If you can pull off a shot further to the right over the bracken and bunkers, you will have a much shorter shot to the demanding green set on top of a hill. The farther left the tee shot runs, the more it brings into play the deep bunker guarding the left side of the green.


rmw6 from tee
The view from the tee at Royal Melbourne West's 6th


The green has appropriately been described as “lethal.”

rmw 6-3
The wicked 6th green at Royal Melbourne West

I also very much liked the West’s tenth hole, a 279 meter par four. Note the “big bertha” style bunker protecting those who dare to shoot directly for the green. Nobody rings a bell when you get to one of the greatest golf holes in the world. There also isn’t a sign telling you; there doesn’t need to be. You just know it’s a fabulous hole because it bowls you over. The tenth is a hole like that. It was the inspiration for Tom Doak’s world-class short par four fourth hole at Barnbougle Dunes.



rmw 10
The short par four tenth from the tee

The World Atlas of Golf describes the tenth hole eloquently: “Few holes of 300 yards can be reckoned to be anything more than stop-gaps. This hole is a grand exception. In golf course design two interesting themes run counter to each other. The one standard principle, that the farther one hits and the nearer one approachs the target the finer becomes the margin of error, is cleverly offset by the axiom that the more finely judged second shot gets progressively more difficult the farther one falls short of the green. The hole crosses a pleasant valley from one crest to the next.”

rmw 10-2
The second shot on the 10th features a short, blind pitch over this bunker

rmw 10-3
The small green on the 10th hole, Royal Melbourne West

The 416 meter eleventh (West) has a feel similar to Pine Valley and Sunningdale, with a demanding tee shot that must be hit through a long chute of trees.


View from the tee, Royal Melbourne West course, 11th hole

The difficult par five holes ate my lunch at Royal Melbourne. I played all four of them poorly. Below is the approach to the 435 meter par five twelfth (West).


rmw 12
The 12th green

The composite course was devised for tournaments in 1959 so that crowds would not have to cross Cheltenham Road. While it can be confusing playing the courses trying to figure out which holes are part of the composite, the easy rule of thumb is that if you are still on the side of Cheltenham Road near the clubhouse, you are on the composite. The holes from the East course (1,2,3,4, 17 and 18) that are part of the composite are a worthy bunch. The green on the first hole (East):


rme1 green
The 1st green, Royal Melbourne East Course

The second on the East is a great par four that has a blind tee shot to a fairway that starts far left and comes back to the right.


rme2-
Royal Melbourne East, 2nd hole approach to green


The third hole on the East is a dogleg right down a sweeping hill and the fourth is an interesting uphill par three. The East course has recently reached the top 100 world rankings on its own merits and I can see why. It's a great collection of holes. The par three 13th on the East, 135 meters, which doesn't play in the composite courses is a spectacular little par three. It has the best protected green of the 36 holes at Royal Melbourne.


Royal Melbourne, East Course, 13th hole

As is the custom at Australia’s top private courses, they allow visitors from overseas if you have a letter of introduction from your home club. The day you play you are made an “honorary member” and granted full privileges including the ability to eat in the clubhouse. The normal greens fee rate is A$300.

We played at Royal Melbourne for a pittance! The course has been undergoing renovations in preparation for the upcoming Presidents Cup matches and thus the course was not in the usual condition they expect, so they didn’t feel it was right to charge us. To be honest, and as you can see from the photos, the course was in very good shape. They must have an extremely high standard that they keep the course in if the conditions we played in weren’t considered good. This was a very classy move on the part of Royal Melbourne.

Congratulations to one of my mates and playing partners, Smythe, who shot a 77 on one of the premier courses in the world the first time he played it! Well done; an impressive display of golf.

Aside from one of the best golf courses in the world, Royal Melbourne also has a genteel and historic feel to it. I suggest looking around the large room located off the entrance to the clubhouse which has an impressive display of memorabilia and old course maps.

The manicured hedges add a classy touch to the entry drive:



As do the grass tennis and lawn bowling courts:



Haney opens up about disfunctional relationship with Tiger

June 2010
Hank Haney seems to be moving on since his public split with Tiger Woods. But that doesn't mean Haney, who spent six years as Woods' coach, is through talking about the relationship. In the August issue of Golf Digest, he talks about his "dysfunctional" pairing with the golfing great.

Some excerpts from Haney who told football star Doug Flutie, who wandered by during the interview, that the two best days of his career were "when Tiger asked me to help him and the day I resigned."

Golf Digest: Why did you resign? Was it frustration? Pressure? Criticism?

Hank Haney: Start with all of the above, and keep going. There are so many reasons that add up to the fact it was time to leave.

...Golf Digest: Did the revelations about Tiger factor into your decision?

Hank Haney: If not for the accident, maybe he'd still be playing well, and maybe I would have stayed on a little longer. But there's still that life span, and the life span was running out.

...Golf Digest: It sounds like it became dysfunctional.

Hank Haney: It didn't get dysfunctional; it always was dysfunctional.

...Golf Digest: Is it possible that Tiger learned all there was to learn from you?

Hank Haney: That could be. I did feel it was going to be harder for Tiger to get better if he didn't commit to a couple things I thought -- and still think -- are important at this stage. Were there things I wanted him to commit to? Yes. Was it hard for me to get him to commit to those things? Yes.

...Golf Digest: How knowledgeable is Tiger about the golf swing?

Hank Haney: The most knowledgeable I've ever been around. I've taught 200 pros from tours around the world, and nobody came close to knowing what Tiger knows.

...Golf Digest: It's been said that Tiger views any association with him as helping that person out. Do you go along with that?

Hank Haney: You said it, I didn't.

Tiger no longer host of the AT&T, but is still playing this week

June 2010
The most obvious change at the AT&T National is moving to Aronimink Golf Club, a tree-lined classic in the Philadelphia suburbs that will host the tournament the next two years as Congressional prepares for a U.S. Open.

Not so obvious is the role Tiger Woods is playing this week.

He is still the defending champion. He is no longer the host.

AT&T was the second corporate sponsor to end its endorsement deal with the world's No. 1 player, although not entirely. It agreed to remain as title sponsor of the tournament, which Woods has hosted since it began in 2007. And the net proceeds continue to benefit the Tiger Woods Foundation, which is building a second learning centre in the United States.

It's an awkward relationship.

Woods no longer carries the AT&T logo on his golf bag, and he is not likely to return to AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. But he doesn't look at this event any differently than when he was handing out the trophy.

“I'll still be part of the event and working hard behind the scenes as always,” Woods said. “This is a great event for our foundation. We're very lucky and very excited that AT&T wanted to still be a part of this event.”

The tournament stays. His endorsement ends.

“If you're going to have one over the other, you choose it this way,” Woods said.

He also dismissed any notion that Woods and his caddie, Steve Williams, are at odds. There was speculation in some corners after the U.S. Open that Woods was unhappy with his caddie when he said, “We made three mental mistakes. The only thing it cost us was a chance to win the U.S. Open.”

Woods and Williams have worked together since 1999, with the most famous blowup coming in the final round of the 2003 Masters when Williams recommended a driver off the par-4 third hole. Woods hit into the trees, had to play a left-handed shot to the fairway and the two rarely spoke the rest of the day.

“There's no tension there, not at all,” Woods said. “You guys are reading way too much into it. I was asked what happened out there, and I made three mental mistakes — three mistakes I don't normally make. Do Stevie and I make mistakes on the golf course? Of course we do. We're not perfect. We made mistakes at the wrong time. It happens.

“Hopefully, that won't happen this week and we can win an event.”

This could be a big week toward deciphering whether Woods is close to winning again. He tied for fourth in the Masters, his first start in five months while coping with a sex scandal, then followed that up by going consecutive weeks without earning a check.

He tied for fourth at the U.S. Open, where he started the final round at 1-under 212 and closed with a 75 to finish four shots behind. But it was the back-nine 31 on Saturday, which put him into contention, that gave Woods hope.

“That was a nice step in the right direction, because I would play two or three good holes, then hit a bad shot and it would take the air out of what I had built,” Woods said. “During that stretch, I put together about 12 really good holes, and it's something I hadn't done all year. Granted, the amount of rounds I've played so far this year is about what I normally play through March.

“I'm starting to head in the right direction.”

He headed out to the practice range and to see the Aronimink for the first time. When he was at the course in May, it was the day after he withdrew from The Players Championship with a sore neck.

The field is slightly better than a year ago. It includes Jim Furyk, Aronimink member Sean O'Hair, Dustin Johnson, Vijay Singh, Hunter Mahan, Rickie Fowler, Robert Allenby and Scott Verplank.

Several others are in Europe to fulfil membership requirements — seven asked for conflicting-event releases — and tournament officials are finding that the Fourth of July date is not what it used to be.

Even so, it has Woods, who remains a star attraction. Even for a Tuesday, thousands of fans were pressed up against the iron fence around the driving range waiting for him to arrive. Hundreds of kids want his autograph, and Woods was asked if takes seriously his position as a role model given his marital turmoil.

“I certainly have made mistakes, no doubt about that,” Woods said. “I take full ownership of them, and I think what a lot of kids can learn from that is that you're not always going to go through life perfect. No one does. When you make a mistake, step up to the plate and take ownership of it.”

Ontario man dies after falling from golf cart

June 2010
A man has died of head injuries after falling off a golf cart at the Ontario resort where the G8 summit was held.

Provincial police were called Sunday afternoon — one day after the summit ended — after an employee of Deerhurst Resort in Huntsville, Ont., fell from the back of the cart.

Police say four staff members were on the cart, two in seats and the other two hanging onto the rear where golf bags are usually placed.

The workers were shuttling carts when the one they were on did an abrupt turn and 69-year-old Gerald Lepage of Huntsville fell off.

He died Monday in a Toronto hospital.

Deerhurst hosted the G8 leaders on Friday and Saturday.

Titleist Vokey Spin Milled Wedges

June 2010


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Available on the golf support website to customize yourself and from only £69.00!

Due to the choice available it means there is now a club for every shot requirement and swing style out there!

There are currently two groove configurations for good reason: Spin Milled grooves produce a medium trajectory and high spin and conform to the Rules of Golf until 2024, except in tournaments governed by a Condition of Competition. Spin Milled C-C grooves produce a higher trajectory with medium spin and conform to the new 2010 Rules of Golf for grooves and can be used in events that adopt the new rules as a Condition of Competition.


Vokey CC Wedge

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The Stock Shaft is the True Temper Dynamic Gold Wedge and the stock grip is the Titleist Tour Velvet Rubber but these can be amended using our website for suit your personal choice.


Vokey Tour Chrome Finnish

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With this much choice its no wonder Titleist Vokey Design wedges have been the most played wedges on the PGA Tour since 2004.

See Our Website or come in store for more details and view our full range of golf clubs including putters, drivers and hybrids plus much more.

Until Next Time
The Golf Support Team

The most frequently asked golf questions from Ask.com

June 2010
Ask.com, a question and answer site that receives more than one million specific questions everyday, researched the most frequently asked golf questions on its site. You may think these are all basic questions but how many of you actually know all the answers? Naturally, I have placed my snarky comments below each answer, in red ink.



Top Ten Questions about Golf on Ask.com


1. What does golf stand for?
A. The word golf likely originated from the Medieval Dutch word "kolf" or "kolve" which meant "club".
I thought the word GOLF was an acronym for Gentlemen Only Ladies Forbidden!
LadiesLoveGolf.com has a similar opinion


2. How long does it take to play 18 holes of golf?
A. Four hours is the estimate most people give for 18 holes.
My answer depends on if you play the publinks in which a round of golf has taken me up to six hours!

3. What Percentage of Golfers Shoot under 100?
A. There are 27 million golfers in America. Only 5 percent of them will ever break 100, and of that 5 percent only 2 percent of them will ever break 80.
I have to agree with this answer, at least for publinks golfers. I play with many who have never broken 100 but I have not yet broken 80.

4. What degree is a pitching wedge?
A. A pitching wedge is set at a 45 degree angle.
One of my favorite clubs in my golf bag. I carry pitching, sand (56 degrees) and lob wedges (60 degrees) for different shots. You can never have too many wedges!


5. How many calories do I burn playing golf?
A. How many calories a person burns while playing golf depends on three factors. One is body weight, as larger people burn more calories than their smaller counterparts. A second factor is how much time is spent playing golf, and the third aspect has to do with how active that person is on the range. A person who weighs 150 pounds and plays golf for two hours while he is carrying his clubs will burn 750 calories. A heavier person, weighing 200 pounds, will burn even more. During a two hour golf game, a 200-pound person carrying his golf clubs will burn 1,000 calories. 
In other words, walk and carry your golf clubs for golf to be more of a physical than mental game! 

6. How do you fix a slice in golf?
A. To fix a golf swing slice, it's important to realize that a slice is caused by the club face being left open when you strike the ball. Discover how you can fix your slice with help from a professional golf instructor.
Don't try fixing your slice yourself or you might add more problems to your golf swing. 


7. How many golf clubs can you carry?

A. The rules of golf allow you to carry fourteen clubs in your bag, so many golfers add another iron or a specialty wood to the traditional set.
For newer  women golfers, try hybrid clubs instead of traditional woods: they are easier to hit and get the ball airborne.

8. How do you calculate your golf handicap?
A. After figuring out a golf course's rating, take the score and subtract it from the course rating before multiplying it times 113 and dividing this number by the slope of the course. Take five scores and multiply the lowest by .96 to get a handicap. 
Check out USGA.org  for more information on handicapping.

9. What is an albatross in Golf?
A. Albatross is another term for a double eagle, or 3-under par on any one hole.
How many golfers have ever gotten an albatross? Of course, for some, an albatross has the same connotation as in the Rime of the Ancient Mariner!


10. What does slope rating mean on a golf course?
A. Slope rating is a numerical index of difficulty for an average (bogey) golfer. The higher the slope number, the more difficult the course is for the bogey golfer.
I suggest that the average golfer look for courses with lower slope ratings until their scores improve, for a feeling of accomplishment!


Kerr's trophy larger but Watson has better payday with "dream performances"

June 2010
Cristie Kerr's record-setting twelve stroke victory at the LPGA Championship left her in a dream-like state. Bubba Watson's teary-eyed acceptance of his first PGA Tour win at the Travelers Championship was exciting to boot as he was the last man standing in a three-man playoff.

Since I could not be at both events in the tri-state area, I chose the Travelers in order to meet-up at a "tweet-up" with Patricia Hannigan (aka golfgirl from Golf Girl Media). I can't wait to see the pictures she took and I'm sure she'll post them soon.

Here are pictures of Cristie Kerr, winner of the LPGA Championship and Bubba Watson, fellow left-handed golfer, victor at the Traveler's Championship and first-time winner on the PGA Tour.

Kerr aced the bigger trophy (and $337,500) but Bubba Watson walked off with the larger check ($1,080,000!)

Tiger brings female guest to daughter's birthday party

June 2010
Tiger Woods and his estranged wife Elin Nordegren have got together for the first time in months to throw another birthday party for their daughter Sam, RadarOnline reports.

Woods had broken his promise and missed Sam's birthday party on June 18 when she turned three as he was playing in the US Open.

Woods then promised not to miss anymore of his children's birthdays when he returned to golf and he and Nordegren threw another party for Sam and for the first time in months spent hours together in the same place.

But all wasn't perfect between Woods and Nordegren. The party was scheduled to start at 4pm on Saturday and last about two hours. Woods didn't show up until 4:55pm and he brought his office manager Karen and another woman with him. Nordegren was understandably very angry.

"But they put aside their differences for the good of their daughter when a big cake rolled in," a source told RadarOnline.

"Clearly this was Tiger trying to make it up to Sam. He wasn't there on her birthday so he wanted to have a party for her and be there. Elin went along with it. Despite their differences they want to do what is best for their children.

"Woods and Nordegren are about to sign a divorce settlement. She will receive approximately $750 million.

Woods and Nordegren spending hours together is a rare event. Nordegren lives in a rented house approximately 1.5km away from Woods and has very little to do with him. Nannies shuttle the children between parents.

"Elin has taken several trips away from Tiger and is getting on with life, without him," said a source. "They barely talk. It's amazing that they spent time together - even at a birthday party."

Bomber Bubba Watson finally a winner on PGA Tour

June 2010

Recap of Bubba's win @ the Traveler's

June 2010
People can change. Bubba Watson is proof of that. When the game's resident Rain Man first arrived on the PGA TOUR, he knew he was good enough to win. Hell, he expected it.

It didn't matter that he honed his game as a kid by hitting wiffle balls off the dirt driveway at his house in the nowhere town of Bagdad (population 1,490) in the Florida panhandle. Or that he still has never received a formal lesson. Or that he wore pinks socks during his high school matches. Or that he plays with a pink shaft in his driver. Or that he suffers from Attention Deficit Disorder.

"My problem was 'Why can't I win? Why can't I do this?' I don't ever envy anybody else, but I did a couple of years ago and it was wrong for me to do that," said Watson, whom many considered aloof if not arrogant when he first turned pro.

"My caddie stayed with me for four years even though I kept getting mad and pissy on the golf course. You never deserve anything. If it's in the will, it's in the will."

Sunday, it was in the tears with Watson surviving a sudden-death playoff with Corey Pavin and Scott Verplank at the Travelers Championship.

As much of a basher of the ball as Watson, who leads the TOUR in driving distance, is, it turns out he's also a big softy. He cried during his wedding ceremony, still gets weepy at church and at TPC River Highlands was flat out bawling.

After his winning par putt on the second extra hole dropped, Watson's head collapsed into the arms of his wife, Angie. They told one another how much they loved each other and Angie whispered in his ear, "To God be all the glory."

The glory on this day, however, belonged solely to Watson. He began the day six strokes back and managed only a 4-under 66 in the final round. But he got plenty of help, mostly from Justin Rose, who had an epic collapse with a 75 that gave one of the game's shortest hitters (Pavin) and its longest (Watson) an opportunity along with Verplank.

"I'm a Christian first and golf just happens to be how I support my family," Watson said. "The game has given me a lot. It lets me support my mom and dad, lets me support the junior tournaments I put on. It's something I do for a living, but I don't ever question why I don't win.

You don't have to be religious to appreciate Watson's internal and external struggles. His dad has had rheumatoid arthritis for almost 20 years and last October was diagnosed with lung cancer. His wife was also told she had a brain tumor over Christmas -- they found out in May it was only an enlarged pituitary gland.

"My dad taught me everything I know. It's not very much, but it's all I know. He would agree with that," said Watson, whose tear ducts were now in full-on Niagara Falls mode. "He took me to the golf course when I was 6 years old and told me he was going to be in the woods looking for his ball, so just take this 9-iron and beat it down the fairway.

"Now look at me after beating a 9-iron on the fairway coming from Bagdad, Florida. I never dreamed this."

Lots of people had, though. Angie's cell phone had 67 text messages before the tear-fest was even over, and Bubba's was buzzing in his pocket the entire time. Among the well wishes were likely ones from Boo Weekley and Heath Slocum. They came from the same Milton (Fla.) High School team that Watson did. Now Watson had a victory, too.

"Truthfully, I never doubt myself," Watson said. "I have the ability, but maybe am not a strong enough mind to keep going because I'm emotional."

When Watson settled in over his 3-footer to win, though, he had to keep those emotions in check. That was easier said than done.

"That putt I made for par to win, I don't remember taking the putter back," Watson said. "My head's going a thousand miles an hour. I couldn't take a breath.

"I just remember my arms went one way and my arms went the other way and somehow it went straight in the hole."

When it did, Watson got what he deserved.

Cristie Kerr put it in cruise control to win LPGA Championship

June 2010
Cristie Kerr became the first American to top the women's world rankings, following her fourth round six-under 66 to win the LPGA Championship by 12 strokes.

Kerr finished with a 19-under 269 to win her 14th career tournament and second major after the 2007 US Women's Open.

Kerr led wire-to-wire, opening with rounds of 68, 66 and 69.

"It's a dream performance," Kerr said. "It's like you wake up or you dream - I can't even speak right now. Winning by two or three is great, but winning by 12 shots is ridiculous. It's obscene."

Kerr started the fourth round with an eight-shot lead then parred her first six holes before rolling in birdies on three of her next four holes.

Kerr earned 337,500 dollars in first-place prize money and is projected to take over top spot in the world ahead of Japan's Ai Miyazato when the rankings are released Monday.

Miyazato fired a 66 to finish five under in a tie for third with South Korea's Shin Jiyai (71). South Korea's Kim Song-Hee (69) was second. Miyazato is a four-time winner on the LPGA tour this season.

Kerr broke the tournament record for victory margin of 11 set by Betsy King in 1992 and matched the second-biggest victory in a major.

"I didn't limit myself," Kerr said. "I wanted to see how far I could take it. And I took it pretty far. I don't think I could've played better."

Miyazato was also impressed with Kerr's performance.

"That's almost too good," Miyazato said. "She's just amazing. I played really good, too, but she is just better than me."

Kerr intends to skip the Jamie Farr Owens Corning Classic in Ohio next weekend to rest up for the US Women's Open on July 8.

After winning this weekend, Kerr knows the pressure will be more intense.

"I'm there now, but I have to prove that I deserve to be there," Kerr said. "So there is still a lot of work ahead. But it feels awfully good right now."

Mountain Lion plays through in Montana

June 2010
Golfers at a western Montana golf course faced a hazard with real teeth — and claws — when a mountain lion decided to play through. Golfers said they spotted the elusive predator while teeing off at Valley View Golf Club Friday morning in Bozeman.

Bozeman animal control officer Kathy Middleton said the lion was first sighted near Aspen Pointe senior living center before other callers later saw it at the golf course.

Joe Knarr with Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks said the agency has been receiving calls about lions all through the south of town. He said mountain lions sightings are common in the area, though there have been more reports this year than previous years.

Middleton said the lion spotted Friday most likely was just passing through.

Club Championship / Tankard Trophy Finals

June 2010
Saturday 3 July is finals day for the gents, ladies and junior club championships. The tee times for the gents competitions are as follows:

Club Championship (36 holes)

S A Robertson -v- K James

0915 and 1345

Tankard Trophy (18 holes)

J Wood -v- G McLuskey

1315

Don't forget there is a mixed Texas scramble played over 12 holes for everybody else starting at 1000 - sign up sheet is on the mixed notice board in the clubhouse. Why not come along and have a bit of fun in the Texas scramble and then watch the closing stages of the Club Championship and the Tankard Trophy.

The LPGA is looking for a star to fill the void

June 2010
One thing is certain, no matter what transpires as the LPGA Championship, a major, concludes this weekend: Not many people beyond the Rochester, N.Y. area, where the tournament is being played, will be talking about it.

It's sad but true that the LPGA has little traction with golf fans, especially in North America. The LPGA Championship started in 1955 and is the second-oldest tournament in women's golf, after the U.S. Women's Open. And, strictly speaking, it's a USGA event and not an LPGA tournament, although it counts as one.

The LPGA needs a superstar, one with whom fans can identify. Annika Sorenstam retired at the end of 2008 and Lorena Ochoa took early retirement this year. They were legitimate superstars. Nobody has yet stepped up to fill the void they left.

Well, that's not entirely true. Ai Miyazoto has won four LPGA tournaments this year, including last week's ShopRite LPGA Classic in Galloway, N.J. She's No. 1 on the Rolex World Rankings. Who knew?

Then there's Jiyai Shin. She won the 2008 Women's British Open and finished third in the LPGA Championship last year while winning two other tournaments. She spoke beautifully at the Golf Writers Association of America's dinner during this year's Masters, where she accepted its award as Player of the Year. Shin referred to her small stature but that she had big dreams -”On the golf course, I feel very tall”- and that she hoped her accomplishments would encourage young golfers everywhere.

Miyazoto, 25, and Shin, 22, are exceptionally talented players. Miyazoto is Japanese and Shin is Korean. The LPGA has become a global tour, and Asian players especially have been on the ascendancy. But language barriers and a general reluctance on the part of American fans to embrace Asian players have contributed to the “missing superstar” syndrome.

The U.S. player Cristie Kerr pointed to the problem this week when she said there are “maybe five or six [Americans] that can really contend every week to win.” She added that some 40 Asians can contend each week.

Asked if she felt it was important for a player with whom “masses of people can identify with” to step up, Kerr answered, “I think it's very important.”

Kerr's fellow American Paula Creamer agreed. “I hope I'm a face for American golf,” she said. Creamer, 23, finished seventh last week after four months off due to hand surgery.

Who is that player that the LPGA needs? Is she on the LPGA Tour now? Might she turn out to be Stacy Lewis? Lewis, 25, was the game's top amateur before she turned pro in 2008. She'd lived seven years in a back brace because of extreme scoliosis, for which she eventually had surgery. She shot four-under-par 68 in the first round of the LPGA Championship. Lewis is gifted and she's fiery.

Meanwhile, Michelle Wie has been the LPGA's big hope. Wie, 20, was the only U.S. player to go undefeated when the American team beat the Europeans in last August's Solheim Cup. She won her first LPGA event in November. Wie, however, has only three top-10 finishes in nine tournaments this year. She's 16th on the money list. So far she's in the “promise unfulfilled” category.

The bottom line is that somebody has to emerge, and it would be best for the LPGA Tour if that were an American player.

“The women, although granted, a world tour, with world class talent, they don't have enough U.S. players at the top,” Oakville, Ont.'s Sandra Post wrote in an e-mail. Post won the 1968 LPGA Championship when she was only 20 and won seven more LPGA events. No Canadian has approached her record. She's now a highly-regarded instructor.

“They need Wie to make a move, Creamer to get well, Kerr and [Angela] Stanford (a five-time LPGA winner) to contend,” Post said. “Many people do not subscribe to the Golf Channel, therefore are not able to watch the women play.”

It's somehow telling that, besides Wie, Nancy Lopez is the most recognizable name in the LPGA Championship. Lopez won the LPGA in 1978, 1985 and 1989. She won 48 LPGA events. Her sunny disposition allied to her fierce competitiveness brought attention to the LPGA.

The LPGA needs another Nancy Lopez, not the current one, who is 53 and shot 87 Thursday, but somebody else with her personality and talent. For the moment, that golfer is missing.

-The Globe and Mail

Pavin wants Tiger on Ryder Cup team

June 2010
One of the reasons Corey Pavin is playing at the Travelers Championship is to keep in contact with potential Ryder Cup team members. Though the captain is admittedly early in the process of formulating who he thinks will and won’t make the team, the process has begun.

“Obviously Phil [Mickelson] is going to be on the team,” Pavin said. “I’m guessing that Jim [Furyk] and A.K. are probably on the team as well.

“I’ve liked the way it’s shaping up, the way the first 20 guys are. There’s people I want to see there. Part of watching the top eight is trying to figure out who’s not going to be in the top eight. Ideas are forming, but they’re small ideas at the moment.”

One of those who just climbed into that top eight is Tiger Woods, who is seventh in the Ryder Cup standings after his tie for fourth at the U.S. Open.

“I think he’s going to make the team on points and I know he wants to,” Pavin said. “I want him to be on the team. He’s the best player in the world.”

As for how Pavin will go about deciding who his four captains picks will be, he said that he’ll get “plenty of input” from his four assistant captains and the top eight players on the team.

The 20th Hole Vegas bound

June 2010

Probably won't get to any golf courses on this trip but here is a review of two courses in Vegas called Royal Links and Desert Pines from my last trip there.

Change to midweek competition - Wednesday 30 June

June 2010
Due to the cancellation of the competition on Wednesday 16 June that was scheduled to be Card 3 in the Summer League, this has been re-scheduled to Wednesday 30 June. The stableford competition due to take place that day will not now take place.

Belhaven Medal Draw - Saturday 26 June

June 2010
Morning Starters

0800 M Allen; K MacLeod
0807 G Cox; S A Robertson
0815 I McGowan; W McGregor; M Bell
0822 P Crockart; B Erskine; G GHunter
0830 M Grieve; S Thomson; G McLuskey
0837 S Murray; D Spittal; K James
0845 M Melville; K McVey; J Whyte
0852 C McDonald; J Henvey (jnr); C Fairweather
0900 G Scrimgeour; I Taylor; D McDonald
0907 A Ramsay; J Henvey (snr); B Sievewright
0915 D Findaly; P Johnstone; F McColl

Afternnon Starters (note later than usual tee times)

1300 C Flannigan; David Alexander
1307 P Torrie; R Michie
1315 D Thomson; J Scott; D Douglas
1322 I Butchart; A Easton; I Scott
1330 I Clark; Dave Alexander; E Gray
1337 J Ireland; J Wood; A Downs
1345 K Ewan; C McKenna; D Grant
1352 A Aird; F Moran; R Tinker

After the U.S. Open, why golf fans need the Travelers Championship

June 2010
After last week's lackluster U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, here are five reasons why you should either watch the Travelers Championship on television this week or take a drive and see it live if you live within a close enough radius of Cromwell, Connecticut (I'm on that two-hour cusp!)

1. The natural beauty of TPC River Highlands golf course and holes 15-18 in particular have been written about extensively and need to be seen to be appreciated. Highlands is the opposite of Pebble Beach, in my opinion, and both are equally beautiful.

PGA Tour on Facebook asked if fans have any tips for the pros playing at TPC River Highlands this week (join the conversation!)

Answers ranged from mine which was more tempered to those who have a "grip it and rip it" mentality.

I said (Stacy Solomon):

Lay-up on #15, go deep to avoid false front on #16th green, consider water in play on #17 & bunker on right of 18th green may be better than facing than facing swale on left.

Seriously PGATour.com, should I really be offering advice to the best golfers in the world?

2. Top PGA Tour golfers like defending champion Kenny Perry, Padraig Harrington and Rickie Fowler will be up-close-and-personal, from the driving range to the putting green.

3. Michelob Ultra 19th Hole Concert Series brings out some of the best local bands in CT. Concerts will be held on Friday and Saturday, right after capping off a great day of golf!

4.  Golf fans disappointed after a lackluster 2010 U.S. Open need a golf  "recovery" tournament.

5. See the new and improved, slimmer John Daly at 185 pounds. Daly's rib injury seems to have passed and he is now working with improved confidence. JD is a great golfer to watch when he's in form but looking into the sun might be better for the eyes as his bright yellow and purple colored outfit can leave you with flash camera spots!

Check the Golf Channel for weekday schedule, CBS-TV for weekend play or catch the action on PGATour.com.

Seve Ballesteros cancels plan to play the British Open @ St. Andrews

June 2010
Spanish golf legend Severiano Ballesteros, who is still recovering from brain surgery in 2008, will not take part in the British Open on the advice of his doctors, he said on his website.

Doctors who examined him in Madrid on Wednesday said his condition was satisfactory but advised him to avoid "any undue stress or potentially emotional situations.

"It is for this reason that they have advised him against travelling to St Andrews" in Scotland to take part in the British Open next month.

"I very much wanted to be at The British Open in St Andrews next month to personally thank all the golf fans and friends who have given me their support," Ballesteros was quoted as saying on the site, www.seveballesteros.com.

"I am aware that there might be people who have been preparing their trip to encourage and cheer me up. Hence, I do not want to disappoint anyone at the last minute and after listening to the doctors' advice I have taken the difficult decision not to travel to St Andrews."

Ballesteros, 53, underwent four operations in 2008 to remove a brain tumour, before undergoing chemotherapy sessions.

In July last year, he said he wanted to compete again in the British Open in 2010, taking as an example the American cyclist Lance Armstrong, who won the Tour de France seven times after surviving testicular cancer.

Regarded as one of golf's all-time greats, Ballesteros won five majors during his stellar career.

He won the British Open in 1979, 1984 and 1988 and became the first European to win the Augusta Masters in 1980, an achievement he repeated in 1983.

Ballesteros was also an influential figure in the Ryder Cup, winning 20 points from 37 matches and captaining Europe to victory over the United States at Valderrama in 1997.

-ATP
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