George Thomas Into the SCGA Hall Of Fame
/He goes in Wednesday with Jim Murray and Eddie Merrins. Here's a little video of him I posted on YouTube and which is always viewable on the page devoted to "The Captain."
When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
He goes in Wednesday with Jim Murray and Eddie Merrins. Here's a little video of him I posted on YouTube and which is always viewable on the page devoted to "The Captain."
It's been mostly bleak lately, but I did see where Kodak has dropped it's 22-year(!) sponsorship with NASCAR in favor of a greater investment in the PGA Tour, citing its global ties.
And as if that's not enough, NASCAR owners are griping about it's Chase points system, the model for the PGA Tour's FedEx Cup.
Bob Harig reports on Erik Compton accepting an invitation to the PGA Tour's season ending Children's Miracle Network event at Disney World. Let's hope no one questions his use of a cart.
Doug Ferguson looks at the 54-hole cut policy that only has one serious detractor in Charles Warren, and which has been successful in helping lighten the load for Sunday play. He also shares this on the FedEx Cup fix in the works. Naturally, it's drifting close to the ADT (RIP) model some of us love.
One solution that appears to be getting a lot of attention is not to reset the points until the Tour Championship, which could mean any of the 30 players at East Lake would have a chance to win. Plus, it would be decided over 72 holes and protect the integrity of the competition.
A decision is not expected for another month at the earliest.
Jeff German reports for the Las Vegas Sun. This can't bode well for the future of TravelGolf.com:
District Judge Jennifer Togliatti has awarded Las Vegas golf course developer Billy Walters a $9 million judgment against the owner of a large Arizona-based Internet company he alleged had defamed him.
Walters charged in a 2006 lawsuit that Robert Lewis, a Flagstaff businessman who runs Travel Golf Media Inc., had falsely disparaged him and two of his golf courses, Stallion Mountain and Desert Pines, on the Internet after he refused to sign a new agreement to promote the courses on the company’s many Web sites.
The new contract, the suit alleged, required Walters to pay three times the promotional fees he had been paying Travel Golf Media.
Lewis published a series of posts with critical reviews and unflattering photos of the golf courses over two months in the spring of 2005, the suit alleged.
Walters’ lead lawyer, James Pisanelli, argued that the defamatory statements had caused Walters emotional distress and injured his personal reputation.
Wow, releasing a bird into the wild without attacking the person taking the photos! What restraint shown by Tiger's luggage looper Stevie Williams. His image rehab is complete, I say! And nice branding for NBC Sports too. (Images courtesy of our friends at BZA PR, who are handling the Kiwi Challenge.)
Thanks to reader Scott for catching this. From Getty Images. Look out Dottie and Roger! Someone wants your job!
In a couple of years when the largest paper west of the Mississippi is relegated to nothing more than a news website, they'll be asking how a once proud and highly profitable operation was destroyed. While I can't comment on the overall operation (LAObserved has covered it well), one department near and dear to this blog has been recklessly destroyed.
Thomas Bonk, a 27-year staffer was part of this week's staff buyouts, leaving us with just a handful of newspapermen and women covering golf. Bonk had been covering golf full-time for at least 12 years by my faulty memory count.
Here's what's most astounding about this: the most famous athlete in the world and one of the planet's most visible human-beings is Tiger Woods. He is a southern California native and part-time resident who hosts a tournament here, where, incidentally, the Los Angeles Times is published.
Along with the AP's Doug Ferguson, no writer was more consistently breaking news or demonstrating some form of access to Team Woods than Bonk. And recently, Bonk was regularly breaking news and offering important information related to the game with a weekly online column. For a paper that has touted its need to be breaking news online and in general beefing up its website coverage, Bonk delivered. It makes little sense that you would release someone fulfilling the stated mission, particularly someone with access to and a relationship with one of the world's most newsworthy and inaccessible figures.
And remember, this is a paper with six sports columnists. Not one has a clue about golf.
Peter Yoon, a talented and developing golf writer, was a victim of an earlier staff purge. The only other Times staffer capable of covering golf is Chris Dufresne, one of the top college football writers in the land who better serves the paper taking advantage of his arsenal of sources covering college football or his old beat, college basketball.
Of course, this is a paper that just fired one of its two primary film critics and numerous talented entertainment writers in the same town where there's a multi-billion dollar industry called Hollywood, so I suppose the beat writers for UCLA basketball and USC football might just be doomed too.
...they become associate members of the European Tour, joining a few other names we already knew about.
Jon Show reports that Jeld-Wen wants out of its $9 million annual commitment to the tour, The Players Championship The PLAYERS and one of the nine senior majors (but apparently that number does no include the free window frames for the VP's, which pushes the value of the deal to $15 million). Show also reports the Ginn and Mayakoba sponsors want out of their deals in light of the real estate crisis.
It also comes on the back of fallout in the auto and financial industries.
The tour is faced with a tough sell given the unsold inventory it already has in the marketplace, including a $3 million annual title deal for a new Fall Series event in Georgia and two $7 million annual sponsorships of the Presidents Cup.
Now here's a tour attitude I've noticed in a few articles...
There is still no decision on what brand will be attached to events in Ohio and Charlotte after their lead sponsors, Merrill Lynch and Wachovia, were bought by Bank of America and Wells Fargo, respectively. Despite speculation, the new banks will automatically assume those deals unless the PGA Tour and the acquiring companies mutually agree to part ways.
“There’s no technical ability to get out,” said Jon Podany, head of sales for the PGA Tour. “The contract is ironclad.”
Now, I can understand talking that way so that other sponsors don't get any funny ideas about renegotiating. Still, you would hope that privately they are far less assertive about that language if a sponsor wants to re-work their deal. I know, I know, I don't understand how business works.
Oh wait, Adam Schupak talks to former PGA Tour and Golf Channel exec Gary Stevenson, who offers this sage advice:
I suspect that the PGA Tour, LPGA, the governing bodies, are taking two giant steps back and making sure that the value they deliver is consistent with what they are asking – and if it’s not, they should be making adjustments to those packages so that the value is there. I’m of the mind that title sponsors, once they take a look at what they get for their money compared to other money they spend, will determine the value in golf is better.
If I was a golf tournament director, I would be less concerned about my title sponsor than I would those sponsors that were spending between $50,000 and $250,000. Those are the hardest to find. If there was a way of creating a different value and locking them in for three years, I’d do that right now.
Jim Achenbach attended the RE/MAX World Long Drive Championship and noticed that nearly every contestant used a Pinnacle and Cobra driver (you go Wally!).
But for those of you feeling guilty about your driver collecting, just consider this level of neurotic behavior:
Winner Jamie Sadlowski and the other three match-play finalists in the Open Division used Cobra driver heads. Furthermore, Dan Boever, the Senior Division champion, hit a Cobra driver.
Five-time world champion Jason Zuback, eliminated after making the Elite Eight, was another Cobra user. Zuback showed up with 29 Cobra drivers from which to choose. That’s right – 29.
“Well, there are some slight differences in all of them,” said Zuback, still on the mend after having four hernias repaired in the vicinity of his abdomen.
Sure those hernias aren't related to lifting a bag filled with 29 drivers?
Say it ain't so, I know! Such dangerous precedent. Yet, I must report the emails and calls have been pouring in. They are praising the USGA's uncharacteristic decision to nominate a likeable, knowledgeable fellow to the Executive Committee on the heels of uncharacteristically nominating a likeable, knowledgable fellow to the presidency.
This new fellow is a lawyer, but in spite of that, Gene McClure is getting rave reviews as someone who has the game's best interests at heart. There is no end to the madness these days.
In other nominating news, Minnesota fared remarkably well with Irving Fish nominated as Treasurer and Joseph Anthony was named associate counsel, despite ex-President and Minnesotan Reed Mackenzie chairing the nominating committee.
Thanks to reader Patrick for Martin Blake's look at Stuart Appleby and his decision to consult a sports psychologist about his disgust for speaking to pro-am partners better coping with major pressure.
"I really felt like: 'This is bullshit. I've got to find a way to not let this happen again.' That was the catalyst.
"What would I do different? I'm not really sure. I'm not saying to avoid being chased by the shark, but to have a coping strategy. That's when I bumped into Gio.
"You go through the basics of tension, pressure, chemicals in the body, heart-rate, all these sorts of things you actually can control. The Masters (was) a little bit (of a catalyst), but the US Open put me over the edge: 'This is bullshit. I don't want to do this again.' If it does happen again, I look at it and I'm excited."
I think we know Stuart's key word now. Does the PGA Tour levy fines for comments in The Age?
While everyone was watching Erik Compton at first stage of Q-school, Dave Seanor reminds us in par 1 of a two-parter that another feel good story tees it up this week. Kevin Hall has been profiled many times because he's of African-American descent, but Seanor focuses on what it's like for Hall to be deaf and what that means to a competitive golfer.
Some suggest Hall has a competitive advantage because he’s not distracted by noise. (Sound familiar, Casey Martin?) But any golf instructor will tell you that sound provides important feedback when a ball is struck. Moreover, Hall isn’t immune to distraction, thanks to exceptionally acute peripheral vision. As does Woods when he hears a camera shutter click, Hall will stop in mid-swing if he detects movement in the gallery.
“I can’t say (being deaf) is a plus,” says Percy Hall, Kevin’s father and occasional caddie. “It doesn’t facilitate what he’s doing. He deals with distractions – voices in his head and visual distractions. Those kind of things are going on in his head, just like everyone else.”
Geoff Shackelford is a Senior Writer for Golfweek magazine, a weekly contributor to Golf Channel's Morning
Copyright © 2022, Geoff Shackelford. All rights reserved.